Archive for Carl Jung

Kim Arndt, MAPC, BCPC, LPC 
FRIDAY Evening Talk:
The Role of Ceremony in Individuation  
March 2012  
                
In his work, Jung clearly articulated the crucial psychological processes of adaptation and transcendence and their role in the dynamics of the psyche. Ceremonies likely arose from these processes. Throughout history, humans have used ceremony as a way of relating to forces beyond human control. Ceremonies are also used to realize important passages in life in an effort at adaptation and transcendence. In this sense, ceremonies are directly linked with psychic libido and the mutual interplay between conscious and unconscious. Through the actions of the participants, ceremony creates a container and a process to unify the opposites of psyche and matter via symbolic action. We will explore the role of ceremony in psychic life and in the process of individuation. Specifically, we will focus on non-conventional ceremonies created on an individual basis. Consideration will be given to an anthropological perspective as well as comparisons between myths, fairy tales, dreams and ceremony.
Kim Arndt, MAPC, BCPC, LPC is a psychotherapist in private practice in Mesa, Arizona. She is a diploma candidate at the C.G. Jung Institute in Kusnacht, Switzerland. She is current
Kim Arndt Phoenix Friends of CG Jungly finishing her thesis, which is on the role of ceremony in the process of individuation. She has participated in a number of conventional and unconventional ceremonies. Kim has given lectures for the Southwest Psychoanalytic Society, Southwest Behavioral Health, and the Jung Society in Moscow. She has worked at Friendship Community Mental Health Center in Phoenix, which is a mental health center dedicated to people disabled by mental illness. In addition to a Master’s of Clinical Psychology, Kim has a Bachelor of Science degree in Zoology. She is widely traveled and was fortunate enough to visit the facilities of the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta, India where she met Mother Teresa in 1994.
March 31, 2012
Categories : Past Events, Podcasts
Kim Arndt, MAPC, BCPC, LPC 
SATURDAY WORKSHOP:
Can I Make a Ceremony?
In Saturday’s workshop, we will practice some basic ceremony and have access to various materials used in ceremony, as a continuation of our exploration of the role of ceremony in individuation. Participants can create ceremony if they wish, and we will discuss the experience of acting out ceremony.

Kim Arndt, MAPC, BCPC, LPC is a psychotherapist in private practice in Mesa, Arizona.

Kim Arndt Phoenix Friends of CG JungKim is a diploma candidate at the C.G. Jung Institute in Kusnacht, Switzerland. She is currently finishing her thesis, which is on the role of ceremony in the process of individuation. She has participated in a number of conventional and unconventional ceremonies. Kim has given lectures for the Southwest Psychoanalytic Society, Southwest Behavioral Health, and the Jung Society in Moscow. She has worked at Friendship Community Mental Health Center in Phoenix, which is a mental health center dedicated to people disabled by mental illness. In addition to a Master’s of Clinical Psychology, Kim has a Bachelor of Science degree in Zoology. She is widely traveled and was fortunate enough to visit the facilities of the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta, India where she met Mother Teresa in 1994.

March 30, 2012
Categories : Past Events

Lecture with Stephen Kenneally, Jung’s Concept of Individuation

January 20, 2012

Individuation, the lifelong development of the personality, is central to Jung’s psychology. It is the process of becoming the person one is innately meant to be. While aspects of this concept have been embraced by popular culture, the true depth and scope of Jung’s theory requires a much closer examination. Rather than merely describing a simple version of self-improvement, individuation describes an intricate process of becoming a person who can relate deeply to his or her psyche.

Kenneally-Jung’s Concept of Individuation
$12.00

Stephen Kenneally, MBA, MFT, is a Jungian psychotherapist and consultant in Santa Monica, CA. He teaches psychology and ethics at Antioch University and is the current Chair of the Opus Archives and Research Center (a research institute within Pacifica Graduate Institute that holds the archives of Joseph Campbell and other eminent scholars in depth psychology and mythology). Prior to becoming a psychotherapist Stephen worked as an investment banker at JP Morgan. He received a BS in economics from Harvard, an MBA from the Darden School of Business, and an MA in psychology counseling from Pacifica Graduate Institute. He is currently an analyst-in-training at the C. G. Jung Institute in Los Angeles, where he offers periodic lectures.

January 26, 2012
Categories : Past Events, Podcasts

Workshop with Scott Haasarud, Ph.D.

December 10, 2011

On Saturday we will explore together through group discussion how several of Jesus’ stories probe deeply into our own psyche. The New Testament scholar Henry Sharmon once wrote that to enter deeply into the teachings of Jesus is to enter deeply into oneself. We will explore how Jung has informed that possibility.

Scott Haasarud is an ordained Lutheran Minister in private practice as a spiritual director, Jungian oriented therapist and pastoral counselor.  His doctoral degree is in Religion and Psychology and he studied for many years at the C.G Jung Institute in Los Angeles. He spent one year as a matriculated student at the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich, Switzerland. For questions about the workshop or lecture, you may contact Scott by email or call him at 602 265-2500.

December 13, 2011
Categories : Past Events
Lecture with Scott Haasarud, Ph.D. - Jung’s Contribution to Understanding Jesus
December 9, 2011
Jung observed that human beings are meaning makers and that the nature of human understanding and meaning making is essentially mythic as well as rational. The purpose of this lecture is to use the archetypal and mythological insights of Jung to shed light on the meaning that the Gospel stories of Jesus have for our lives today. For example the birth of Jesus reminds us of the virgin birth of the hero and the mythic significance of the great mother goddess.  Stories like the prodigal son are deeply related to the archetype of individuation. This lecture will use some of the basic ideas of the psychology of C.G. Jung as tools for interpreting myth, specifically the myths that were projected onto Jesus of Nazareth, the central events in his life, and the stories he told.
Haasarud-Jung’s Contribution to Understanding Jesus
$12.00

Scott Haasarud is an ordained Lutheran Minister in private practice as a spiritual director, Jungian oriented therapist and pastoral counselor.  His doctoral degree is in Religion and Psychology and he studied for many years at the C.G Jung Institute in Los Angeles. He spent one year as a matriculated student at the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich, Switzerland. For questions about the workshop or lecture, you may contact Scott by email or call him at 602 265-2500.

 

December 13, 2011
Categories : Past Events, Podcasts

November 5, 2011, Saturday Workshop with Jonathan Young, Ph.D.

Reflecting on ancient symbols and rituals reminds us of the significance of winter in the symbolic life. The metaphor of seasonal darkness suggests the work of getting through challenges. Some of the richest experiences in the individuation process come from long dark nights. This is also a time of yearning for illumination, which may be partly a longing for unclaimed aspects of the psyche. As we appreciate the inspiring qualities of holidays, we will ponder the search for the light within. The transcendent language of the season could be an inner voice calling us to a state of beauty beyond ordinary knowing. In a spirit of contemplation, let us note the threshold moments in the unfolding stories of our lives.

Jonathan Young is a Psychologist, Storyteller, and writer on mythic stories. He assisted mythologist Joseph Campbell at seminars and was the founding curator of the Joseph Campbell Archives. He created and chaired the Mythological Studies Department at the Pacifica Graduate Institute. His books and articles focus on personal mythology.

November 18, 2011
Categories : Past Events
Lecture with Jonathan Young, Ph.D.- The Inner Life of Holidays: Memories and Traditions
November 4, 2011

November stirs a distinct mood. From Halloween into the winter, there is a parade of festivities that engross our senses. By staying mindful in the midst of seasonal strivings, we can use ordinary rituals to honor the call of the unconscious. Popular stories, customs, music and images are rich with nostalgia and emotion. The archetypal aspects of such traditions can be guides in the journey towards wholeness. We will look at familiar ceremonies to find personal meanings and see how they affect the deep down flow of the imagination.

Young-The Inner Life of Holidays: Memories and Traditions
$12.00

Jonathan Young is a Psychologist, Storyteller, and writer on mythic stories. He assisted mythologist Joseph Campbell at seminars and was the founding curator of the Joseph Campbell Archives. He created and chaired the Mythological Studies Department at the Pacifica Graduate Institute. His books and articles focus on personal mythology.

November 18, 2011
Categories : Past Events, Podcasts

September 17, 2011 Workshop with Guilford Dudley, Ph.D.

The workshop will explore “wonder” as a double motif in one’s inner descent: wondering what are the fundamental truths and lies permeating one’s life, and wonder as in “the wondrous, ineffable nature of inner exploration,” often guided by dreams. Images and motifs from Alice in Wonderland include swimming across the sea of tears (working through grief), and the imagery of growing and shrinking in size (inflation and depression). The workshop will also focus on the inner figures that populate our unconscious, in both their personal and archetypal forms. Participants will be encouraged to contribute efforts to integrate inner parental, mentor, and lover figures, as well as to “wonder” what we will leave to our children and intimate friends who will have to integrate us as their inner figures after we die.

Guilford Dudley is a Jungian Analyst working in Northern New Mexico. He has a doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania and three degrees from Yale University. Guil is completing a manuscript for a memoir entitled: “A Penny for Your Truth: Confessions of a Jungian Analyst,” in which he narrates his own journey through the dark, but often amusing, sides of an aristocratic family and its mythic claims to English royalty, along with the descent into his own nether realms while living in a remote cabin in the California mountains, accessible in the winter only by dogsled. He is a member of the C. G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe, and the author of two books on myth, and an unpublished manuscript on the apocalyptic imagination.

September 20, 2011
Categories : Past Events

Lecture with Guilford Dudley, Ph.D.,Descent into Hell:The Soul’s Other Journey

September 16, 2011 

Unlike what we read about in most spiritual literature-the upward, heavenly ascent of the soul–Jung’s experience was that the upward movement of the soul only creates its opposite, an equally meaningful descent into subterranean realms. Jung has re-emphasized what patriarchal interpretations of the Christian message took out: the importance of nature, the feminine, and metaphorically the nether realms of the earth–not only the metals used in alchemy, but the demonic.

“If I ascend to the highest and most difficult on the one hand, and seek to eke out redemption that reaches even higher, then the true way does not lead upward, but toward the depths.” – from Jung’s Red Book

He reminds us that in the Christian mythos Christ repeats the rhythm of descent in pagan religions, such as Odysseus’ visit to the Underworld in the Odyssey and Orpheus’ descent to bring back Eurydice, but does so in a new version of suffering as the soul’s destiny and achievement of wholeness. The lecture will enlarge on Jung’s meaning of the soul’s anabasis, its earthward ‘descent into hell.’ In this descent we encounter both the dark and the treasure within the dark.  We can even encounter the ancestors, including immediate family members.  The burdens they leave us in their incomplete lives become our task to complete, without our realizing that we are fated to compensate for their one-sidedness. Becoming conscious of this syndrome can liberate us for fuller individuation.

Guilford-Descent into Hell:The Soul’s Other Journey
$12.00

Guilford Dudley is a Jungian Analyst working in Northern New Mexico. He has a doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania and three degrees from Yale University. Guil is completing a manuscript for a memoir entitled: “A Penny for Your Truth: Confessions of a Jungian Analyst,” in which he narrates his own journey through the dark, but often amusing, sides of an aristocratic family and its mythic claims to English royalty, along with the descent into his own nether realms while living in a remote cabin in the California mountains, accessible in the winter only by dogsled. He is a member of the C. G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe, and the author of two books on myth, and an unpublished manuscript on the apocalyptic imagination.

September 20, 2011
Categories : Past Events, Podcasts

TYPOLOGY AS THE BASIS OF A LIFE JOURNEY

Saturday Workshop: April 2, 2011

Giannini will lead participants, with their constant input, in a life journey, based on the four couplings and aided by Erik Erikson’s eight life ages, as well as Jung’s overarching two stages of life, which are discussed in Jung’s mid-life crisis, as now so amazingly described in his Red Book. Our journey with the couplings begins with an SF parental phase, followed by an ST competitive phase, then a typical mid-life crisis, a plunge into an NF creative phase of new discoveries with memories, dreams and reflections, and finally an expanded NT philosophical/spiritual phase. Giannini will seek participant input throughout.

Finally, in the NF and NT phases, Giannini will demonstrate that the intuitive function here not only embraces the other types, but also is found in the essence of every archetype, every synchronicity experience, and finally constitutes the basic structure of the synchronicity principle, which Jung described as the “universal substratum in the environment,” and so of psyche.

Expectations and Preparations:
That the instructor will be open to full participation and dialogue.
That each participant will know his/her typology.
That each participant will have read the assigned material that the instructor will send or, if so desired, read Chapters 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11 and 12 of Compass of the Soul.

Recommended Readings:
Compass Paper ONE
Compass Paper TWO
Compass Paper THREE
Compass Paper FOUR
Compass Review Galipeau
Compass Review JAP
Giannini Chapter Nine B
Giannini Chapter Nine A

JOHN GIANNINI, MA, MBA, MDiv is a Jungian analyst in private practice in Chicago and Evanston. He holds an MDiv in Religion and Psychology from St. Albert’s College, an MA in Psychology and Religion from the University of Chicago Divinity School, an MBA from Stanford University, and an LCPC certification with the State of Illinois. John has published articles and lectures widely throughout the U.S. and Canada on the wounded child within, and narcissistic/addictive behavior. He is the author of Compass of the Soul, an updated understanding of typology. He is now completing a book entitled The Sacred Secret: The Maternal Principle and Her Love in Persons and Nature.

April 2, 2011
Categories : Past Events