Harpies: Those Things that Drain our Creative Soul

An archaeologist unearths the divine feminine, one archetype at a time...

Harpies: the official definition is from Greek mythology - creatures with the upper bodies of women, the lower bodies of birds. The spirit of sudden gusts of winds, sent by Hades to steal the souls of people and carry them off to the Underworld to torture them. They appear as both beautiful, winged maidens and ugly old women with sharp talons. 

But I'm more interested in a modern interpretation, one that I first encountered when reading Women Who Run with the Wolves by the Jungian psychologist Clarissa Pinkola Estes. Her definition of Harpies: those things that claw at us like predators, draining us of our creative energy, our sense of well-being, our sense of confidence.

Our sense of Who We Are.

Such as the fear of expressing oneself, of using one's voice. Do I have the strength and confidence to tell the truth in my writing? As Alexandra Fuller, the author of Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight, says, "I think you have to write about a million words to clean out of the pipes. I think we are afraid of our own voices and very self-censoring, and we write as if the book is going to publish and be read by people. Once we realize we're never going to get published and we just write; that's our voice."

But of course - we want to be published, right? Fuller's advice is well-taken, though. If we feel as though we are confessing our deepest thoughts to a diary no one will ever see, then that's the moment we free our voices, allowing the words to sneak past that censor, that ever-present detention hall nun that lies in wait, ready to snatch our most vulnerable and closely-guarded treasures.

Sort of reminds you of the old saying by William W. Purkey:

"You've gotta dance like there's nobody watching,
Love like you'll never be hurt,
Sing like there's nobody listening,
And live like it's heaven on earth."


So wherever I find myself in the world

Fully aware of those Harpies standing over my shoulder, waiting to pounce

I write on, doing the only thing I know to do

Letting their clattering beaks and flapping wings fade away, back into the Underworld.

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