the senex is a complicatio of the puer, infolded into puer structure, so that puer events are complicated by a senex background. Although these two archetypal structures are intertwined, we shall draw the portrait of the senex away from the puer in sharpest relief and contradistinction in order to reflect the psychological tension between them. Nevertheless, the senex archetype is more than something "psychological," not merely a derivative of experience, an aspect of man and his behavior, an icon foisted upon life by man's idolatrous imagination. Rather, the senex is one of the crystallizations of monotheism's God, one of his numen multiplex, or, the senex is itself a god, a universal reality whose ontological power is expressed in nature and culture and the human psyche. As natural, cultural and psychic processes mature, gain order, consolidate and wither, we witness the specific formative effects of the senex. Personifications of this principle appear in the holy or old wise man, the powerful father or grandfather, the great king, ruler, judge, ogre, counselor, elder, priest, hermit, outcast and cripple. Some emblems are the rock, the old tree, particularly oak, the scythe or sickle, the time-piece and the skull. Longings for superior knowledge, imperturbability, magnaminity express senex feelings as does intolerance for that which crosses one's systems and habits. The senex also shows strongly in ideas and feelings about time, the past, and death. Melancholy, anxiety, sadism, paranoia, anality, and obsessive memory ruminations reflect this archetype. Moreover, the main image of God in our culture: omniscient, omnipotent, eternal, seated and bearded, a ruler through abstract principle of justice, morality and order, a faith in words yet not given to self-explanation in speech, benevolent but enraged when his will is crossed, removed from the feminine (wifeless) and the sexual aspect of creation, up high with a geometric world of stars and planets in the cold and distant night of numbers-this image depicts a senex god, a god imaged through the senex archetype. The high God of our culture is a senex god; we are created after this image with a consciousness reflecting this structure. One face of our consciousness is inescapably senex.
— James Hillman
Hillman's move here is ontological before it is psychological — he is not describing a personality type or a developmental stage but naming a god, and the distinction matters. The senex does not belong to you the way a complex belongs to you; it belongs to the order of things, to how matter crystallizes, ages, consolidates, and finally withholds. You do not have senex tendencies. You live inside a culture whose image of ultimate reality is constitutively senex — omniscient, wifeless, enthroned, vindictive when crossed. That god produced a specific shape of consciousness, and you inherited it before you had a choice.
What Hillman is tracking underneath the catalog of emblems — the oak, the scythe, the skull, the obsessive rumination — is the texture of a particular suffering: the suffering of what cannot move, cannot yield, cannot be crossed. Longing for imperturbability is not a virtue; it is senex hunger, the desire not to be disturbed by anything that does not fit the system. When that structure fails — and it fails through the puer, through eruption, through what the senex cannot contain — the rage and anxiety that follow are not pathologies to manage. They are the archetype disclosing its limits. The infolding Hillman names at the opening, senex as complicatio of puer, means neither can be understood without the other: order only exists because something keeps escaping it.
James Hillman·Senex & Puer·2015