What are you trying to reveal by integrating mythology and mundane life?
The characters portrayed in different myths are what Jung referred to as archetypical characters. That is, they’re a certain personality, a certain energy, that pops up again and again throughout different cultures and ages. Dionysus appears in one place, then Bacchus in another, and then Zagruess, and so on. They wear different clothes, and the character changes somewhat from incarnation to incarnation, but it’s a basic, elemental personality. And we all have those things in our lives, in our dreams and fantasies. We think of these things now as concrete, unchangeable forms, but they were simply characters in stories that were passed from one group to another. Each individual adds their own spin on how the characters appear, but there’s this interesting fact behind that: There’s a personality there that seems to remain constant – no matter where, no matter when. I honestly don’t see these characters as standing side-by-side with mundane life, though. What I mean to say is, there is no