The Sword
Learn about The Sword symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Hearth
Learn about The Hearth symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Gate
Learn about The Gate symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Garden
Learn about The Garden symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Forest
Learn about The Forest symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Desert
Learn about The Desert symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Crossroads
Learn about The Crossroads symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Chalice
Learn about The Chalice symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Cave
Learn about The Cave symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Castle
Learn about The Castle symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
Morphology & Myth, but femme
INTRODUCTION
The Official Lexicon of OTHERWIS3 series #001
Series 0401: SYMBOLS
Symbols… there’s lots of ways to see them. We’re from American of central european descent. Which means we remember the Freud led to both Jung and Bernays. The former was his european student while the later was his american nephew.
Is the old gaurds interpretation serving us today?
Seems to us, the reciepts are due. And we may need to have a friendly debate with some managers.
In the world of OTHERWIS3, symbols represent, ahem, situations. Each Situation Card has three states of being. A challenge, a change, and a conclusion, summarized with one word on the left, center, and right side of the card.
The Bonfire
Learn about the bonfire symbol according to Jung, Literature, and team OTHERWIS3.
The Bridge
It All Begins Here