The classical figure of Cassandra represents a person with an unusual capacity to recognize that which the collective has repressed or denied. The Cassandra complex is a Jungian concept that emphasizes the problematic aspects of such a person’s psychology. Seen from a broader perspective, this complex has another side. The collective who is unable to hear the “Cassandra” individual might be over identified with Apollonian values of order, harmony, and reason. In order to work on the Cassandra complex such that new growth can occur, both the Cassandra and the Apollonian sides of the complex need to develop and change.