Current:Home > Scams'Organs of Little Importance' explores the curious ephemera that fill our minds -FutureProof Finance
'Organs of Little Importance' explores the curious ephemera that fill our minds
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 10:44:53
Jungian psychology is having a moment, owing to the self-published The Shadow Work Journal that rode a TikTok-powered wave to become a surprise publishing behemoth.
The slim workbook, authored by a 24-year-old, outsold every other book on Amazon a few weeks ago and sent Google searches of "shadow work" soaring. Both the book and the notion of the shadow are inspired by Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung, whose view of the mind was that our conscious selves —our egos — are but a sliver of who we are, and that the vast forces of the unconscious are where to find our souls — our truest, most potent selves. Problem is, the unconscious is by its very nature not conscious, which means understanding ourselves requires interrogating the seemingly insignificant detritus of our minds. Hundreds of thousands of young readers have bought into Jungian shadow work because of the journal, but the notion of such work is a hundred years old.
Mind detritus becomes the stuff of great art in the hands of poet Adrienne Chung. "How curious our lives which line the sidewalk leading back," Chung notes, as she wrestles with her own shadows — and plumbs her unconscious — in her National Poetry Series-winning debut collection, Organs of Little Importance.
Borrowing its title from a Charles Darwin line, Organs is a panoramic exploration of the curious ephemera that fill our minds — the obsessions, memories and peccadilloes that never quite fade. "Why am I still scared of demons and loud noises, of my reflection in the mirror?," she wonders. "Why am I every age at once, each part of my body frozen in a different time?" Chung's own experience with a Jungian analyst is central to her poem "Ohne Tittel," and establishes themes threaded throughout — the elasticity of time, and the way dreams, as Jung found, can be of "cinematic importance."
If this all sounds too "woo woo," the 22-poems selected by Solmaz Sharif, will be instantly relatable for any fellow elder millennials, followers of Jung or not. The scenes of learning how to work the VHS player when she was three, the heavy pink blush of the 1980s, and watching the OJ Simpson trial from her classroom dislodged long-shelved memories of mine. And Chung's identity formation is rendered with clarity: a childhood watching endless hours of Disney princesses, a Chinese mother who dutifully donned duty-free makeup products, spotting a boy "whose shirt read 'Drink Wisconsibly.'"
Standouts in the collection include the expansive "Blindness Pattern," which plays with the symbolism and vibrancy of color, "The Stenographer" and its evocative feelings of midlife remove, and the propulsive stanzas of "The Dungeon Master." It is the trippy journey of the 15-sonnet-sequence Dungeon Master, sweeping and specific at once, that demonstrates a poet in complete command of her craft. She captured the many obsessions of her unconscious mind like butterflies in a net, unexpectedly awakening my own. For example, I share her bemusement that George W. Bush became a hobbyist painter, and had the exact same realization as Chung after watching a scene in True Detective season one, a moment she turns poetic:
"Someone on TV says that time is a
Flat circle, which leaves my mouth agape
Until I learned that it was Nietzshe,
not Matthew McConaughey, who said, Your
whole life,
like a sand glass, will always be reversed and
will ever run out again."
In writing of love, psychology, philosophy — even mathematics — Chung sprinkles in such observations, both highly personal and surprisingly universal. What a treat to spend an afternoon immersed in her world, to better understand her loneliness, to laugh as she indicts "one swipe and you're out" dating culture and feel the pangs of nostalgia for lost time as it rushes forward. Or does time actually rush forward? Matthew McConaughey and Nietszshe would have some thoughts.
veryGood! (682)
Related
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- SUPERBLOOM: A beautiful upside to the California downpours
- Shocked and Saddened Maury Povich Pays Tribute to Jerry Springer After His Death
- Vietnam's human rights record is being scrutinized ahead of $15 billion climate deal
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Olivia Wilde's Revenge Dress Steals the Show at 2023 Met Gala
- Jury Duty's Ronald Gladden Reveals What It Was Really Like Working With James Marsden
- Photos: Extreme Canadian wildfire smoke shrouds parts of U.S.
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Mindy Kaling’s Latest Project Has Her Stealing the Show at the 2023 Met Gala
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- Tom Pelphrey Shares How He and Kaley Cuoco Stayed Connected to Baby Girl During Date Night
- Met Gala 2023: Proof Patrick Mahomes and Brittany Mahomes Win Even Off the Field
- Proof Kendall Jenner and Bad Bunny Are Still Going Strong
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- NASA is sending an Ada Limón poem to Jupiter's moon Europa — and maybe your name too?
- Across Canada, tens of thousands have evacuated due to wildfires in recent weeks
- Dancing With the Stars' Len Goodman Dead at 78
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Pete Davidson's Karl Lagerfeld Tribute on the Met Gala 2023 Red Carpet Is Cool AF
Pregnant Meghan Trainor Apologizes for Controversial F--k Teachers Comment
Jennifer Lopez Is the Picture of Sexy Sophistication Baring Skin at Met Gala 2023
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Wildfires are bigger. Arctic ice is melting. Now, scientists say they're linked
Vanderpump Rules' Ariana Madix Shares What She's Learned Through Tom Sandoval Cheating Scandal
U.S., Development Bank Launch Incubator to Help Clean Energy Projects Grow