"It may truthfully be said that the non-mystic rather than the mystic is unusual. He is the over-intellectualized person who sees the world only in sharp outlines grinding on like a soulless machine. Carl Jung speaks of this man as most in need of a psychiatrist. When such a man retires and is forced to withdraw his attention from his business or profession, he finds his world reduced to a flat desert with no mountains reaching above the clouds, no valleys with unseen depths. At that time, reports the psychiatrist, he may dream of a withered tree stripped of its leaves."
Howard Brinton, The Religious Philosophy of Quakerism p. 45 (Pendle Hill 1979).
Howard Brinton, The Religious Philosophy of Quakerism p. 45 (Pendle Hill 1979).