AN
INTRODUCTION TO CIRCLEWORK™
by Jalaja Bonheim, Ph.D.
Today,
thousands of groups all around the country are choosing to
meet in circles. This is new - just a few decades ago, you
would have found the same groups sitting in a classroom format.
Intuitively, people sense that the circle has something to
offer them. People often comment that the circle helps them
feel a sense of community, and that it reminds them of the
value of equality - in the circle, nobody occupies a "special"
position.
However, most groups that gather in a circle are not practicing
Circlework™. While Circlework™ may include a wide
range of elements such as emotional healing work, discussion,
physical exercise, and so on, it is first and foremost a spiritual
practice that begins and ends with awareness of the center.
This awareness of, and reverence for, the center as a place
of sacred power, distinguishes Circlework from other types
of circle gatherings.
Circlework™ begins and ends with the intention of listening
to the voice of the center, the voice of spirit-or, if you
prefer, to the voice of our own deepest wisdom, of which the
center is the universal symbol. Circlework™ deepens
our receptivity and strengthens our connection to spirit.
Like a giant ear, or like a satellite dish, the circle helps
us tune in to vast resources of healing, wisdom and guidance.
Many people have found Circlework™ to be a powerful
agent of individual healing, transformation, and growth.
I personally feel primarily called to lead women's circles,
and to train women in circle leadership. However, Circlework™
can take myriad forms. Today, circles are forming in schools
and hospitals, in businesses and in the corporate world. Young
and old, men and women are beginning to reclaim the circle
as a tool for healing themselves, their families and communities.
Circlework™, as we practice it today, is both ancient
and brand new. It's ancient in that humans have always gathered
in circles to pray, celebrate, and seek spiritual communion.
Throughout the ages, around the planet, the center of a circle
has been revered as symbol of the universal source. At the
same time, Circlework™ is new, because we know, in a
way our ancestors did not, that we live on a small planet
where all beings are interconnected. We know that we cannot
survive unless we evolve into planetary citizens and agents
of world peace. In addition, the increasing complexity of
the human psyche demands that we apply all the insights and
skills of modern psychology to the art of Circlework™.
In Circlework™, we develop psychological and spiritual
maturity simultaneously.
In the twentieth century, the great psychologist C.G. Jung
was the first to acknowledge the power of the circle as an
archetype of wholeness and integration. As he pointed out,
the center of a circle is an ancient and universally understood
symbol of God, Spirit, the Source, the One. He described the
circle archetype as a much-needed medicine for the modern
illness of psychological and social disintegration. Jung himself
painted circular images called mandalas, and used mandala
art in his work with patients. Circlework™ builds on
Jung's insights, but takes them one step further by reclaiming
the circle as a vessel for groups to experience healing and
wholeness, not just individuals.
Each human being is both a unique, separate individual and
a social creature. Therefore, we need both solitary and communal
forms of spiritual practice. Because our society has for the
last few centuries worshipped at the altar of individualism,
we have gathered a great wealth of spiritual practices that
can be done without a community. Meditation, prayer, visualization,
and yoga are just a few examples.
However, we're impoverished in the arena of communal practice.
Most communal forms of spiritual practice reflect specific
religious doctrines. Thus, Catholics participate in the Mass,
and Moslems in communal prayer. While these are rich, beautiful
practices, they don't support spiritual communion between
people of diverse religious faiths. Moreover, growing numbers
of people no longer feel aligned with institutional religion.
More and more people feel spiritually alone and disconnected.
They yearn for spiritual community, but all too often don't
know where to find it, or how to create it.
Circlework™ is a spiritual rather than a religious practice,
and is not based on any particular creed. Therefore, it has
the power to unite people who hold widely divergent religious
and spiritual beliefs, or who have no particular beliefs at
all. The only prerequisite for Circlework™-the foundation
that all members of a circle must share - is respect for life
in all its forms, and a commitment to individual, social,
and planetary wholeness.
Circlework™ offers a powerful tool for planetary as
well as personal healing. As a form of relationship practice,
it teaches us the ways of peaceful co-existence, skillful
communication, and compassionate love of self and others.
At the same time, Circlework™ hones our receptivity
to spirit-something we urgently need to cultivate at this
time in history. Our brains, miraculous though they are, are
incapable of meeting the challenges we now face. If we continue
to rely on them alone for guidance, we will no doubt go the
way of the dinosaurs, taking thousands of other species with
us. Circlework™ offers a non-religious way for people
to gather in sacred space, and to access vast resources of
creativity and compassion-resources that can help accomplish
what none of our politicians have been able to do, namely
to secure a livable planet for our children and our children's
children.
Jalaja Bonheim