Riddle

It is a common theme for the hero to face a riddle (Oedipus and Bilbo are two well-known examples) that must be solved in order to proceed. In countless legends and tales, the inability to answer a riddle often means having to give up something, not infrequently one’s life.  

Similarly, the ego (which the hero symbolizes) is confronted with a riddle in its encounter with the unconscious. Every dream is, in fact, a riddle—we always ask ourselves: "What does this mean?" The riddle is a symbol that must be "cracked," perhaps through reflection, focus, and wisdom. A riddle often revolves around understanding the "nature" of something, a process of bringing it into consciousness.

In earlier times, across various cultures, riddles were both entertainment and competition. The one who poses a riddle that the other cannot answer gains the upper hand—this can be seen as a power game; one tries to ensnare the other with a riddle, but if the respondent knows the answer, they slip away. Failing to answer can also signify submission to the questioner's knowledge and wisdom. Similarly, it is wisdom that is tested in Parsifal when he faces the decisive question: "Whom does the Grail serve?" As young and self-centered, he does not understand, but when he returns twenty years later, wiser and humbled, he knows better.

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