Field, Farming

The field represents cultivated, worked land where crops such as grain are grown and spread to many. Farming the land is traditionally considered a crucial, human activity associated with hard, grounded labor, often seen as a symbol of feminine fertility through masculine work. As Jung writes,

"Where wheat and vine cultivation exist, there a civilized life prevails, but where there is no farming, the nomadic and hunter's uncivilized lifestyle dominates" (Psychology and Religion, par. 382). 

In this context, the field symbolizes not only the physical land but also the cultivation of one's life, efforts, and growth. The act of farming or working the land is symbolic of the process of developing and nurturing aspects of the self or one's destiny. It is a grounded, earthy pursuit with deep ties to life's cycles, the feminine aspects of creation, and the labor required for nurturing growth. The field can also represent the effort to harvest the fruits of one's labor, including wisdom, development, or personal achievement. 

(See also Bread and Grain.) 

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