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Calendar
Fall 2004
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| Our calendar of events for Fall, 2004. Please note:
Dates, locations, or speakers are subject to change. Check this website
for last minute changes. |
Sept
17-18, 2004
PITTMAN McGEHEE: Burn the Barn
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Lecture: The Zen Poet Masahide writes:
The barn’s burnt down. . .
Now I can see the moon.
Spirituality is the deep human longing to move the transcendent
into the immanent through experience and reflection. This lecture/workshop
will consider the illusions the ego builds as defenses against life’s
inevitable anxiety and pain. These illusions may keep us from seeing
the transcendent truth, thus leaving us dis-illusioned. What are
the barns we build that keep us from seeing the moon?
Workshop: The Hero Journey.
In honor of Joseph Campbell’s centenary, we will focus on what
he called the monomyth. The three-fold process of 1) departure,
2) initiation, and 3) return, are the essentials of the journey.
One can see this formula in all myth and sacred story. Can one see
this process in one’s own story? This workshop will help make us
conscious of how individuation follows this formula, in some form,
for each of us.
PITTMAN J. McGEHEE, M. DIV, HON. DIV received
his Master of Divinity from the Virginia Theological Seminary and
was ordained as a priest in the Episcopal Church in 1969. He received
an honorary Doctor of Divinity from the Episcopal Seminary of the
Southwest. Formerly the Dean of Christ Church Cathedral in downtown
Houston, he is currently a Diplomate Jungian analyst and the director
of the Institute for the Advancement of Psychology and Spirituality.
Additionally, he is serving as the Carolyn Faye Professor of Analytical
Psychology at the University of Houston. Pittman is widely known
as a lecturer and educator in the field of psychology and religion,
as well as a published poet and essayist.
Reading List (click here)
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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. |
Workshop: Saturday, September 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 9/11; $60 afterwards.
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| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| October
22-23, 2004
JAN BAUER: Bedazzled Charisma and Its Ways
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Lecture: Falling under the charm or power of someone’s
charisma has happened to all of us some time in our lives. Whether
that someone was a teacher, a guru, a passionate lover or Princess
Diana, charismatic individuals have the power to provoke unpredictable
and extraordinary emotions in us.They can even change the course
of our lives, for better or for worse.
Charisma is not just a characteristic
of the famous or the powerful. Many ‘normal’ people have charismatic
traits but few know how to own these qualities consciously.There’s
always the temptation to either refuse one’s charisma and hide one’s
light under a bushel, or to abuse it without regard for the consequences.
In our modern world, charisma is getting more and more attention,
often replacing other kinds of authority and leadership. How then
to recognize it, understand it and even use it for the benefit of
all?
Workshop: With the help of some practical exercises and
in depth discussion we will explore how the charisma of certain
individuals has changed our own lives, and what this change means,
as well as, how we can recognize and use our own charisma in a way
that is both responsible and inspiring.
JAN BAUER, MA attended Sarah Lawrence College
and then studied in France where she earned a Master’s in literature
and subsequently taught high school in France and Tunisia. In 1972
she returned to Boston where she earned a Masters in Adult Education
at Boston University and worked as assistant to the director at
Plymouth Plantation. She graduated from the C.G. Jung Institute
in 1981 and moved to Quebec where she continues to live and practice
as an analyst in both French and English. (From 1989 to 1995, she
was Chairperson of Admissions for the Inter Regional Society of
Jungian Analysts.) From 1999-2003 she was Director of Training for
Inter Regional Society of Jungian Analysts. She has written two
books, Alcoholism and Women, published by Inner City Books,
and Impossible Love, published by Spring in English and
by the Editions de l’Homme in French. Jungian concepts that particularly
inspire her are the idea of individuation, ie. becoming truly oneself,
and the integration of the shadow as that part of ourselves that
we reject but that can expand our lives if we have the willingness
to let it enter our consciousness. Ms. Bauer believes that one of
the goals of analysis is to establish a ‘democracy’ of the psyche
– letting all our different parts have a voice in the way we live
our lives. |
Lecture: Friday, October 22, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, October 23, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 10/16; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| November
12-13, 2004
JEFFREY RAFF: The Wedding of Sophia |
| LECURE: Sophia, Goddess of Wisdom, is the moving
force behind alchemy and the feminine aspect of the Philosopher’s
Stone. Dr. Raff presents Sophia as a living being still present in
the world today, but repressed and ignored. Only by learning to engage
the world of the imagination can we find a way to bring Sophia back
into our world. Through an understanding of alchemical symbolism it
is possible to learn more about Sophia, the imaginal realm, and the
feminine principle.
WORKSHOP: Riding the Untamed Dragon:
A Workshop on Active Imagination
Active Imagination is the technique, first described by C.G.Jung,
through which we enter the imaginal realm. Used properly, active
imagination creates a union between the ego and the unconscious,
enriches the individuation process and empowers one’s inner voice.
It is the means by which the inner world becomes real. Dr. Raff
has developed a series of exercises that allows beginners, as well
as those more advanced in inner work, to engage in active imagination.
This workshop is primarily experiential with some discussion of
theory where required. The goal of the workshop is to increase the
ability of participants to perform active imagination on their own.
JEFFREY RAFF, Ph.D. received his BA from Bates
College, a Masters in Psychology from the New School for Social
Research, and a PhD in Psychology from Union Graduate Institute.
He attended the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich from 1972 to 1976,
graduating as a diplomate Jungian Analyst. He is the author of Jung
and the Alchemical Imagination, Healing the Wounded God, and
The Wedding of Sophia, as well as numerous articles. He
is in private practice in Littleton, Colorado and has taught active
imagination workshops for thirty years.
Reading List (click here)
|
| Lecture: Friday, November 12, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Collins Hall
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$10 at the door; Members free.
|
Workshop: Saturday, November 13, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: 50 if registered by 11/9; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| December
10-11, 2004
JAMES HOLLIS: Divining Divinities:
Reflections on the gods
|
| LECTURE: Archetypal psychology employs the metaphor of
“the gods” to refer to the primal, archaic energies which course
through the cosmos, through nature, and through ourselves.Who or
what are “the gods,” and where are they observed in the conduct
of daily life? Why does this matter to us?
WORKSHOP: Your Personal Myth
A myth is an energy charged force field with an implicit
narrative and a predictive scenario in which we move,
and which moves us, whether we are conscious of its
presence and effects or not. What are the outlines of
your personal myth?
This workshop will use journaling to respond to a series
of questions and exercises designed to lift this force field
into greater consciousness.Without consciousness, no
real choices are possible.
JAMES HOLLIS, Ph. D., is Executive Director of
the Jung Educational Center of Houston, a Training Analyst for the
Inter- Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, and author of ten books,
the latest being: Mythologems: Incarnations of the Invisible
World.
Reading List (click here) |
Lecture: Friday, December 10, 7:30 pm
Unity Church of Portland, Sanctuary
4525 SE Stark St, Portland, OR
$10 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, December 11, 9:30
am - 4:00 pm
Unity Church of Portland, Sanctuary
4525 SE Stark St., Portland, OR
Public: $85. Members: $50 if registered by 12/3; $60 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|