Calendar
Spring 2003
|
| Our calendar of events for Spring 2003. Please
note: Dates, locations, or speakers are subject to change. Check
this website for last minute changes. |
Jan
17-18, 2003
JOHN BEEBE: The Purposes of Nightmares &
The Self in Dreams
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| Lecture: The Purposes of Nightmares
Frightening or upsetting dreams come to all of us sooner or later.
It is sometimes hard to understand what they intend. Using clips
of dream sequences from classic films that show both the horror
and the humor of nightmares, Dr. Beebe will help us to see the positive,
adaptive meanings of negative or disruptive dream experiences.
Workshop: The Self in Dreams
Everyone has an ego that wishes, and wills, and fears. But Jung
tells us that we also have a Self that has the ability to cancel
our wishes, frustrate our wills, and intensify our fears, all in
the service of a mysterious project: individuation. How do we recognize
the Self? Jung found evidence of the Self in dreams. But how does
the Self speak to us in dreams? Using examples from a variety of
sources, Dr. Beebe will demonstrate how we can identify the Self
and how the Self emerges in dreams as a dynamic presence, organizing
a new psychological standpoint.
John Beebe, M.D. is the immediate past President
of the C.G.Jung Institute of San Fransisco. A frequent lecturer
on film, psychological types, dreams, and moral character, he is
the author of Integrity in Depth, and the editor of Jung's
Aspects of the Masculine.
Reading List |
Lecture: Friday, January 17, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, January 18, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 1/11; $60 afterwards.
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| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| February
21-22, 2003
JOHN ALLAN: Symbols in your Psyche: The Inner
Journey |
| Lecture: Symbols in your Psyche:The Inner Journey
The uniqueness of analytical psychology lies in its emphasis on
developing the capacity for symbolization. Jung's life and work
centered around the symbol-he imagined, dreamed, wrote, carved,
painted, played with and sculpted the symbol. This lecture-slide
presentation seeks to provide a meditative-experiential evening
around such key Jungian concepts as the Meadow, Persona, Shadow,
Anima-Animus and Self.
Workshop: The Symbol in the Transference:
Jungian Approaches in Psychotherapy and
Counseling
"They tore the bark off the tree
but the roots will help it
grow." (7yr old boy)
This workshop for professionals, students and interested lay people,
seeks to return analytical psychology to its fertile roots--the
symbol and symbolic expression. The day will focus on a variety
of ways to activate and amplify symbols in the healing process.
Hermes is invoked along with Eros and the Alchemy of Play so that
Psyche leads Ego to new understandings and a new life. Priority
is given to the therapeutic alliance and the symbol as it emerges
out of the transference. Jungian theory (Primary Self, de-integratio,
re-intergration, participation mystique (the interactive field),
projection and introjection) will
be linked to clinical practice. Slides, images, dreams, stories
and active imagination will be shown and demonstrated. Transformation
is witnessed as nigredo evolves to albedo and then rubedo and as
chaos gives way to struggle and containment before the emergence
of themes of reparation and resolution.
John Allan, Ph.D., is Professor Emeritus of Counseling
Psychology at the University of British Columbia and a Senior Training
Analyst with the Pacific Northwest Society. He was a Board Member
of the Association for Play therapy for a number of years and frequently
lectures at the C.G. Jung Institute in Switzerland. He is the author
of over 60 published articles and 16 books. His book, Inscapes
of the Child's World, is in it's 6th printing and has been
translated into Japanese and Russian. Written Paths to Healing
(with Judi Bertoia) is currently in it's second printing.
Reading List |
Lecture: Friday, February 21, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, February 22, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 2/15; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| March
21-22, 2003
ANN BELFORD ULANOV: Meditations on Aliveness
and Deadness |
| "As long as the animals are there, there is life in the
symbol."
--C.G. Jung
Lecture: Aliveness/Deadness
In the opening years of our new century and under the shadow of
terrorist attacks on American soil, these following questions have
become urgent: What makes for our sense of aliveness and feeling
real? What puts us in touch with our own voice? What confers a sense
of finding and creating a path that is true for us? What kills it,
making us feel deadness? The focus of this lecture will examine
the space of aliveness, which is created between analysand and analyst,
between the ego and animus/a, in worship between ritual and repetition
compulsion, and in imagination between the factual and the symbolic.
Workshop (9:30am to 2:30pm): Aliveness/Deadness/Regeneration
To feel alive and not dead is as basic as our need for food, air,
and water. Fear of this lies at the root of illness. In this workshop
we will explore the unconscious ways we make parts of ourselves
dead and what spaces offer themselves for regeneration.
Ann Belford Ulanov, M.Div., Ph.D., L.H.D., is
the Christiane Brooks Johnson Professor of Psychiatry and Religion
at Union Theological Seminary, a psychoanalyst in private practice,
and a supervising analyst and faculty member of the C.G. Jung Institute,
New York City. With her late husband, Barry Ulanov, she is the author
of Religion and the Unconscious; Primary Speech: A Psychology
of Prayer; Cinderella and Her Sisters: The Envied and the Envying;
The Witch and The Clown: Two Archetypes of Human Sexuality; The
Healing Imagination; Transforming Sexuality: The Archetypal World
of Anima and Animus; by herself she is the author of The
Feminine in Christian Theology and in Jungian Psychology; Receiving
Woman: Studies in the Psychology and Theology of the Feminine; Picturing
God; The Wisdom of the Psyche; The Female Ancestors of Christ; The
Wizards' Gate; The Functioning Transcendent; Korean edition of our
Religion and the Unconscious, Fall 1996; Korean edition of Primary
Speech, 2000-2001; Religion and the Spiritual in Carl Jung; Finding
Space: Winnicott, God, and Psychic Reality, Attacked by Poison Ivy,
A Psychological Study, 2002. She is the recipient of two honorary
doctorates and many awards, acknowledging her distinguished work
in Depth Psychology and Religion.
Reading List |
Lecture: Friday, March 21, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, March 22, 9:30 am -
2:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: 50 if registered by 3/15; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| April
11-12, 20023
ROBERT ROMANYSHYN: The Tears of God
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Lecture: The Tears of God: Grief as an Opening to the Divine
The alchemy of the grieving process dissolves the conscious mind and
its intentions, and in a descent into the soul's seasons of grief
one meets the Oprhan, an encounter which can transform personal loss
into a journey of homecoming. Grief can be home-work, and the Orphan,
the most homeless of all, can lead us into that place where the wounds
to love are the cracks through which a sense of the Divine shines
through. The wonder, even miracle, of this moment is the recognition
that our human tears of grief are mirrored in the tears of the Divine
who hungers for an encounter with us. We grieve because we have dared
to love, and we can love again in an expanded way and allow ourselves
to be loved because we have taken the time to grieve. Workshop:
The Healing Power of Poetry
Poetry helps one breath better. It is to the soul and heart what
vitamins are to the body. The images which poetry evokes, as well
as the moods and memories, feed a hunger that soul has for beauty,
mystery and a sense of the sacred.
Through readings and exercises, participants are invited to appreciate
the powerful healing gifts of poetry. In addition, they are invited
to attune their ears to the melodies and rhythms of poetry when
it is read aloud, so that they can experience something of the joy
that comes from exercising the muscles of the soul when the voice
sings its song. Finally, participants will be encouraged to try
their hand at writing a poem. In preparation for the workshop, participants
are asked to bring a poem that has chosen them, or has been with
them in their lives.
Robert D. Romanyshyn Ph.D. is an Associate Member
of The Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts and a Senior Core
faculty member at Pacifica Graduate Institute. In addition to having
practiced as a psychotherapist for more than 25 years, Robert has
taught at several universities and has lectured widely in the U.S.,
Europe, and Africa. His work has also been the subject of radio
interviews and television programs. As a teacher and writer, Robert
has been described as a master story teller with a gift for expressing
the insights of the soul with the voice of a poet. His primary interest
lies in being a spokesperson for those values largley neglected
in our technological culture, including our longing for beauty,
and our desire for a sense of the sacred. In addition to a recently
completed book of poems called Dark Light, Robert is the
author of The Soul in Grief: Love, Death and Transformation,
Ways of the Heart: Essays Toward an Imaginal Psychology, Mirror
and Metaphor: Images and Stories of Psychological Life, and
Technology as Symptom and Dream.
Reading List
|
Lecture: Friday, April 11, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, April 12, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: 50 if registered by 4/5; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| May
16-17, 2003
CLAIRE DOUGLAS: Active Imagination & the
Visions Seminar
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| Lecture: Active Imagination and the Visions Seminar
C.G.Jung described active imagination as "the creative secret
of the mind" where --through visioning, dance and /or art work--consciousness
and the unconscious work together in a profoundly healing way. The
VISIONS SEMINAR is Jung's great exploration of active imagination
as a potent methodology for expanding the psyche and reuniting the
patient with archetypal, healing images that lie beneath personal
complexes. The active imagination in the VISIONS SEMINAR also expresses
one woman's quest for healing engendered by transformative, passionate
feminine images --images flowering in many people's psyches' today.
Jung's 1930's seminars were based on active imaginations painted
and recorded by Christiana Morgan, a gifted young woman from New
England who had been in analysis with him. In the course of her
research, Dr. Douglas discovered Morgan's complete series of visions
which link the chthonic, dynamic, and erotic feminine with the Divine.
Through slides and lecture, Dr. Douglas will explore the historical
background of active imagination. She will examine the VISIONS SEMINARS
relevance in the creation of Jungian theory, especially of active
imagination, anima and animus, typology, and the psychology of women.
Workshop: Active Imagination: A Quest for Transformation
Images of the feminine that are transformative, powerful and passionate
are emerging even as we find ourselves caught by old patterns and
judgements. We search within ourselves and in the world for support
of new ways of being. Christiana Morgan's original work illustrates
a unique and passionately feminine path of individuation. Dr. Douglas
will show slides depicting Morgan's quest to reclaim her feminine
voice and power. Seminar participants will be invited to experientially
follow the permutations of the tranformative feminine within their
own lives through dreams, artwork, thoughts, feelings, and active
imagination.
Claire Douglas, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist
and a training and supervisory analyst member of the C.G.Jung Institute
of Los Angeles. Besides numerous articles and book chapters, she
is the author of Translate This Darkness: The Life of Christiana
Morgan,(Princeton University Press, 1997), The Woman in
the Mirror: Analytical Psychology and the Feminine, (backinprint.com
2000) and is the editor of C.G.Jung's "The Vision Seminar"
(Bollingen Editions 1997). Her article "In Homage to the Feminine
Self" is in the latest issue of The San Franscisco Jung Institute
Library Journal. She is presently working on a book on revisioning
the mother archetype, to be published in 2004. Dr. Douglas' analytic
practice is in Malibu.
|
Lecture: Friday, May 16, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, May 17, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: 50 if registered by 4/5; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| May
31, 2003
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, May 31, 6:00 pm
West Hills Unitarian Fellowship
8470 SW Oleson Road, Portland
Free to members and guests
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