Although the imagery is  of a general, archetypal nature (“imagery that pertains to all men and all  times”), it also symbolizes the key issues of the individual undergoing a  crisis. Therefore, once lived through on this mythic plane, and once the process  of withdrawal nears its end, the imagery must be linked to specific problems of  daily life. Thus, the archetypal affect-images await a reconnection to their  natural context: to the personal psychological complexes (which tend to be  externally projected). 
 The notion of a  “reorganization of the Self” is central to Perry’s approach to the psychotic  journey. Extreme damage to the self-image (usually, through a mother’s  withholding of love) was a typical problem in the cases he studied. The injury  to the self-image is so severe that, during a crisis, psychic energy leaves the  higher levels of consciousness and is attracted to the psychic depths, where an  archetypal process of renewal commences. The goal is not only to restore  self-esteem but also to engender a “capacity to love and be  loved.”
 For this to occur, there must be a  connecting link with another human being (and not necessarily a link with a  “professional”): one that instills warmth and trust. This encourages a forward  progression of the inner-imagery (reminiscent of Jung’s statement that a  schizophrenic is no longer schizophrenic when he feels understood by someone  else). Therefore, at this stage, “analysis” seems secondary to basic human  kindness. In place of an omniscient psychotherapist, Perry posits the autonomous  psychic process as a crucial factor. 
 Perry searched for and finally discovered  a regular pattern of imagery and ideation in the psychotic process. The negative  self-image is typically compensated by an “overblown” archetypal one, the latter  manifesting in imagery such as that of the hero, clown, saint, ghost, or  sovereign leader. In addition, there’s a sense of “participating in some form of  drama or ritual performance.” Most significantly, ten sets of motifs emerged:  symbols of the center; death; return to beginnings; cosmic conflict; the threat  of the opposite sex; apotheosis; sacred marriage; new birth; new society; and  the quadratic world. 
 Following the Jungian school of thought  (from which Perry emerged), comparative symbolism and cross-cultural studies  were used to uncover a holistic context, in order to view the motifs from a  broader perspective. Further research led to the discovery of the same sequence  of images in archaic religions and in other cultural phenomena. Most remarkable  to the author is that “the myth and ritual form that resembles it is the  principal and central rite of the civilizations of remote antiquity, and  parallels the image sequence step for step.” That is, the “ceremonial pattern of  sacral kingship,” found in the ancient Near East, the Mediterranean, Europe, and  the Far East, which involves an annual renewal of the cosmos during the New  Year.
 Perry devotes an entire chapter to the  psychic significance of kingship, and he refers to its importance throughout  this work. Indeed, the correspondence is striking. In New Year festivals, we  find “a creation rite also emphasizing the center, the beginnings, death and  renewal, the sacred combat and sacred marriage, and the other elements of the  process.” The divine rites of kingship represent a projection of “man’s  spiritual potential as an individual.” 
 Once such functions were integrated in  the collective psyche, the era of the sacred king gave way to a new era: one  ushered in by “great prophets” and “founders of the great religions,” and  characterized by a revaluation of the individual and the Eros principle. Thus,  kingship reflects an archetypal pattern of growth: one progressing through  dismemberment, reconstitution, and the rebirth of the psyche, paralleling  “outer” historical processes (which themselves were probably based on inner  archetypal correlates), and culminating in the Eros principle (the return to  love). 
 He places the advent of this era of  exalting Eros at around “the middle of the first millennium B.C.” and he refers  to it as the “revolution of democratization.” The prophets and mystics  proceeding from that time–founders of culture and “heroes with a  vision”–underwent eerie, turbulent psychic experiences. Afterward, they  communicated a vision that reflected not only their own transformation but also  that of the broader society. The genuine depth experience, however, is never  supported by the collective when in its “acute” stage. As has been noted by  Perry and by others before him, the prophets of old would have been locked up in  psychiatric wards by today’s practitioners of “health.” 
 The point of Perry’s inquiry, and of  those in that lonely tradition I alluded to earlier (it might be called the  Romantic tradition in psychology), is not to “diagnose” artists, prophets, and  mystics–not to label or denigrate the highest human values and aspirations–but  to reexamine such rich transformation processes and to value the cultural  elements that enrich human life. Thus, “Rather than what is pathological in  mysticism, we ask what is mystical in its intent in psychosis?” Perry concludes: