Calendar
Fall 1999
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Our calendar of events for Fall 1999. Please note:
Dates, locations, or speakers are subject to change. Check this website
for last minute changes.
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September 17-18, 1999
Donald Kalsched: Early Trauma
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Lecture: Early Trauma and Dreams: Archetypal Defenses of the
Personal Spirit Experiences in early childhood that cause
unbearable psychic pain or anxiety (trauma) can leave the personality
and the human spirit threatened with destruction. In this lecture,
using dream examples from the clinical situation and the fairy tale
of Rapunzel, we will see how an archetypal defense emerges to save
the imperishable human spirit from further trauma, but at the price
of encapsulating a core of selfhood, thus cutting it off from life.
Psychotherapy of this trauma complex will be discussed.
Workshop: From Bewitchment to Enchantment: Transformational
Process in the Psychoanalysis of Early Trauma Patients who have
suffered severe early trauma often find themselves bewitched by dark
tyrannical voices assaulting them from within, leading to intense
anxiety and depression. In dream work with such patients, the dark
inner voices reveal themselves as both archaic and typical - hence
archetypal - personifications whose inner purpose seems to be
the defense of a vulnerable core of selfhood to make sure it is never
violated again. However, in defending the true self against further
trauma, the archetypal defenses also persecute and demoralize it,
cutting off all hope for life-in-relationship to others. Therefore
the positive side of the Self cannot constellate and the individuation
process cannot get started. In successful depth psychotherapy these
archetypal defenses slowly lose their power as their bewitching
energy slowly becomes humanized in the transference and is transmuted
into a mature capacity for love and creative living (enchantment). In
this workshop, clinical material as well as the Grimm's fairy tale
Fitcher's Bird (sometimes called Fitcher's Vogel) will
be utilized to illustrate this process. Attendees are asked to read
the tale before the workshop. Versions of the story can be found
online at:
You might also be interested in:
Donald E. Kalsched, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist and
Jungian analyst with a private practice in Katonah, N.Y. He is a
faculty member and supervisor at the C.G. Jung Institute in New York
City and is also Dean of Jungian Studies specialty at the Westchester
Institute for Training in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in Mt.
Kisco, N.Y. His recent book The Inner World of Trauma: Archetypal
Defenses of the Personal Spirit was published in 1996 (Routledge).
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Lecture: Friday, September 17, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free.
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Workshop: Saturday, September 18, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by 9/11; $50 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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September 24, October 1, October 8, 1999
Friday Night at the Movies: The Wisdom of the Dream
A free film series
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As a young boy, Jung "somehow" knew his dreams were significant and
full of meaning. His early attention to those dream images was, for
all humankind, the answer to the knocking at the door by the
unconscious desiring entry into the conscious world.
Stephen Segaller's narrative of Jung's journey -- a series of three
films -- opens the door for the viewer to travel with Jung into the
depths and unfolding of the conscious in the psychological realm
of life. Segaller's film is a chronological montage of images
from the "outer world" and the "inner world" using interviews with
Jung, commentary by contemporary analysts, paintings of dream images
and rare footage of Jung's travels to Africa, Britain and New Mexico.
This film will be shown in three parts, and after each showing a
discussion will be led by Jungian analysts. All showings are free.
Location:
Town Hall
3704 N. Interstate Avenue
Portland, Oregon
Directions: From I-5 north or south, take exit 303 (Going), turn south onto
Interstate Ave. Town Hall is the older gambrel-roofed building
on the left in about 1/4 mile. There is plenty of parking behind
the building.
Tri-Met's Route 5 runs along Interstate.
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Part One: A Life of Dreams Friday, September 24, 7:30 - 9:15 pm
Discussion led by Robert Stuckey, Ph.D., and Dunbar Carpenter, Psy.D.
Jung's early life, genesis of his understanding of the reality of the psyche
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Part Two: Inheritance of Dreams Friday, October 1, 7:30 - 9:15 pm
Discussion led by Robert Davis, Ph.D., and Mark Girard, M.S.W.
Jung's second half of life, descent into the collective unconscious, encounter with archtypes.
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Part Three: A World of Dreams Friday, October 8, 7:30 - 9:15 pm
Discussion led by James Soliday, D.Min., and Joell Hyman, M.S.
Jung's influence on understanding the concerns of contemporary
Western culture, aging, relationships, war, addictions, myth, ritual and play.
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October 22-23, 1999
Terry Gibson: Paradise & Millennium: A Jungian Reflection on
Cinematic Images of the Perfection of Soul in Times of Intense
Collective Transition
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We all long for paradise. No matter our psycho-spiritual persuasion,
no matter how mature and individuated we fancy ourselves to be, no
matter how suavely world-wise, we all long for paradise when things
get tough. Paradise is home, the peaceful, generative home of full
and final beauty and peace we never seem to find in this world.
Paradise is the abode of the Soul.
Film and Jungian psychology have many images of this paradisiacal
home. These seem to be intensifying and deepening as the millennium
approaches. This lecture and workshop will respectfully explore
these images and reflect on their possible guidance and challenge
in our journey toward the Gates of Paradise. As always with such
conversations, no answers are promised, just a broadening and
enhancing of our questions.
Terrill L. Gibson, Ph.D., is a diplomate pastoral psychotherapist
and diploma Jungian analyst who practices individual and family
therapy in Tacoma. He lectures and writes widely on the basic theme
of the integration of psychotherapy and spirituality. He has frequently
served as a consultant, faculty member, supervisor and facilitator
for a variety of Pacific Northwest universities, social service
agencies, corporations, and religious congregations. A book he
co-edited with Laura Dodson, Ph.D., Psyche and Family
(Chiron Press) is his most recent publication.
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Read Terry Gibson's article
Incest and Imagination in our On-line Newsletter.
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Footnotes to Terry Gibson's
lecture and workshop, including a list of films shown and a bibliography.
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Lecture: Friday, October 22, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free.
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Workshop: Saturday, October 23, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church (Room under construction)
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by 10/16; $50 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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November 19-20, 1999
Clare Cooper Marcus: House as a Mirror of Self
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Lecture: Professor Marcus will speak on themes raised in her book
House as a Mirror of Self: Exploring the deeper meaning of home.
Her talk, illustrated with slides of her subject's art work, will explore
various ways in which the psyche is expressed in the choice, decoration,
and maintenance of a dwelling.
Workshop: The theme of the evening lecture will be explored
in greater depth. Participants will be involved in a number of
experiental exercises to understand the significance of dwelling
places in their lives. The workshop format will be a combination
of lecture, discussion, and personal sharing in small groups.
Clare Cooper Marcus, Professor Emerita, recently retired
from the Departments of Architecture and Landscape
Architecture, University of California, Berkeley.
She is the author of House as a Mirror of Self: Exploring the
deeper meaning of home (Conari Press, 1995).
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Read Clare Cooper Marcus' article
House as a Mirror of Self in our On-line Newsletter.
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Footnotes to Clare Cooper Marcus's
lecture and workshop: a select bibliography.
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Lecture: Friday, November 19, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free.
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Workshop: Saturday, November 20, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by 11/13; $50 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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December 10-11, 1999
Michael Conforti: Patterning in the Psyche and the Natural World
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Nowhere is the confluence of the relationship between matter
and psyche more clearly expressed than in the formation of
patterns. Existing within both the internal world of psyche and
the outer natural world, archetypal patterns are expressions of an
innate ordering process which gives matter its specific form and
design. We find these deeply textured patterns present within the
world of fairy tales, myths, and dreams. We can see similar
archetypal patterns expressed in our architectural designs, cities,
cultures, and even on a personal level in our choice of spouse,
employee, or therapist. In fact, with a discerning eye, we can
often intuit the expression of the destiny that is suggested by the
patterns established within our lives.
In this lecture and workshop Dr. Conforti will discuss the
formation of patterns and their relationship to archetypes.
Much attention will be given to the work of what he terms
"Archetypal Pattern Recognition", and its application with the
therapeutic, personal, corporate and global arenas.
Michael Conforti, Ph.D., is a Jungian analyst and founder and
Director of the Assisi Conferences. He is a faculty member of the
C.G. Jung Institute in Boston, the C.G. Jung Foundation of New York
and a Senior Associate faculty member in the Doctoral and Masters
Programs in Clinical Psychology at Antioch, New England. He is also
a visiting lecturer at the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich and has
conducted workshops for many Jungian organizations throughout the
United States, Canada, Mexico, Europe, and South America. He is the
author of Field, Form and Fate: Patterns in Mind, Nature and
Psyche (Spring Publications, Dallas, 1999).
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Read Michael Conforti's article
Archetypal Field Theory in our On-line Newsletter.
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Lecture: Friday, December 10, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free.
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Workshop: Saturday, December 11, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $75. Members: $40 if registered by 12/4; $50 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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