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where are you in this story?

By May 9, 2014 12 Comments

For me yesterday was one of those days when difficult thing piled upon difficult thing. I already felt challenged and then something happened to challenge me more. And then something else happened to challenge me more. Life was not conforming to my desires or expectations.

But I had just been reading about the hero’s journey and I heard myself think, “So yeah, I’m in the trials and tribulations phase of the hero’s journey.” That thought helped, a lot. So I share it with you here. If you aren’t familiar with it, the “hero’s journey” is the basic architecture of the story under most of the movies you see and the novels you read. It shows up so ubiquitously and is so compelling to us, the theorists believe (and I agree) because in some sense we’re all on a hero’s journey, or many hero’s journeys, in our lives.

Sometimes, it’s helpful, calming, healing even, to simply remember that, and put whatever you are experiencing in that frame. Here are the stages of the hero’s journey, with commentary from me on the life phase I associate them with:

THE ORDINARY WORLD. When life feels routine, when the status quo feels stable, but also a little dissatisfying, empty, or shallow.

THE CALL TO ADVENTURE. As Christopher Vogler puts it, “Something shakes up the situation, either from external pressures or from something rising up from deep within, so the hero must face the beginnings of change.” In our lives, this might be a call to an external adventure (“I feel called to run for the school board” or “I feel pulled to move away from this place.”) Or, it might be a call to a more explicitly inner journey, to finally heal the wounds of your past or change old behavior patterns.

REFUSAL OF THE CALL. This is important! The next phase of the journey is that the hero refuses the call! This is the part when you doubt, deny, fret, want to run away, say “no not me there’s no way I could do that,” and so on. Isn’t it comforting to know that’s a normal, built-in phase of the journey?

MEETING WITH THE MENTOR. Then, the hero finds some kind of mentor. Maybe suddenly you notice that an acquaintance is ahead of you on the particular journey you’re on, and can provide a model and some guidance. Or maybe an author becomes your mentor through the books she’s written. I can think of so many women authors who have been mentors for my journeys over the years—Marianne Williamson for my first journey into having a spiritual practice, Geneen Roth for the journey into letting go of emotional eating, and so on.

Then, in the next phases, the heart of the journey happens, the in the trenches part. You cross the threshold, away from your familiar status quo and into a new and special territory of the journey. There are trials and tribulations and tests. The hero encounters many challenges and one peak challenge—”the ordeal” in which she confronts her greatest fear. We can’t skip the trials and tribulations phase, or the ordeal. It’s part of the journey.

And then, the final phases begin. There’s some kind of treasure or reward that the hero gains after overcoming the ordeal. If the adventure is a career change, maybe the treasure is the new job. If the adventure is reclaiming your long lost love of painting, the reward is your renewed painting practice. If the adventure is forgiving your ex, perhaps the reward is that relief and release.

In the hero’s journey, the hero then works to bring the treasure home, back into ordinary life. In our lives, this phase is about moving toward integration of whatever new experiences, learnings, or external changes the adventure has brought. Interestingly, this is usually a perilous mission during which there’s a risk that the treasure will be lost. Maybe in your first week painting again your self-doubt or crazy schedule causes you to almost stop. Or you show up at the new job and it’s not clear its the right fit, or that you can do it. There’s some sort of other test, giving the hero the opportunity to recommit, in some sense, to the new way. It’s like the gaining of the treasure has to be reconfirmed, underlined, restated.

And then there’s the return, back home. Back to everyday life, back to more of an equilibrium. The hero returns with, in Vogler’s words, “some element of the treasure that has the power to transform the world as the hero has been transformed.” I love so many things about that sentence. First, that sometimes we don’t bring back the whole treasure, but only some element of it. And second, that what we bring back—a lesson, an insight, a creation—can then be used in service.

We are all on the hero’s journey. Click to tweet.

I know for me, sometimes it helps to see my life through this lens. (Some people view the hero’s journey as a masculine journey, and there are some great thinkers like Maureen Murdock, Jean Bolen, and Clarissa Pinkola Estes writing about the heroine’s journey—a different map of growth and change. I think we take both kinds of journeys—that the distinction is more about inward looking vs. outward looking journeys than men’s vs women’s.)

Where are you in the hero’s journey now? Are you hearing but refusing a call to adventure? Are you in the thick of the adventure, facing trials and tribulations? Are you in the phase of the return, re-integrating what you’ve learned or what’s changed into your ordinary life, and letting it be of service to others?

Love, Tara

Join the discussion 12 Comments

  • Shau says:

    Hey Tara,
    Thank you for the e-mail, just in time. Been having the same message coming over the past few weeks. Thanks!

  • Shakti says:

    Are you familiar with the movie “finding Joe”. It’s a Joseph Campbell documentary that does a superb job explaining the different places within the hero’s journey.
    I did a review on it on my blog once a while back because the impact in my life during my late 20’s was so obvious the hero’s path. It was a very intense time in my life.
    I have a friend that just gave me a quote yesterday that put a smile on my face. “You have a 100 percent success rate of surviving your bad days. That’s pretty good, you can trust yourself now. ”

    Thanks for sharing this post. I think it’s really important to know that we are all hero’s in our own lives.

    Shakti Chionis
    http://www.365daymiracles.com

  • violet says:

    Hi Tara. Thank you for your email. Your email really help with my present thoughts of self finding.
    Thank you.

  • Gwendolyn says:

    Great. Thanks for explaining your favorite sentence as I was reading it for the third time to understand this then went on to have your thoughts fill it in. Aha…moment. Like a spiral we circle and integrate our learnings into something solid with in us. Where am I in the journey- right there. In April I did a VIP retreat with a gal and was transformed by the power, ease and joy of spending five days with a client. The element I brought back into my life was courage to have fun, lots of fun with my work; the courage to stand in the knowing that offering nourishment to another women is a worthy call, and just because it is honestly very easy and fun for me to do this doesn’t make it any less valuable to the one needing it—it makes it more right on. The courage to celebrate is becoming a calling.

  • Elizabeth says:

    Hi Tara,
    Your message could not be more timely for me. I’m in the trials and tribulations phase of my journey, too. After working to overcome my fear of public speaking, I’m now finding one situation after the next where I’m called to speak out on situations that are both important to me personally, and relevant to my community. It is a new path for me and way out of my comfort zone. Yet, when I try to deny myself from doing it, it comes back in my face. Doing nothing does not seem to be an option. I keep reminding myself I can do this. Thank you for giving me the perspective of the hero’s journey. It helps tremendously to put things in perspective.

  • Links I love says:

    […] Where are you along the hero’s journey? […]

  • Diana says:

    Very timely. Thank you for reminding me.

  • Donna Davis says:

    Hi Tara:

    Thank you so much for this message. Personally, I see myself moving out of refusal as I meet my mentors and helpers. It’s good also to understand that the phases of the story overlap, perhaps because inner and outer journeys don’t always synchronize.

    There is a visual representation of this cyclical process as “The Great Round,” where Jungian therapists have postulated that mandalas can be grouped into about 10 or 12 characteristic patterns, and each of these organized into a progressive series moving through time/space like the hours on a clock. In Jungian theory the phases, however worked out or realized in worldly action and achievement, are related to the ego’s estrangement from and then ecstatic reunion with the Self, which underscores the contradictions of blessing and danger in the journey–because the Self is a transpersonal being unconcerned with individual heroism–and needs and goals–per se.

    I think Rhonda Kellogg’s work explores this idea, but that is an off-the-cuff reference, I’m not sure.

    What is really important here, I think, is that visual journaling with mandalas and other imagery can also assist us to imagine and understand our journey and its inevitable challenges and limitation. Creative images can be perceived, contemplated and appreciated apart from our immediate experience of life and literally give us that “bigger picture” that you describe in your post.

    Oh Tara, I’ve never gotten over the long-winded academic (animus!) in me, but thank you for guiding me in your warm, clear voice back toward the wisdom of mandalas and The Great Round!

    Love,

    Donna

  • Zeinab says:

    This article comes right on time for me! I think that I am in the refusal part of the hero’s journey and this article brought it back hoe to me. I know I have to do now to continue this journey.
    Thank you soooo much!

  • Tamara says:

    Tara, this is a beautiful integration of the hero’s journey into our own lives. On the hero’s trek, I too, am often startled by encounters with internal and external archetypes (how did that Jung get so darn clever?). Knowing this, the universality of our own journeys, gets to making me feel like less of a lone wolf, and more apart of an earnest, hopeful, clan. Thank you Wise Soul, for sharing your hero’s journey with us.

  • Melea says:

    I am in the trenches, but not always happy to be there and so want go back to refusal. Being a hero is complicated! Thanks for the encouragement as always.

  • Elysha says:

    I am in “lack of discernment but full willingness for adventure.” Meaning that I keep searching but am getting exhausted from the search and not finding answers. I would gladly follow the call if I knew what it was. I wonder where that falls. . .

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