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By means of the complex, Analytical Psychology becomes a psychological theory and not only a theory of archetypes.
The seminar will enhance the understanding of complexes by use of clinical material, participants’ dreams and a re-interpretation of the Oedipus myth.
When called, the hero sets forth to redeem the soul, a forgotten myth or a lost sense of meaning that may lie fallow, slumbering in the darkness of the shadow.
Psychological and archetypal aspects of the Hero, the Path and the layers of the Shadow are portrayed by means of dreams, myths and fairy tales.
This seminar will provide an archetypal perspective on the images of the journey and the stages of life. Myths, fairy tales and dreams will guide us along the journey.
This seminar/workshop provides an archetypal perspective on the journey & the stages of life, the images that characterize them, and how they provide a lens through which we may observe our dreams. Material from myths, fairy tales and dreams will guide us along the journey.
This seminar will present three phases – or faces – of the ideas that have evolved around Jung's concept of the Self, and present an example of active imagination and the transcendent function.
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… (Jung, Commentary to the Secret of the Golden Flower .)
Observing psychopathology from a Jungian perspective implies stepping off the trodden path, searching for the way of deviation.
This seminar explores individuation , the focal process in Jungian psychoanalysis, as a transformative quest entailing four (or five) dynamic, archetypal structures, which are explored with the help of dreams and tales, & The Golden Fleece
Jung made the strange choice of the alchemical Rosarium to illustrate aspects of transference and countertransference in the analytic process.
In this workshop/seminar the uncanny will become familiar by way of clinical application.
The Talmudic dictum says, “A dream not interpreted is like a letter not read,” and the mystical Book of Splendour, the Zohar, states that “no occurrence materializes in the world that is not first revealed in a dream.”
In this seminar we shall attempt to discern the relevance of Biblical dreams for modern man, and how our dreams may reflect ancient themes.
The dream is like a myth and a fairy tale, to be told and retold and listened to. When we search for the key to the dream, we take part in the tale and become actors in the drama.
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