Lev ditt liv - live your life
In Psychosynthesis, we often use the butterfly as a metaphor for our transpersonal development. How do you relate to that? But the real question is ..
In Psychosynthesis, we often use the butterfly as a metaphor for our transpersonal development.
How do you relate to that?
But the real question is not whether the metaphor is beautiful—
it is whether you recognize yourself in it.
Let’s take a deeper look.
Metamorphosis as a philosophical image
Already in the work of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, metamorphosis was used to express the idea that:
For Goethe, this was not about rupture, but about a hidden continuity within change.
But there is another side to this.
In The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka, we encounter something entirely different:
Here, metamorphosis becomes a symbol of alienation—not growth.
We often use the butterfly as an image of personal development.
But what is truly interesting here lies in the biological details.
Dissolution before new structure
The caterpillar breaks down (histolysis). In other words:
- old patterns must actually dissolve—not just be improved.
This resembles processes we encounter in:
In the work of Carl Jung, this is part of individuation:
a phase where the old self no longer holds, but the new is not yet fully formed.
In Psychosynthesis, we might describe this as the journey from identification to disidentification—and further into transformation (synthesis).
This journey also moves through acceptance and allowance.
But this is not easy.
Don’t be fooled. This process is not simple.
You may have heard of the “dark night of the soul” as a way of describing this.
But it is not just one dark night—there are several.
This is a process of dismantling identity.
Of everything you have learned and believed yourself to be.
It does not happen overnight.
It cannot happen overnight—your energy system, your nervous system, your psyche would not be able to sustain it.
You are moving from low current to high current.
That is why the process must be gradual.
We are brought face to face with the inevitable:
… and this can show up as confusion, uncertainty, fear—and doubt.
We must learn to meet this within ourselves.
To feel into what it actually means.
What does it require?
We need to cultivate trust in order to move through this journey.
Trust in yourself—because no one outside of you can carry you through it.
You can be supported.
But you cannot be carried.
There is no fixed answer for you.
You create it as you walk.
That was a mouthful—but stay with me.
In the biological development of the butterfly, there are what are called imaginal discs.
These can be understood as:
In Psychosynthesis, this might be described as:
Jung would call this:
The point is this: transformation is not random.
It follows an inner structure—a field of possibility.
The chrysalis stage may be the most powerful metaphor of all.
It is a state where:
The anthropologist Victor Turner called this: liminality.
We see this in:
Here is something important to understand:
This stage often feels like stagnation —
but it is actually active reorganization.
Can you recognize yourself in that?
The good news is: it does not last forever.
Let’s go one layer deeper.
“Resistance” as necessary tension
Here, biology becomes interesting again.
As we saw:
Psychologically, this may feel like:
But instead of seeing resistance as a problem,
we can begin to see it as part of the very structure that makes transformation possible.
We are given the opportunity to practice allowance—again 😉
The metaphor breaks down if we take it too literally:
The butterfly follows a fixed program.
We do not.
We have thoughts, feelings, and choices.
We experience resistance.
We can pause—or move forward.
And that is why we must learn trust in this process.
Where biology is deterministic, psychology is open and uncertain.
If we adjust the metaphor to better reflect reality:
You do not “automatically become a butterfly.”
Transformation requires your participation, such as:
This is not a beautiful, linear process.
On the contrary, it can be brutal and destructive—especially for the ego.
It has been described as a process where you are pressed, softened, chewed, and spat out again—where nothing of your old identifications is allowed to hold you in place.
It is more like a controlled disintegration—one that may succeed… or not.
And even when we do not “complete” it—
it does not mean we have failed.
We all have a path to walk.
We are not in the same place.
Some are ready for transformation now. Others are not.
We are not on the same train of consciousness—and we are not meant to be.
But remember:
There is always another train 😊.
In short
The butterfly as a metaphor points to:
But perhaps the most important insight from biology is this:
Transformation does not happen by adding something new.
It happens when what is already within you is allowed to reorganize itself.
And this requires something from you:
I share more about this in today’s video (In Norwegian):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NkCIalqf27M&t=3s
I speak often about the transpersonal development many people are moving through now.
If you want to explore this further (in Norwegian with English translations available):
Author:
Mariann Marthinussen is a psychotherapist, coach, speaker, and group facilitator working within the field of Psychosynthesis and transpersonal psychology.
For more than 20 years, she has guided individuals and groups through processes related to personal development, identity transformation, awakening, emotional integration, and self-realization.
Her work bridges psychology, embodied awareness, breathwork, and transpersonal understanding, with a particular interest in how human beings move through existential transition, inner crisis, and expanded states of consciousness.
She is the founder of Lev ditt liv (“Live Your Life”), where she offers therapy, coaching, mentoring, courses, retreats, and group programs focused on conscious human development.
Kategorier: : Oppvåkningen, Selvrealisering, Sjelens mørke natt