• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary navigation
  • Skip to footer

Margaret Duarte

Visionary Fiction

  • About
    • FAQ
    • Just for Fun
    • Privacy Policy
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Happenings
  • Media
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Awards
  • Testimonials
You are here: Home / For Writers / Images and Symbols / Making the Invisible Visible

Images and Symbols / Making the Invisible Visible

February 20, 2012 by Margaret Duarte

“By taking the lid off the unconscious, we can be guided by its knowledge,” says Bernie Siegel, in an article titled Making the Invisible Visible–How dreams and drawings reveal the unknown and invisible. 

Siegel, a self-described Jungian surgeon, encourages his patients to share, through drawings, their experiences of life and illness.

He, in turn, uses these drawings to make therapeutic decisions based not just on intellect, but also inner knowingness.

“What makes our species unique,” he says, “is not our ability to reason, but our use of symbols.  Through images and symbols, the invisible is made visible.”

This got me to thinking.

Fiction writers also make the invisible visible by taking the lid off the unconscious–allowing it to speak (in case of the writer) and be spoken to (in case of the reader)–through the use of images and symbols.In her book, Between the Lines, Master the Subtle Elements of Fiction Writing, Jessica Page Morrell explains how writers use imagery and figurative language to express something that is not the literal meaning, convey abstract ideas, and add complexity and implications to their work.

She writes, “Used artfully imagery acts almost like a sixth sense, whispering to the reader’s subconscious.”

Writers “use imagery to appeal to the reader’s associative powers,” Jessica says, “allowing an image to appear as a whole in the reader’s imagination, complete yet connecting with all the sensations surrounding it.”

Images, “intensify the unspoken, often creating patterns that resonate with meaning and help to explain or stand in for difficult-to-describe concepts and emotions.”

A lesson for writers:  Readers have an intuitive understanding of symbolism, so don’t be afraid to use it.

As always, thanks for stopping by,

Filed Under: Book Talk, For Readers, For Writers Tagged With: Bernie Siegel, Between the Lines, imagery, images and symbols, invisible visible, Jessica Page Morrell, symbolism

About Margaret Duarte

Former middle school teacher, Margaret Duarte, lives on a California dairy farm with a herd of “happy cows,” a constant reminder that the greenest pastures lie closest to home. Margaret earned her creative writing certificate through UC Davis Extension and has since published four novels in her “Enter the Between” visionary fiction series: Between Will and Surrender, Between Darkness and Dawn, Between Yesterday and Tomorrow, and Between Now and Forever. Her poem and story credits include SPC Tule Review; The California Writers Club Literary Review; finalist in the 2017 SLO Nightwriters Golden Quill Writing Contest; First Place winner for fiction in 2016, Second Place winner for fiction in 2018, Honorable Mention for fiction in 2019, and Gold winner for fiction in 2020 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA PUBLISHERS AND AUTHORS Book Awards Competition; 2019 California Author Project winner for adult fiction.

Footer

Blog Updates

Like me

Categories

Founding Member of VFA

Copyright © 2025 · Author Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in