Calendar
Winter/Spring 2001
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Our calendar of events for Winter & Spring, 2001. Please note:
Dates, locations, or speakers are subject to change. Check this website
for last minute changes.
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January 19-20, 2001
Naomi Ruth Lowinsky: The Poetry of Soul
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lady
you are sea green
to my blue song
you fling the whole ocean
out of your hair
you speak in all the tongues
Naomi Ruth Lowinsky
Lecture: Poetry has been an expression of soul, a way to
sing praise, lament, invoke, tell stories, pray, since the
beginning of human culture. Poets keep their ears to the ground of
the changing myth; they are the instruments on which the gods play
their music. It is the poets who can guide us in a time like our
own, when the myths are changing. Poets know how to follow the
waves of the cultural unconscious, how to fish in the vast waters
of the collective unconscious, bringing up treasure from the deep.
This talk is an act of imagination, an articulation of an inner
dialogue with the poetic Self. We will consider what poetry has
to do with Jungian analysis. We will listen to the news as told
by the poets, especially those who are bringing the goddess back
to consciousness.
Workshop: Writing as Spiritual Practice. Creating a
regular space to find words that express our deepest nature is a
spiritual practice. We give a name to the wild thing that leaps
to mind; we give voice to the stranger in our dreams; we follow
the path of our own sacred words.
In this workshop we will discuss how to develop a writing practice.
We will listen to poems that express the sacred and use writing
exercises to open ourselves to the language of soul. Participants
are asked to bring a poem they love, their own or someone else's,
that expresses a connection to the sacred.
Naomi Ruth Lowinsky, Ph.D., is a poet, an analyst member of
the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco, poetry and fiction editor
of Psychological Perspectives, and a reviewer of poetry for the San
Francisco Jung Institute Library Journal. She speaks and publishes
widely on "the feminine" and on "the creative" and her poems have
appeared in numerous literary magazines. Her book of poems, red
clay is talking, came out last year. She is also the author of
The Motherline: Every Woman's Journey to Find Her Feminine
Roots.
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Footnotes
to Naomi Ruth Lowinsky's lecture and workshop: a select
bibliography.
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Lecture: Friday, January 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, January 20, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 1/13; $60 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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February 16-17, 2001
David L. Miller: Testing the Spirits: False Prophets & True
Healers in the Old Age and in the New Age
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Lecture: The title alludes to a saying from the Christian
Bible. In its original context, the advice to test the "spirits"
implies a warning about the many varieties of spirituality promoted
in the second-century world, and it offers a warning against
trusting every so-called "spirit" that advertises itself as
healing. Discernment is necessary. But how can one tell one
"spirit" from another?
This presentation will explore responses to this question from
religious traditions and also from contemporary depth psychology,
since in these first days of a new millennium there are as many
winds of "spirit" blowing as there were two thousand years ago.
Today there is talk about this "spirituality" and that one in many
realms: politics, media, religions, New Age spirituality,
advertising and athletics. How is one to judge what is going on
spiritually in our time? This is as perplexing a problem now as
when C.G. Jung wrote in 1928: "I believe that the spirit is a
dangerous thing and I do not believe in its paramouncy!"
Workshop: My Name is Legion: Archetypal Images of
Spirit. Some depth psychologists have avoided talk about the
"spirit," preferring instead to speak about soul. But archetypal
psychology may have much to teach about images of so-called
"spirits," and especially about its shadow side, that is, about
the dangers of spirituality to the individual and collective
psyche. This workshop will explore the varieties of "spiritual"
experience in everyday life and the different ways such experience
is imagined. Ancient myths and religions will be explored for
their stored-up treasury of images of "spirit" -- images such as
"wind," "breath," "fire," "frogs" and "pigs."
David L. Miller, Ph. D., is Watson-Ledden Professor of
Religion at Syracuse University, a Core Faculty Member at Pacifica
Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara and has taught analysts in
training at the Jung Institute in Zurich, Kyoto University in
Japan, as well as the seminar of the Inter-Regional Society of
Jungian Analysts and Jung programs in Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Chicago and New York. He is the author of five books and more than
seventy-five articles. Dr. Miller's website:
web.syr.edu/~dlmiller/.
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Lecture: Friday, February 16, 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, February 17, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 2/10; $60 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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March 16-17, 2001
Robert Sardello: Archetypal Silence: The Mother of Soul
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In Gnostic myth, Sige, Silence, is the mother of Sophia, the Soul
of the World. Silence is the medium, the matrix of soul life. We
know when we are in soul when we experience an inner silence, even
though we may be speaking with others or there are sounds around
us. Silence is an autonomous phenomenon, more like a region we can
learn to step into than simply the absence of noise. This weekend
explores Silence as basic to soul experience.
Lecture: The evening lecture explores the barriers to the
region of silence through the imagery of the Isenheim Altar and
some of the writing of St. Anthony the Great. We will see that we
have to find the gateway to Silence. Guardians have to be met and
faced. How these guardians function in the present world is
presented, along with suggestions concerning how to recognize them
and how to honor their autonomy.
Workshop: The workshop explores the spiritual psychology of
Silence. We will recover the importance of Silence for the life
of images, prayer, healthy soul life, inner contemplation and for
the speaking of the heart. The nature of Silence is described and
differentiated from solitude along with how Silence belongs to
creative speaking, the therapeutic relationship and a presence to
the Soul of the World. Specific imaginal exercises will be
presented that help develop sensitivity to the many layers of
Silence and how to tell where you are in the region of Silence.
We'll also discuss how the rhythm of Silence opens and deepens
intimate relationships and professional life.
Robert Sardello, Ph.D., is co-director of the School of
Spiritual Psychology (based in Greensboro, NC) which offers courses
and workshops concerning how to be present to soul life and open to
the workings of the spiritual worlds. Along with Cheryl Sanders,
these courses are now held in cities here and in Canada, England
and Australia. Robert is the author of Facing the World with
Soul, Love and the Soul (now re-issued as Love and
The World: Foundations of Spiritual Psychology) and Freeing
the Soul from Fear. Doing the Good: The Soul's Path of
Virtue is in press. Robert also teaches at the Chalice of
Repose Project in Missoula, MT and at the Dallas Institute of
Humanities and Culture. The School of Spiritual Psychology web
site:
www.spiritualschool.org
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Lecture: Friday, March 16, 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, March 17, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 3/10; $60 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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April 6-7, 2001
Special Event: Thomas B. Kirsch
Presented by the Pacific Northwest Society of Jungian Analysts
and supported by Oregon Friends of C.G. Jung
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Lecture: Origins of Analytical Psychology in the United
States. Jung's analytical psychology has developed in many
places in the United States and in the world. Much of the spread
has been during the past quarter century. As we enter into the
twenty-first century, there has been a tendency not to remember how
analytical psychology developed in this country. It is the purpose
of this talk to briefly review the founding of analytical
psychology in three areas: New York, San Francisco and Los
Angeles. These were the three areas in the United States where
Jung's psychology developed during the lifetime of Jung, and as a
result, he influenced how these professional groups developed. In
these localities the founders had had their analyses with Jung,
which had an important bearing on how each professional society
developed. This talk will be illustrated with photos of the
founders of the different Jungian societies. Implications for the
state of analytical psychology today will be presented.
Workshop: Working with Dreams. The half-day workshop
will focus on a general study of dreams. It will begin with an
overview of the scientific findings - the discovery of Rapid Eye
Movement and its relationship to analytical psychology. The
workshop will continue with an overview of Jung's theory of dreams.
To illustrate archetypal themes, initial dreams will be discussed
and interpreted from different vantage points.
Thomas B. Kirsch, M.D., born in London, raised in Los
Angeles, is a graduate of Reed College, Yale Medical School with
Psychiatric Residency at Stanford, and graduate of the C.G. Jung
Institute of San Francisco. He is past president of the
International Association for Analytical Psychology. He is a
member of the Academy of Psychoanalysis. He has been in private
practice since 1967 and is the author of numerous papers on the
biology and psychology of dreams. He is the author of The
Jungians: A Social and Historical Perspective published by
Routledge in 2000.
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To Order Tickets:
Advance tickets are available only by mail from the Pacific
Northwest Society of Jungian Analysts. Please make your check
out to PNSJA, include a Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope, and mail
to:
Dr. James Soliday
3861 S.W. Hall Blvd.
Beaverton, OR 97005
For more information please contact:
James Soliday: 503-643-9536
Joell Hyman: 503-228-9208
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Lecture: Friday, April 6, 7:30 pm
Kaiser Permanente Town Hall
3704 N. Interstate Avenue, Portland
Public: $15. Members: $10 before March 28; $15 afterwards.
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Workshop: Saturday, April 7, 9:00 am - 1:00 pm
Kaiser Permanente Town Hall
3704 N. Interstate Avenue, Portland
Public: $60. Members: $50 before March 28; $60 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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April 20-21, 2001
Josephine Evetts-Secker: Orphanos Exoikos: "The Precarious
Possibility of Wholeness" (C.G.J.)
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Lecture: The lecture will be an archetypal exploration of
orphanhood as a state of soul in clinical practice, dreams, myth
and fairy tales.
Workshop: The workshop will amplify the lecture's exploration
through work on dreams and a fairy tale. This approach to the
neurotic and the healthy orphan amplifies Jung's pre-occupation with
"being all alone in the world," ie. individuation.
Josephine Evetts-Secker, M. Phil., born and educated in
England, taught in Canada and trained at the C.G. Jung Institue in
Zurich. After taking an early retirement from the University of
Calagry, she now is in private practice in England. Her papers on
literature and psychology have been published in various journals
and she has produced books on fairy tales for Barefoot Press, one of
which won a Storytelling World Award in 1998. She lectures in
Canada, USA and England and is a regular lecturer at the Jung
Institute in Zurich. She is currently Co-ordinator for Advanced
Candidates for one of the London Jungian training programs (IGAP).
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Lecture: Friday, April 20, 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, April 21, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 4/14; $60 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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May 18-19, 2001
Erica Lorentz: Movement as Active Imagination
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"The body is merely the visibility of the soul, the psyche; and
the soul is the psychological experience of the body. So it is
really one and the same thing." (Jung, Zarathustra Seminars, p.
355.)
Lecture: Archetypal Manifestations in the Individuation
Process. Individuation is a second half of life process when
we consciously return to our personal unconscious and our
archetypal roots. We know much about working with personal
unconscious material. Jung, however, pushes deeper in his work and
invites us to research and work with archetypal forces that
manifest in our personal process. These experiences are often
pathologized, although they have been experienced, observed and
discussed since the beginning of human consciousness. This lecture
will discuss the importance of recognizing, witnessing and
containing these archetypal energies when they become embodied and
emerge in our lives and in our analysis. Case material and video
clips will help to illustrate the subject matter.
Workshop: Body and Soul: A Spiral Dance. Body and
soul are inseparable and mirror each other. Our bodies contain
instinctual wisdom that we have been trained to ignore. In this
workshop we will encourage a dialogue between the conscious and the
unconscious (body) through a gentle non-structured movement
meditation. To become whole we must go beyond learned patterns.
If we listen deeply to our natural rhythms, movements, sounds and
images, we can become more fully embodied and heal the rift
between psyche and soma, body and soul. Verbal sharing will aid
us in beginning to integrate our experience. Prior movement
experience is not necessary. Wear comfortable clothes to allow
ease of movement for this event. This workshop is limited to 24
participants.
Erica Lorentz, M.Ed., L.P.C., A.D.T.R., is a Jungian
analyst in private practice in Houston where she teaches at the
C.G. Jung Center and is a co-coordinator of Beyond Words:
Dance/Movement Therapy Training Program. She has taught and
supervised on the graduate level and does workshops throughout the
U.S. and Canada. In 1999, she was movement coordinator for Matthew
Fox's "Techno-Cosmic Mass."
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Lecture: Friday, May 18, 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, May 19, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 5/12; $60 afterwards.
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Continuing Education Credit is available
for both lecture and workshop.
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June 2, 2001
Annual Light-Hearted Evening
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A free program and potluck for members and guests. This event
celebrates the end of our program year and is an opportunity for
the membership to share food and fun.
Please bring your favorite dish to serve 6 to 8 people, and
your own table service. Coffee and tea will be provided.
Program: To be announced.
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Saturday, June 2, 6:00 pm
West Hills Unitarian Fellowship
8470 SW Oleson Road, Portland
Free to members and guests
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June 23-24, 2001
Special Film Seminar Weekend: The Way of the Dream
with Dr. Marie-Louise von Franz
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This unique documentary, produced and directed by Fraser Boa, is a
series of 20 half-hour films on the dreams of ordinary people.
Included in this series is a montage of people around the world
responding to three questions: Do you dream? Do you think your
dreams are important? Can you recall a dream? The film crew
traveled over 25,000 miles, to Canada, England, France, Switzerland
and the United States, for these spontaneous reactions.
The basic structure of the series is a more formal telling of
personal dreams by a smaller group of men and women followed with
interpretations of these dreams by Dr. von Franz. Certain motifs
and archetypes are illustrated in these dreams and include: The
male shadow; the negative and positive anima; patterns in dreams;
the female shadow; negative and positive animus; dreams of our
culture; dreams of relationships; dreams of The Self. Some of
segment titles are: The Devouring Mother, The Inner Bride, The
Hanged Man, and Hell Has No Mirrors.
Our The Way of the Dream weekend will include discussions
led by local Jungian analysts. Though the film is segmented, it
is continuous thematically and the two-day attendance is
encouraged. This is the first showing of Boa's film in Oregon in
over ten years, a rare opportunity for our community.
Fraser Boa was a Jungian analyst practicing in Toronto and
a professional film maker. His post graduate work in English was
done at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, and films studies at
the University of California in Los Angeles. He was a graduate of
the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich.
Dr. Marie-Louise von Franz was a Jungian analyst, author and
associate of C.G. Jung. She had interpreted over 65,000 dreams
prior to the filming of this series and has long been held as one
of the foremost authorities on analytical psychology.
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Screenings and Discussions:
Saturday, June 23, 9:00 am - 5:30 pm
Sunday, June 24, 9:00 am - 5:30 pm
Peterson Hall Auditorium, Linfield School of Nursing
Legacy Good Samaritan Campus
2255 NW Northrup St, Portland
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Tickets:
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2-Day Series |
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Single Day |
| By 6/9: |
$100 |
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$75 |
| After 6/9: |
$125 |
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$100 |
| At the door: |
$150 |
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$125 |
To Order Tickets:
Please make your check out to OFCGJ, include a Self-Addressed Stamped
Envelope, and mail to:
Oregon Friends of C.G. Jung
attn: Way of the Dream
811 NW 20th Avenue
Portland, OR 97209-1443
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