Carl Jung’s flood visions stir his imagination and make him wonder if seeing into the future just might be possible. Such experiences and coincidences will lead to a more complete theory of mind as well as the development of what Jung will call, Synchronicity.
For the initial posting that began this series, click here.
It was early fall in 1913 and Carl Jung had a definite feeling that something was about to happen. The feeling evolved into a deep sense of oppression that intensified daily.
In October of that year, during a trip he took alone, Jung has an hour-long flood visions that showed:
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Water covering much of Europe
- The flood contained the debris from civilization
- There were bodies of drowned people everywhere
At the end of the flood vision, all of the water turned to blood.
Two weeks later, he had the same insight, only a more vivid version. At the same time, an inner voice told him that what he was seeing was real. Of course, as a psychiatrist, he was constantly analyzing himself through all this, but he also wondered if his flood vision might be precognitive in nature. If his vision was showing him something of the future, all Jung could conclude was that perhaps a revolution was coming to Europe.
No revolution occurred and Jung’s visions subsided until the summer of 1914. At that time, he had a very intense dream that started in April and was repeated twice more in May and June. In this dream, he saw:
- Europe frozen over – snow everywhere with lakes, rivers and canals frozen solid
- Europe appeared deserted
- There was no green anywhere
The third time he had this dream, it ended with the understanding that the cold actual came from outer space.
At the end of July in 1914, Jung was invited to speak to the British Medical Association. The subject? “The Importance of the Unconscious in Psychotherapy.”
On August 1, World War I broke out in Europe and immediately Jung realized what his flood visions and other dreams meant and that they had come from his unconscious. The timing of the topic for his speech to the British Medical Association, he felt, was simply an additional “synchronistic” event that showed how series of paranormal coincidences can lead to an understanding of ourselves and the world around us.
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The blog post above, and the others like it, became so popular that I created a book using them as the basis for particular explorations of the paranormal. Titled, Carl Jung, Hauntings, and Paranormal Coincidences, it combines the Jung material with supporting information from my own experiences and those of others.
If you are interested in reading that book, you can find it in most online bookstores. Listed below, however, are direct book links to some of the larger retail outlets in the English speaking world:
Amazon.com, Amazon Canada, Amazon UK, Amazon India, Amazon Australia, Barnes and Noble, Kobo (Canada)
But if you would like to just browse through some of those postings on Carl Jung’s paranormal experiences, you can find those links below.
Happy reading.
Part 1: Carl Jung: Paranormal, Coincidences and Synchronicity
Part 10: The Flood (This post)
Part 12: The Final Breakthrough
Other articles on Jung, Synchronicity and the Paranormal
Carl Jung’s Contribution to Paranormal Study
Energizing Jung’s Ideas About Synchronicity
Jung on Synchronicity and the Paranormal
Why two geniuses delved into the occult
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