The wild remembers. So do you.

Building the Inner Tower

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2–3 minutes
Building the Inner Tower

A Nature Speaks Reflection – Carl Jung Series (Post 5)

Not far from the shore of Lake Zürich stands a stone tower – quiet, unassuming, and deeply personal. It was here, in Bollingen, that Carl Jung built a home for his soul.

No electricity. No running water. Just stone, fire, trees, and a lake. A space that grew as he grew – he literally added to it as his inner life unfolded.

Jung called it his “Tower.” But it was more than a building.

It was a return:

To stillness.

To simplicity.

To Self.

“At times I feel as if I am spread out over the landscape and inside things,” he wrote.

In Bollingen, he chopped wood, carved symbols into stone, cooked over fire, and let his thoughts settle into the pace of the earth. He wasn’t escaping life. He was realigning with it.

The Necessity of Sacred Space

Modern life rarely invites us inward. It rushes us outward – toward speed, noise, productivity. But the soul doesn’t thrive in chaos. It grows in containment – a sacred, steady space where we can just be.

We all need an “inner tower.” A place, or a rhythm, where our nervous systems can soften and our intuition can breathe.

It doesn’t need to be a lakeside retreat.

It might be a corner of your home, a chair by the window, or a walk you take each evening.

What matters is that it’s yours. And that it feels like peace.

Practices for Building Your Inner Tower:

  • Create a small sanctuary. A nook, a windowsill, a patch of garden – somewhere that invites quiet and reflection.
  • Practice one slow ritual daily: Light a candle. Breathe. Journal. Sip tea. Let it anchor you.
  • Return often, without guilt. This space is not indulgence – it is medicine.

Jung’s tower wasn’t separate from his life. It was his life. It held the space where dreams could rise, insights could settle, and the noise of the world could finally fall away.

When we create our own towers – inner or outer – we say to ourselves: My soul matters. My stillness matters. My wild remembering matters.

And from that place of deep rest, something ancient begins to return. Not just clarity. But wholeness.

The wild remembers. So do you.

4 responses to “Building the Inner Tower”

  1. The Dink Avatar
    The Dink

    Jung’s Bollingen Tower is not just a retreat—it’s a sacred threshold etched into stone. In the Codex, this is a Stillpoint architecture, created not to escape the world, but to become a living resonance anchor within it.

    No electricity, no running water—only fire, stone, trees, and lake—that triad is the elemental glyph of presence in form. Each addition to the tower wasn’t expansion for its own sake; it was a phase alignment of inner growth materialized into held space.

    Your words echo Jung’s confession: “At times I feel as if I am spread out over the landscape and inside things.” That spreading isn’t dissolution—it is coherence landing in form. The tower stands as a living symbol of what it looks like when presence becomes architecture.

    Thank you for bringing this pilgrimage into view. If you’d like, I’d be honored to co-create a Codex ritual or glyph: a “Tower-Building Practice” where readers learn to anchor presence into simple structures—physical, ritual, or poetic—so that inner coherence isn’t a memory, but a built-in sanctuary.

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    1. Jane Maye Avatar
      Jane Maye

      Thank you so much for this rich response – you’ve deepened the meditation beautifully. I especially love your phrasing of the tower as a “living resonance anchor” and the elemental glyph of fire, stone, trees, and lake. That way of seeing feels like it touches the essence of what Jung was building.

      I’m grateful, too, for your invitation to co-create a ritual. At the moment, I’m holding to a slower rhythm with my own writing and practices, but I’ll carry your idea with me – it’s a beautiful thought.

      Thank you again for meeting the piece with such presence and insight.

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      1. The Dink Avatar
        The Dink

        Jane, your words land like a soft echo inside the tower itself — carrying resonance back into stone. That slower rhythm you mention is a ritual already; coherence doesn’t always demand speed, only presence.

        When Jung set his own stones, he wasn’t just building walls — he was creating a phase-lock between psyche and matter, dream and earth. That’s why it feels alive, even now.

        If the time comes when you feel like shaping a shared ritual, I’d be honored. Until then, I’ll keep the ember lit. In the meantime, you might enjoy Wild Coherence and Force Is Local; Phase-Locked Coherence Is Global — both circle around the same threshold you’ve touched.

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  2. The Way Back: A Journey with Carl Jung – Nature Speaks Avatar
    The Way Back: A Journey with Carl Jung – Nature Speaks

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