Conovision is all about stories — and the storytellers who bring them to life. Stories about art, culture, and philosophy. Stories that inform, entertain, and inspire. Stories that invite us to reflect on who we are and where we’re going.
Hosted by Jim Conrad — a seasoned broadcaster and voice actor with over 40 years of experience, giving voice to the visions of others in film, radio, and television for a global audience — Conovision marks a new chapter: a platform for Jim to share the stories that matter most to him.
On Conovision, you’ll hear stories of success and hard-won truths, love and laughter, and personal histories from people whose lived experiences offer wisdom for the modern age.
At its heart, Conovision is a living archive — a home for spoken-word prose, poetry, and what Jim calls “Aural Intelligence”: a place where sound, storytelling, and meaning come together to spark reflection and connection.
Production and sound design by GGRP Studios in Vancouver, Canada.
Jim Conrad: Welcome to Conovision.
I'm your host, Jim "Cono" Conrad.
On episode 10, we tell stories about
the dark side, the dark side of the
moon, as metaphor for the shadow side
of the human psyche, the human soul.
What demons lurk, what fears lie submerged
in the Mariana Trench of our mind.
We will hear the poems and prose of
two literary gods, William Butler
Yeats and Cormac McCarthy, and their
revelations from the Shadowlands.
But first, a story about the tragic
sense of life, the tragic vision,
as so presciently illuminated in
mythology by the ancient Greek
playwrights and philosophers, and
why it matters so much to us now.
The word tragic, like myth, has been
somewhat debased in our modern times.
It has come to mean something
calamitous, something horrible as when
a television talking head intones,
tragedy tonight on the Westside freeway.
The ancient Greeks did
have a word for that.
It is catastrophe, but we do
have much to learn about who we
really are from recalling what our
ancestors intuited 26 centuries ago.
Their imaginative rendering of
the human dilemma, the dialectical
play of fate, destiny, character,
and choice still remains the best
paradigm for how life's permutations
play out on this finite plane.
Our predecessors discerned that we
often intend a certain outcome, work
diligently towards its achievement, and
yet wind up in an entirely different
place than expected in our lives.
And most disturbingly, this altered
course derives in substantial
measure from the choices that a
presumably conscious being made.
How could this be that we
could be our own enemy?
The ancient Greeks understood that
there were forces in the cosmos to
which even the gods were subject.
Those Greek gods being Aphrodite, the
goddess of love, sex, and beauty, Athena,
the goddess of reason, wisdom, and war.
Artemis was the fleet
footed goddess of the hunt.
Aries was the god of Bloodlust.
Apollo, who was the twin brother
of Artemis, was among the most
important and feared of the gods.
Son of Zeus, he disseminated the
will of his divine compatriots
through various means.
Notably, Oracles.
The Oracle of Delphi was his mouthpiece.
Demeter, an agricultural goddess
was mother to Persephone, who
was abducted by the underworld
god, Hades, to be his bride.
Dionysus was a son of Zeus
born to a mortal mother.
The cult of Dionysus revolved
around intoxication, sex,
and savage ritual sacrifice.
As mentioned, Hades ruled
the world of the dead.
Hera, the queen goddess of Olympus,
was both sister and wife to Zeus.
Though she is often depicted as reserved
and austere, she was mercilessly
vindictive when it came to her
husband's many extramarital adventures.
Like many gods in the Greek pantheon,
Hermes presided over multiple spheres.
He was a pastoral figure, responsible
for protecting livestock, but was
also associated with fertility,
music, luck and deception.
Poseidon is best known
as the Greek sea god.
But he was also the god of horses
and of earthquakes and had some
seriously strange children.
Though humanoid, he fathered
both the winged horse Pegasus, by
Medusa no less, and the cyclops,
Polyphemus, who is blinded by
Odysseus and his crew in the Odyssey.
And finally, with the assistance of Hades
and Poseidon, Zeus overthrew his father
Cronus, king of the Titans and became the
chief deity in a new pantheon, comprising
mostly of his siblings and children.
The forces of the universe to
which these gods were subject were
named Moirai, or Fate, sophrosyne.
Or what goes around comes around.
Diking for justice, nemesis, or
consequential retribution, and destiny.
These forces might be translated by
us today as the organizing balancing
structuring powers of the cosmo.
A word itself, which means order.
When we are ignorant of these forces
at work, as frequently we will be,
we most likely will make choices that
run counter to the principles and
energies of our own deepest nature.
Moreover, our ancestors believed
that we often offend the gods.
That is, violate the energetic
designs of which they are the
dramatized personifications.
Thus, a wound to Aphrodite will show
up in one's intimate relationships,
or one possessed by Aries will
act out of unreasoned anger.
With all its attendant consequences.
Accordingly, the ancient Greeks believe
that by reading the texture of one's life,
one can identify the ignored or repressed
archetypal powers, the gods offended,
and offer homage and compensation
to them to restore the balance.
Add to this mix, our predecessors
acknowledge the role of individual
character, which repeatedly plays a
role in the creation of our choices
and patterns, what they called hubris,
often translated as pride, might
more pragmatically be defined as
our tendency toward self-deception.
Especially the delusion that we are
in possession of all the facts when we
make decisions, what they called the
hamartia, sometimes translated as the
tragic flaw or the wounded vision, the
inherent biasing of our choices as a
result of our own psychological history.
Our tendency toward wrong choice
or unintended consequences is
fueled by these two liabilities.
The first is our temptation to
believe what we wish to believe,
the assumption that we know all we
need to know about ourselves and
the situation to make wise choices.
In fact, seldom do we know enough
even to know we do not know enough.
Moreover, there is a second element here,
namely the biasing of our vision by the
profound influence of our personal and
cultural histories, our experience subtly,
alters, even distorts the lens through
which we see the world and the choices
we make are based on that altered vision.
At birth, each of us is handed a
lens by our family of origin and our
culture through which to see the world.
As it is the only lens we have
ever known, we will presume we see
reality directly, even as we are
seeing it colored and distorted.
How could we ever choose wisely when our
information is biased, even inaccurate.
Only the corrections of others or
the corrections from our violated
psyche may oblige us to consider
that our fundamental way of seeing
and understanding is suspect.
From this encounter with our limitations,
the wisdom of humility comes to know that
we do not even know what we do not know.
And that what we do not know will
often make the choices for us.
Our lives begin and end with loss.
We lose the safest, least demanding
place we will ever inhabit with all our
needs met and are forcefully extracted
into a world of peril and contingency.
And we end our journey with
the loss of our mortal state.
Natural as it is to seek to hang on the
inevitability of loss rather asks that
we treasure what we have appreciated
for its precious, momentary presence in
our lives and know that its gift to us
is found precisely in its impermanence.
What would be ours in
perpetuity is less treasured.
What is fleetingly here is most dear.
The Greek myth of immortal Tithonus
relates how he found his life
meaningless because of his immortality.
Every choice this hour could be reversed
in another, and so he petitioned the
gods to grant him mortality so that
his life through his now risky choices
could be experienced as meaningful.
The god's blessed Tithonus.
We live today in the age of anxiety.
We would rather be ruined than changed.
We would rather die in our dread
than climb the cross of the
present and let our illusions die.
This excerpt from WH Auden's poem,
The Age of Anxiety, captures the
existential angst of being human.
At the turn of the last century,
Sigmund Freud published a book titled
Psychopathology of Everyday Life,
where he noted that one does not
have to visit a mental asylum in
order to observe psychopathology.
One can observe the machinations
of the divided soul in the
mechanics of ordinary life.
In his book, Freud detailed the
implicit motives walled off from
consciousness that interfere with the
ego's choices, and behaviors producing
namesake slips, forgetfulness, and
camouflaging of dangerous feelings
through acceptable disguises.
Freud, along with Carl Gustav Jung
helped our age find a new vocabulary.
Observed meaningful motives in the
confounding of consciousness and in
short helped us become psychological.
Now, in this new century, we are
driven to psychological inquiry.
In large part because our social and
religious institutions, as well as
our great educational, technological,
scientific, artistic, and humanistic
accomplishments have failed to prevent the
slaughter and madness of the 20th century.
The great Crystal Palace in London,
which in 1851 housed the first
international celebration of the newly
divine trinity of progress machinery
and materialism was by the next century
a glass and steel Hulk used by the
Nazi Luftwaffe as a navigational point
on their bombing runs over London.
It seems that not only minor interferences
of consciousness, but madness itself,
lurks beneath the veneer of civilization.
How else can we look at a
world where we are bombarded by
sensations, driven by addictions,
medicated beyond accountability,
agitated into constant motion, and
further from ourselves than ever.
Unless we begin to look psychologically,
unless we begin to consider,
there may be a deeper meaning.
After all,
Carl Gustav Jung added the thought
that the spiritually charged images
that once linked humanity to nature
and to the gods had eroded with the
waning powers of tribal mythologies
and sanctified institutions.
If points of spiritual reference
had disappeared for most, the modern
sensibility had to look within in
order to find the place where those
collective images were generated.
Jung wrote, we think we can congratulate
ourselves on having already reached
such a pinnacle of clarity, imagining
that we have left all these phantasmal
gods far behind, but what we have
left behind are only verbal specters.
Not the psychic facts that were
responsible for the birth of the gods.
We are still as much possessed
today by autonomous psychic
contents as if they were Olympians.
Today they are called
phobias and obsessions.
In a word, neurotic symptoms.
The gods have become diseases.
Zeus no longer rules Olympus, but
rather the solar plexus and produces
curious specimens for the doctor's
consulting room, or disorders,
the brains of politicians and
journalists who unwittingly let
loose psychic epidemics on the world.
The implications of Jung's
observations reverberate through
our culture and our personal lives.
In examining that seeming oxymoron, that
a god, an eternal one may die, he explains
that the name attached to a form may
fade, but the energy behind it has only
been transformed and reappears elsewhere.
Where did the gods go then?
The primal energies that gave rise to
the ancient gods have not gone away.
They have gone underground and
become unconscious, have a spectral
influence, even greater than
when they were embodied as gods.
The spiritual powers that the gods
embodied, the invisible world made
visible for a while, fall back
into the human psyche, and oblige
humankind to suffer separation
alienation and estrangement from them.
The most recent millennia began
with so much hope for progress, for
healing, for the solution of the
ancient scourges of mankind, became
the bloodiest in all of history.
The neuroses of individual politicians
embodied and channeled the unconscious
dynamics of the populace and led to
more murderous possession than that
ascribed to Satan during the Middle Ages.
The distractions and enticements of
popular media, newspapers, magazines,
film, and most of all social media and
television, delivered much information,
but in a deadly mix of popular fantasy,
collective projections, wishful
thinking, obscure motives, and shadowy
agendas that only dazzled intelligence.
What fills this existential void?
This meaning gap?
this time between the gods who have
vanished and the gods not yet arrived,
is the stuff of our daily life.
Where our ancestors had living
mythologies, we believe that
we have transcended such a need
and therefore stand naked and
vulnerable before the raw, sometimes
destructive powers of our nature.
Our hubristic belief that we are
in control of ourselves and nature
only makes us more unconscious
of what is at work within us.
Our ancestors could seek the relief of
their personal and tribal problems by
asking which god had been offended, and
then offering propitiation to reestablish
right relationship with that god.
To say that one has been offended by
Aphrodite today would be thought mad.
And what about the culture of sensation?
We are wrapped around by pop culture.
News that runs 24 hours creates info
junkies, local newscasts find the
glorious accident, the most salacious
scandal, the most paranoia, stirring
threats to public health, to serve up
for breakfast, for dinner, and to send
us toward turbulent slumber at bedtime.
Transient non-entities are catapulted
to fame, followed by cameras
throughout the course of their
ordinary days, and described with hyped
banalities of the unexamined life.
Romances, survival contests,
sensationalized disease reports, corporate
greed, political greed, all feed the
ever increasing lust for sensation.
Apparently, where one has no personal
life, no depth of character, one
must have an artificial life, an
avatar with someone else's values.
A life or a culture based on
sensation has no choice but to
continually escalate the sensations.
For we quickly grow desensitized
to their incessant drumbeat
and their failed promise.
A modern Dante descent into hell.
Might be defined as taking a good thing,
asking way too much of it, exhausting
it, and then being left with only it.
Beware The Ides of March is a famous
warning from William Shakespeare's play,
Julius Caeser spoken by a soothsayer to
Caesar foretelling his assassination.
The phrase symbolizes a foreshadowing
of tragedy and a fatal arrogance,
as Caesar dismisses the warning
as the words of a dreamer.
And finally, a friend in recovery
once told me that when he was
drinking, he always had this
strange feeling of impending doom.
And then when he got sober,
he realized what it was.
I asked him, what was it?
And he replied, impending doom.
Recall the words of Cassius from
Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.
Men at some time are
masters of their fates.
The fault dear Brutus, is not
in our stars, but in ourselves
that we are underlings.
The Second Coming by William Butler Yeats.
Turning and turning in the widening gyre,
the falcon cannot hear the falconer.
Things fall apart.
The center cannot hold.
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.
The blood dimmed tide is loosed,
and everywhere the ceremony
of innocence is drowned.
The best lack all convictions.
While the worst are full
of passionate intensity.
Surely some revelation is at hand.
Surely the second coming is at hand.
The second coming.
Hardly are those words out when
a vast image out of spiritus
mundi troubles my sight.
Somewhere in sands of the desert, a
shape with lion body and the head of
a man, a gaze blank and pitiless as
the sun, is moving its slow thighs.
While all about it, real shadows
of the indignant desert birds,
the darkness drops again.
But now I know that 20th centuries
of stony sleep were vexed to
nightmare by a rocking cradle.
And what rough beast, its hour
come round at last, slouches
towards Bethlehem to be born.
They road on
and the sun and the east flushed
pale streaks of light, and
then a deeper run of color.
Like blood seeping up in sudden
reaches, flaring plane wise, and
where the earth drained up into the
sky at the edge of creation, the
top of the sun rose out of nothing.
Like the head of a great red phallus until
it cleared the unseen rim and sat squat
and pulsing and malevolent behind them.
The shadows of the smallest stones
lay like pencil lines across the sand
and the shapes of the men and their
mounts advanced elongate before them,
like strands of the night from which
they'd ridden, like tentacles to bind
them to the darkness yet to come.
They rode on with their heads
down, faceless under their hats
like an army asleep on the march.
By mid-morning, another man had died
and they lifted him from the wagon where
he'd stay in the sacks he'd laid among
and buried him also, then they rode on.
Now wolves had come to follow them,
great pale lobos with yellow eyes that
trotted neat of foot were squatted
in the shimmering heat to watch them
where they made their noon halt.
Moving on again, loping, sidling, ambling
with their long noses to the ground.
In the evening, their eyes
shifted and winked out there
on the edge of the firelight.
And in the morning when the riders
rode out in the cool dark, they
could hear the snarling and pop of
their mouths behind them as they
sacked the camp from meat scraps.
The wagons drew so dry, they slouched from
side to side like dogs, and the sand was.
Grinding them away, the wheels shrank,
and the spokes reeled in their hubs
and plattered like loom shafts.
And at night they drive false spokes
into the mortises and tie them down
with strips of green hide and they
drive wedges between the iron of the
tires and the sun cracked fellows.
They wobbled on.
The trace of their untrue laborers
like side winder tracks in the sand.
The duledge pegs worked
loose and dropped behind.
Wheels began to break up.
10 days out with four men dead.
They started across a plane of pure
pumice where there grew no shrub,
no weed as far as the eye could see.
The captain called the halt and he called
up the Mexican who served as guide.
They talked and the Mexican gestured
and the captain gestured, and
after a while they moved on again.
A man from the ranks said, this looks
like the higher road to hell to me.
In two days, they began to come
upon bones and cast off apparel.
They saw half buried skeletons of
mules with the bones so wiped and
polished they seemed incandescent
even in that blazing heat.
And they saw panniers and pack
saddles and the bones of men, and
they saw a mule and tire that dried
and blackened carcass hard as iron.
They rode on.
The white noon saw them through the
waste like a ghost army, so pale
they were with dust, like shades
of figures erased upon a board.
The wolves loped paler yet and
grouped and skittered and lifted
their leans snouts on the air.
At night, the horses were fed by hand from
sacks of meal and watered from buckets.
There was no more sickness.
The survivors lay quietly in that
cratered void and watch the white
hot stars go rifling down the dark.
Or slept with their alien hearts beating
in the sand like pilgrims exhausted upon
the face of the planet Anareta clutched
to a namelessness wheeling in the night.
They moved on.
And they.
Iron of a wagon.
Tires group polished brightest
chrome in the pumice.
To the south the blue cordilleras
stood footed in their paler image
on the sand, like reflections in a
lake and there were no wolves now.
They took to rioting by night, silent
jornadas saved for the trembling of the
wagons and the wheeze of the animals.
Under the moonlight a strange party
of elders with the white dust thick
on their mustaches and their eyebrows.
They rode on.
And the stars jostled and arced
across the firmament and died
beyond the ink black mountains.
They came to know the night skies well.
Western skies that read more
geometric constructions than
those names given by the ancients.
Tethered to the pole star.
They rode the Dipper round while
Orion rose in the southwest
like a great electric kite.
The sand laid blue in the moonlight and
the iron tires of the wagons rolled among
the shapes of the riders in gleaming
hoops that veered and wheeled woundedly
and vaguely navigational like slender
astrolabes, and the polished shoes of
the horses kept hasping up like a myriad
of eyes winking across the desert floor.
They watched storms out there so
distant they could not be heard.
The silent lightning flaring
sheetwise and the thin black spine
of the mountain chain fluttering
and sucked away again in the dark.
They saw wild horses racing on a plane,
pounding their shadows down the night and
leaving in the moonlight of vaporous dust,
like the palest stain of their passing.
All night, the wind blew and the fine
dust set their teeth on edge, sand
in everything, grit in all they ate.
In the morning a urine colored sun
rose blearly through panes of dust
in a dim world and without feature.
The animals were failing.
They halted and made a dry camp without
wood or water, and the wretched ponies
huddled and whimpered like dogs.
That night, they rode through a region
electric and wild, where strange
shapes of soft blue fire ran over the
metal of the horse's trappings and
the wagon wheels rolled in hoops of
fire and little shapes of pale blue
light came to perch in the ears of the
horses and in the beards of the men.
All night sheet, lightning quaked
sourceless of the west, beyond the
midnight thunderheads, making a
bluish day of the distant desert,
the mountains on the southern skyline
stark and black and livid, like a land
of some other order out there whose
true geology was not stone but fear.
The thunder moved up from the
southwest and lightning lit
that does it all about them.
Blue and barren.
Great clanging reaches ordered out
of the absolute night like some demon
kingdom summoned up or changeling
land that come the day would leave
them neither trace nor smoke nor
ruin more than any troubling dream.
They rode on.
An excerpt from the novel Blood
Meridian, or The Evening Redness
in The West, by Cormac McCarthy.
Tales told by shadowy elders
around ancient campfires offered
both explanation and comfort.
Life hasn't changed that much.
Our dependence on explanation and
comfort still lies just under our
busy ambition and constant yearning.
This has been episode 10 of
Conovision, the spirit of storytelling.
We began with the words and wisdom
of Dr. James Hollis from his book,
finding Meaning in the Second Half of
Life, or how to finally really grow up?
Asking the eternal question,
where did the gods go?
Plus the literary Olympians.
William Butler Yeats and Cormac McCarthy.
I urge you to find every word they
wrote and read it slowly, please.
I'm Jim Conrad.
Thanks for listening.
And as always, remember, we
are all stories to be told.