The black image world is called the nigredo. Its metal isjead. The weather conditions there are dark, eerie, creepy, frightening, putrid, depressive, and melancholy. This moment of depth brings contact with the underworldly, the inferior. This is a time of debasement and getting lost. According to alchemy the nigredo is the initial phase of every process in which a transformation of form takes place. First, things must rot thoroughly like garbage, before they can be reduced to the rubble of disconnected parts in which the creative power once again has free play. The alchemist says that everything in the beginning is bitter and rotten. Initial processes either lead to putrefaction or have their beginning in rot. In this state of nigredo, one feels as though the whole world is falling apart-and especially that this nigredo statewitt" never pass away. The future is dark and confused. It seems as though the feeling of emptiness and isolation will last forever. The tempo of life in the midst of this rotting is sluggish. All en-ergy drains out of consciousness. In this bottomless pit one finds death, death as the only reality.
— Robert Bosnak
Bosnak is describing something the soul resists with every strategy available to it. The nigredo is not a passage — or rather, it does not announce itself as one while it is happening. That is the specific violence of it: the certainty that it will never pass away is not a cognitive error to be corrected but the actual phenomenology of the state. You are not mistaken about the darkness; you are inside a world whose defining feature is the absence of any visible exit.
What the alchemical language insists on, and what the pneumatic instinct in us fights hardest, is the necessity of the rot. Not the value of the rot — that framing already smuggles in a future in which the rot justified itself. The putrefaction is prior to meaning, prior to transformation, prior to any arc. The creative power has free play again only after the disconnected rubble — but you cannot get to the rubble by willing the rot to hurry. The sluggishness Bosnak names is not a symptom to be treated; it is the tempo of a process that will not be managed from above.
Every instinct trained by the last two thousand years of Western interiority says: find the higher ground, detach, let spirit carry you out. The nigredo says: there is no higher ground from here. That is not despair. That is the bottom, doing what only the bottom can do.
Robert Bosnak·A Little Course in Dreams·1986