seeker archetype

The Seeker Archetype

It is no surprise that the seeker archetype is one of the most difficult to define. Pinning down this roving icon becomes more complicated the longer you spend following her this way and that. She’s like the seed of a dandelion cast on the wind.

The Lost Seeker Archetype

When she starts out, the seeker archetype continually wanders to find something undefined. The unevolved, shadow seeker isn’t sure what she is seeking. She knows that she is after something, but committing to what that something is can prove tricky. This results in her feeling like something is lost. That something may be her. She becomes the consummate lost soul.

Typically the seeker is certain that the search has something to do with learning about the way life, the world, and maybe even the cosmos. She may refuse to get more specific than that for fear of pigeonholing her quest. The seeker realizes that by framing the question, she is already determining the answer.

This ambiguity does not water down the confidence of the people influenced by the seeker. The seeker carries at her core an intense inner drive to continue on regardless. This is part of the gift of this archetype.

The Seeker’s Quest for Answers

The seeker has a habit of asking unanswerable questions and not allowing them to rest. The seeker wants to know why life is the way it is not just for humans, but often for the entire universe. The questions that the seeker asks are not necessarily questions that can be answered such as “Why are we here?” and “How did life begin?” and “What other life is out there?”

Just because we can’t answer these questions, doesn’t mean they are is not worth seeking after. These inquiries bring a deep sense of meaning for all of humanity, calling us to something greater than ourselves and bringing us out of our day-to-day existence. The seeker archetype serves us all in this way.

Asking about the meaning of life brings meaning via the search. This is the classic, “the journey is the destination.”

Astronomers as seekers use highly evolved telescopes to look and listen far out into the universe. They are trying to find out, “Is there more life out there?” Think of how many astronomers looked for many decades and died without ever coming to the answer. That doesn’t mean that their search was fruitless. They gained so much along the way – wonder, immersion, discovery, bliss, anticipation, and more.

Literal to Symbolic Search for Truth

The seeker often starts out her journey expecting to find truth and answers some where; that is to say in some physical location. She moves about the earthly plane hoping truth will be found under a rock, in the heart of a city, swept up in romance, bowing at the feet of a guru, following the road to a holy site, gazing at a wonder of the world, or laying in a field of sunflowers. The truth she seeks is personal truth.

The maturation of those with the seeker archetype brings the realization that the search is not an outward search. The ends of the earth can be reached. The seeker turns inward to travel beyond the senses and beyond this world. She finds a limitless terrain vast enough to match her enormous questions.

As she evolves, the seeker archetype looks for a thing, a feeling, a knowing, an experience called truth. This is not truth with a lowercase t mind you, but Truth with a capital T. She goes beyond personal truth to universal Truth. Concrete physical facts or data that satisfy scientists and engineers are a bore for the seeker. She is different than the student archetype in that she doesn’t like a syllabus and a course schedule.

The answers she seeks leave concern for tangible things. The seeker wants to know what she cannot touch with the five senses, and this desire ultimately leads her beyond this earthly plane.

The Wanderer Archetype

One of the variations of the seeker archetype is the wanderer. The wanderer archetype has less fire for an outcome than the seeker. She is lulled into a quiet, comfort that comes via endless travel be it outward or inward travel. The wanderer is more comfortable with uncertainty than certainty, which is both a blessing and a curse. The wanderer can abandon loved ones and commitments. She forgets the important truth that connection and community bring wisdom too.

The comfort with uncertainty helps those with the wanderer archetype to practice the spiritual grace of detachment, embracing the present moment. As long as the wanderer stays intent on not being attached to being detached, gifts of the now flow freely.

The Seeker’s Light & Shadow

Suffering comes when the shadow seeker longs to be like everyone else, wishing she could be content with the simple, stationary life. This is not an archetype meant for putting down roots, although friends and community may be exactly what the seeker needs to keep from becoming a lost soul.

The shadow side of the seeker is also someone who doesn’t let go of the answer she expects. If she sets out to find a treasure chest full of gold and instead finds self-love, she misses the opportunity. When she thinks the answer is “out there” and refuses to return home, she misses the cosmic Truth that what she is searching for was under her feet the whole time. She keeps trying to find the person she thinks she should be instead of who the journey has made her into. 

The light aspect of the seeker archetype is the brilliant opening up to the universe. An expansion occurs for all of humanity when just one person begins to question. This creates a ripple, then a storm of cosmic Truth that helps the whole wake up.

Detachment and openness are the light side of the seeker. The seeker brings solace in the aloneness that sometimes comes along the path. The tie to something larger than herself brings faith and courage to the seeker archetype.

Seeker archetype examples in movies: The Way; Contact; Close Encounters of the Third Kind; Seven Years in Tibet. 

Seeker archetype in books: The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho, The Conference of the Birds by Attar, Eat Pray Love by Elizabeth Gilbert

 

Explore your relationship with the
seeker archetype…

the learners class

The “Learner Archetypes” Online Class

In this four-part audio course, “The Learners,” Stacey Couch goes in-depth into the student, dilettante, and seeker archetypes. These archetypes share a perpetual love of learning, driven to know about the nature of life. The student converts experience into knowledge and wise action. The dilettante turns information overload into the grace of awe. The seeker transforms ambiguous questions into universal truth.

 

 

Stacey Couch

About Author, Stacey L. L. Couch

Stacey Couch is a Spiritual Advisor who supports creative seekers learning as they go on the spiritual path. She serves beginner and life-long students of the soul. Her compassionate and collaborative approach honors the humanity and value of each person. Wisdom found in story, mysticism, and nature provide guidance and healing in her work. Through meeting with Stacey, lost souls find refuge. Connection to the Divine is realized. Belonging comes. She is the author of Gracious Wild: A Shamanic Journey with Hawks. Learn About working with Stacey
17 replies
  1. Anna oreilly
    Anna oreilly says:

    Hi stacey, I nearly got to your drumming last wed but solitude has been my healing mode even more than usual. The seeker really resonates with me. I love your description. My favorite book now is the Tao de Ching for the second half of life. I’ll schedule an appt with you before too long. Thanks for your emails. Anna

    Reply
    • Stacey Couch
      Stacey Couch says:

      I too am caught up in the wisdom of the Tao te Ching. It is a profound text. I’m so glad you’re enjoying my newsletters. I look forward to the next time we can connect. In Gratitude, Stacey

      Reply
  2. laura
    laura says:

    Thank you for taking the time to write about these archetypes….it is incredibly helpful. I am a seeker. I am going to keep this article to remind me of how my seeker operates in my life. Sometimes I feel lost, unfocused, and confused when I get distracted by the call ( and pull) of the search. I think this article will be a great refocusing tool for me. This article perfectly describes the tension I experience between the drive to seek Truth and my longing to be connected, grounded, and settled in the moment. I have spent my life traveling toward any experience that I felt “called me”. If I had to put it (my truth) into words I would say I was looking for connection, the reason I am here, and a feeling of belonging/home. You are correct… the only sustaining Truth I have found comes from within and not from any outward experience. My experiences did ultimately bring me to find the my Truth (connection and grounding), but it was really through the experience of literally being forced to sit still with myself. I finally see that in order to seek inward I need to quit creating chaos by jumping into everything “that speaks to me” in my life. As I settled, I began to see the truth within (who I am beyond my ego and experiences)…..this is where serenity truly lives.

    Reply
  3. Pattie o'Brien
    Pattie o'Brien says:

    Once again you spoke to something in my life. I am definitely The Wanderer, even if I am not physically moving about this planet. I thirst for knowledge on so many levels.

    Thank you Stacy for your insight. Miss you.

    Reply
  4. Jaymie
    Jaymie says:

    Thank you, Stacey, for yet another, helpful, interesting post — This truly resonates with me as well. I’ve been wandering my entire life, taking nothing at face value.

    Reply
    • Stacey Couch
      Stacey Couch says:

      I’m glad that you found this article of service Jaymie. So often in wandering to find a way to explain the patterns in our lives we forget to look at the wandering as a pattern. Blessings to You, Stacey

      Reply
  5. Thomas Shane Upton
    Thomas Shane Upton says:

    Thank you Stacey 🙂 your article was very informative and answered many of my inner questions. I’m currently searching for a spiritual sanctuary to devote my time to in order to discover these meanings and things that most are either too disbelieving to discover or too afraid to see beyond the veil of ordinary life.

    Ive lived pretty much my entire life in seclusion apart from school just because I never had the same interests as others and felt like it was meaningless in the grand scheme of things, I didn’t find any joys in just living and always felt like I wanted more than was on offer. After a while I became alienated from everyone else and was commonly pushed away from misconceptions the few times I did try to reach out by the time I became interested.

    I found solace in solitude and technology up until I had a spiritual awakening 3 years ago at 25 and discovered the mask I had always put on to please others was just that, a mask from myself, I had no idea who I was or who I wanted to be and never had a defining goal in my life. It was only a short few months ago I found my calling in spirituality and wanted to discover all I could about astral projection, intuition, concepts of religion etc. and I keep pushing myself to discover more despite what anyone would think.

    Opinion and judgement always bothered me before up until 3 years ago and now it never even crosses my mind. I’m perfectly content discovering my own truths and confident that the right ones will be drawn to me. Again thank you for this article and I hope you find what your looking for, love and light.

    Reply
    • Stacey Couch
      Stacey Couch says:

      You are most welcome Thomas! Thank you as well for sharing your powerful story. So much transformation is available to us when we start to look for it! Many Blessings, Stacey

      Reply
  6. My archetypal analysis of Brave New World – Reece's Blog
    My archetypal analysis of Brave New World – Reece's Blog says:

    […] The seeker is generally someone who goes on a long and difficult journey, either mental or physical, to seek self-enlightenment. John fits into this description, he is in an enclosed society that he does not want to be part of. His mother, Linda, tells him of the “other place” that she comes from. From a young age, John wants to go to the other place. He wants to go to a place where he is not alone, the arrival of Bernard allowed him to do so. This is the beginning of his self-inflicted journey seel enlightenment. You can see John’s enlightenment as he discovers “Time and death and God”(Huxley 118). John learns more as he continues his journey. I find that John fits as the seeker better than other characters. While other characters like Bernard do fit the description their journey and self-enlightenment are not as profound. Bernard goes on a much lesser journey and not much is shown on his self-enlightenment. John has the most profound of the two and that is why I think John is the seeker in Brave New World. […]

    Reply

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