Jung, Jung, Jung I want to read A passage from one of his lectures Which I think is One of the greatest things he ever wrote And which has been a very marvelous thing for me People forget That even doctors have moral scruples And that certain patients' confessions Are hard even for a doctor to swallow Yet the patient does not feel himself accepted Unless the very worst of him is accepted too Unless the very worst of him is accepted too And yet, the patient does not feel himself accepted Unless the very worst of him is accepted too No one could bring this about by mere words It comes only through reflection And through the doctor's attitude towards himself Of his own dark side If the doctor wants to guide another Or even accompany him a step of the way He must feel with that person's psyche When he passes judgment Unless the very worst of him is accepted too Unless the very worst of him is accepted too And yet, the patient does not feel himself accepted Unless the very worst of him is accepted too Whether he puts his judgements into words or keeps them to himself Makes not the slightest difference To take the opposite position And to agree with the patient offhand is also of no use Feeling comes only through unprejudiced objectivity This sounds almost like a scientific precept And it could be confused with a purely intellectual Abstract attitude of mind But what I mean is something quite different It is a human quality A kind of deep respect for the facts For the man who suffers from them And for the riddle of such a man's life The truly religious person has this attitude He knows that God has brought All sorts of strange and inconceivable things to pass And seeks in the most curious ways to enter a man's heart He therefore senses In everything the unseen presence of the divine will Unless the very worst of him is accepted too Unless the very worst of him is accepted too And yet, the patient does not feel himself accepted Unless the very worst of him is accepted too Unless the very worst of him is accepted too Unless the very worst of him is accepted too And yet, the patient does not feel himself accepted Unless the very worst of him is accepted too This is what I mean by unprejudiced objectivity It is a moral achievement on the part of the doctor Who ought not to let himself be repelled By sickness and corruption