ARMY Magazine - Monthly Issues ARMY Magazine ISSUE NO.7 - JUNE 2019 | Page 21

also “enchanted by the way that BTS has used various books…to weave complex tales full of symbolism.” Psychology, which tra- ditionally is studied by scholars and analysts, might be new to you. If it is, you are the person for whom Dr. Stein has writ- ten this book. He knew ARMY would want to find a way to con- nect these themes to BTS and to the Bangtan Uni- verse (BU), and he makes those connections by find- ing a balance between what ARMY wants to hear and what he wants us to under- stand about psychology. By mixing anecdotes about BTS with Jung’s ideas and analyses, Dr. Stein bridges the two worlds seamlessly. have been taught, to show others. Citing author Harry Wilmer in his book Practical Jung, Stein describes the persona as “a compromise between what we wish to be and what the surrounding world will allow us to be.” The mask of persona is usually fashioned from our experiences, families, and societies. Watching televi- sion, movies, and even ex- posing yourself to new mu- sic can alter the persona, as it has the potential to re- move you from your culture. Stein suggests travel as an important piece of this pro- cess because encountering new cultures allows us to become aware of differenc- es and similarities shared by the entire human race. In turn, our psyche begins the process of separating from an earlier persona, which is needed for growth in a pro- cess called individuation. Stein also states that Dr. Stein begins by ex- plaining that persona is a T.S. Eliot, a famous English mask we put on for the poet, once wrote that every world – what we want, or cat has three names: the one everybody knows, the one only the cat’s intimate friends and family know, and the name known by only the cat. Likewise, hu- mans have three names; most people, however, do not know their inner name. It is a moniker assigned be- fore we were named by our families and our societies. If we don’t know this name, Dr. Stein and BTS, through RM’s speech to the United Nations, encourage us to “find your name, find your voice by speaking yourself.” Neither finding your name nor speaking yourself is easy, however. Dr. Stein tells us it is often painstaking work to find our true name. Only then will we truly love ourselves, because to really love yourself, you must love all of your self, including the parts you fail to love, repre- sented by the shadow. 21