sudden fall from a smooth-rising career, through an invisible depression in whose grip we struggle vainly-then Persephone reigns in the soul and we see life through her darker eye. It is as if we must go through a death experience in order to let go of our clutch on life and on the viewpoints of the human world and its Aristotelian psychology. It is as if we do not recognize the full reality of anima until attacked by Hades, until invisible forces of the uncon-scious underworld overpower and make captive our normalcy. Only then, it seems, are we able to discriminate psyche from human, ex-periencing in the belly of our intimate being that the psyche has connec-tions far removed from human concerns. Then we see human concerns differently, psychologically. The rape of Persephone does not happen just once in a life. Because this anima experience, this radical change in soul is a mythical occur-rence, it is always going on as a basic pattern of psychodynamics. Because this particular myth is central to the main Greek mystery cult of psychological transformation, that of Eleusis, Hades' rape of the innocent soul is a central necessity for psychic change.
— James Hillman
Hillman is not consoling you here. The fall he describes — the career that stops, the depression whose grip makes ordinary effort feel absurd — is not a crisis to be managed back toward the smooth-rising trajectory. It is the myth enacting itself, and the myth's logic runs in the opposite direction from recovery. Persephone does not ascend immediately. She reigns underground first, and what she offers is not restoration but a different eye.
Notice what the passage insists on: we do not recognize the full reality of psyche until normalcy is made captive. This is not poetic license. The soul's deeper connections — to what Hillman elsewhere calls the underworld perspective, the imaginal, the dead — remain invisible precisely as long as we are managing well. The "human world and its Aristotelian psychology" is the world of function, of feeling rightly calibrated to circumstance, of forward motion. The rape interrupts that. The question worth sitting with is not how to survive the interruption but what the interrupted soul now sees that the functional soul could not afford to.
The myth recurs. Hillman makes that structural: this is always going on, not once in a biography. The Eleusinian mysteries were yearly — the descent was not an emergency, it was a rhythm the Greeks built a whole cult around, because something about the soul requires it.
James Hillman·Re-Visioning Psychology·1975