Essentially, Active Imagination is a dialogue that you enter into with the different parts of yourself that live in the unconscious. In some ways it is similar to dreaming, except that you are fully awake and conscious during the experience. This, in fact, is what gives this technique its distinctive quality. Instead of going into a dream, you go into your imagination while you are awake. You allow the images to rise up out of the unconscious, and they come to you on the level of imagination just as they would come to you in dream if you were asleep. In your imagination you begin to talk to your images and interact with them. They answer back. You are startled to find out that they express radically different viewpoints from those of
— Robert A. Johnson
The sentence breaks off mid-thought, and that truncation is itself instructive — because the thing Johnson is describing also arrives before you are ready for it. You sit down expecting a technique, a procedure, something you can manage, and instead you get a voice that disagrees with you. Not slightly. Radically. That adverb is doing real work: the images hold viewpoints you have not licensed, do not endorse, and cannot explain by reference to your conscious intentions.
This is where most introductions to active imagination quietly soften what Johnson is actually reporting. The literature tends to frame it as enriching, integrative, a way of finding inner resources. And it can be all of those things. But the first disclosure is stranger and less comfortable: there are presences in you that do not share your preferences, your values, or your preferred story about yourself. They have been forming in the dark, shaped by everything the ego has not claimed.
What startles is not the strangeness of the images but their autonomy. They are not projections of what you already think; they push back against it. Active imagination, at its sharpest, is less a growth practice than a confrontation — the conscious personality meeting what it has been busy not knowing about itself.
Robert A. Johnson·Inner Work: Using Dreams and Active Imagination for Personal Growth·1986