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Calendar
Spring 2007
|
| Our calendar of events for Spring, 2007. Please
note: Dates, locations, or speakers are subject to change. Check
this website for last minute changes. |
January
19-20, 2007
TESS CASTLEMAN: Creativity: The Holy Other as Transcendent
Healer in Analysis, Community and Culture |
| LECTURE
Although neither traditional nor radically alternative, creative
expression in Jungian analysis arises as the third transcendent
healing opportunity, completing the dyad of analyst and
analysand. This creative third can be a dream or an active
imagination, sometimes in the form of a work of art, sometimes
not, but always expressing the transcendent function of the Self in
its creative play of the tension of opposites. Using examples from
clinical cases, social experiments, and excerpts from the films of
the Japanese master director Akira Kurosawa, the function of
creativity will be explored both on a personal basis and in its
larger collective and cultural role in our societies and our world
community.
Writing: The Door In
WORKSHOP
Using innovative techniques inspired by Natalie Goldberg and
Julia Cameron in their presentations on creative writing, as well
as Tess Castleman’s own approach devised from fifteen years of
conducting writing seminars, workshop participants will engage in
an experiential writing process drawing upon their inner world.
Participants will benefit from giving expression to their own
voices, especially if they have been told that writing is not one of
their talents or special abilities. (They will not be required to read
their writing to the group, but will be given the opportunity to do
so if they choose to.) During the day, a series of different exercises
will guide us as we travel into the labyrinth of our inner resources
to discover potentials that generally are unknown to us and
largely untapped in our lives. Please bring journals or notebooks,
at least two pens, or a laptop to record the results of our
exploration.
TESS CASTLEMAN, M.A., is a Zurich graduate and
Jungian analyst since 1989, and faculty and a newly elected member
of the Curatorium of the Jung Institute of Zurich. She is author
of Threads, Knots, Tapestries: How a Tribal Connection is Revealed
through Dreams and Synchronicities and the soon to be published:
Sacred Circles: Creating Dreaming Community. She has also completed
a novel. She lives in Dallas, Texas, and Zurich, Switzerland, where
she practices as an analyst. She leads dream retreats throughout
the world.
Register (click here) Reading
List (click here)
|
Lecture: Friday, January 19, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$12 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, January 20, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $60 if registered by 1/12; $70 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| February
16-17, 2007 LYN COWAN: Seabiscuit:
The Little Horse That Could, And Did, And Still Does |
| LECTURE
The word “hero” is so broadly used in our day that it begins to
lose its mythic sense. But the mythic Hero – larger than life and
required to accomplish impossible tasks at great risk, bringing
hope and redemption to lesser mortals – stands in an important relationship
to the Self. Implied in the Hero’s grand mission are ideas of personal
responsibility and vocation, two themes we meet frequently in Jung’s
theory of individuation but do not often examine. This presentation,
illustrated with film clips from the feature film, Seabiscuit,
will invite conversation about the collective psychological phenomenon
that was a horse named Seabiscuit – a true mythic Hero, and the
human partners who engaged with him in a mutual process of transformation.
Many Are Called – But How to Answer?
WORKSHOP
The word “vocation” means “a calling,” experienced as an
inner voice that prompts us to follow a certain path in life. But
“vocation” is more than an occupational aptitude or career
path; it involves a sense of Destiny, of purposefulness – not
merely blind Fate –that deepens our sense of self as we grow
older. Jung’s theory of individuation suggests that we are each
“called” to become distinct personalities, to become conscious
of ourselves and our differences, both interpersonal and
intrapersonal. But how can we answer this call in a world
pressing more insistently for conformity for safety’s sake? What
sort of heroism and personal responsibility is required for us to
both hear and answer psyche’s call?
LYN COWAN, Ph.D., has been a practicing Jungian
analyst since 1980, Director of Training for the Inter-Regional
Society of Jungian Analysts for six years and past president of
the Society, held a Professorship for ten years in the doctoral
program in Clinical Psychology at the Minnesota School for Professional
Psychology, and recently concluded two years of teaching and lecturing
at the C.G. Jung Center of Houston, Texas. She has frequently lectured
internationally and is the author of three books: Portrait of the
Blue Lady: The Character of Melancholy, Tracking the White Rabbit,
A Subversive View of Modern Culture, and Masochism: A Jungian View.
Her passion for horseracing began when she was 11 and continues
unabated.
Register (click here) Reading
List (click here)
|
Lecture: Friday, February 16, 7:30 pm
First Unitarian Church
1011 SW 12th Ave., Portland
Salmon St. Sanctuary
$12 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, February 11, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First Unitarian Church
1011 SW 12th Ave., Portland
Salmon St. Sanctuary
Public: $85. Members: $60 if registered by 2/9; $70 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| March
9-10, 2007
JOHN BEEBE: Trauma and Psychic Creativity
|
| LECTURE
One of the most remarkable capacities of the psyche is its ability
to manage traumatic experiences. Taking as examples major innovative
works of art from the history of painting and film, Dr. Beebe will
illustrate the strategies the psyche adopts when forced to manage
its sense of violation and disillusionment through creativity. He
will then relate the solutions endorsed by artists in times of cataclysmic
social upheaval, with the choices analytic patients sometimes are
able to make when faced with overwhelming life events.
How to Recognize the Eight Function-Attitudes -- An Approach
to Psychological Typing
WORKSHOP
To recognize at first glance the true “psychological type” of a
person one is starting to get to know is no doubt a knack, but to
be able to identify the particular kind of consciousness that the
person is presenting at a given moment of interaction is something
that can be learned. The eight-function, eight-archetype model of
the types that John Beebe has developed greatly facilitates this
learning. With the aid of clips from classic American film, Dr.
Beebe will demonstrate how this model can enable us to recognize
each of the eight “functions of consciousness” that Jung described
in his 1921 classic, Psychological Types. The systematic
use of Dr. Beebe’s new model, developing Jung’s theory for our time,
is a good way to assess the results of taking an MBTI paper and
pencil instrument to see if the test findings really match the conscious
orientation of the person.
Taking us into his cinematic workshop, Dr. Beebe will share with
us how he determines that one function-attitude and not another
is being presented to us on the screen at a particular moment. He
will show how he then goes about assessing that consciousness using
Jung’s typology. He will present some telling examples of how particular
archetypes colors the presentation of a particular function, such
as feeling, thinking, intuition, or sensation, and its attitude,
extraversion or introversion, often so much as to make it seem like
some other function and attitude. The goal of this daylong event
is to sharpen the audience’s talent for type recognition.
JOHN BEEBE, M.D., a Jungian analyst and psychiatrist
in practice in San Francisco, is a past President of the C. G. Jung
Institute of San Francisco. An internationally recognized clinical
teacher of Jungian psychology, he has lectured on topics related
to analytical psychology throughout the world. His writings on dreams,
psychological types, and masculine psychology have appeared in the
Chiron Clinical Series, The Journal of Analytical Psychology, Psychological
Perspectives, The San Francisco Jung Institute Library Journal,
Spring Journal, and other Jungian publications, and in many collections
of papers edited by Jungian analysts. Dr. Beebe is the author of
his own book, Integrity in Depth, which is a study of the archetype
of moral wholeness, and he has pioneered the use of Jung’s typology
to gain insight into our effects upon others, for good and ill.
As a lover and recognized critic of film, he frequently draws upon
movies to illustrate how various styles of consciousness interact
to produce the stories of our lives that Jung called individuation.
Register (click here) Reading
List (click here)
|
Lecture: Friday, March 9, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$12 at the door; Members free. |
Workshop: Saturday, March 10, 9:30 am -
4 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $60 if registered by 3/2; $70 afterwards. |
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| April
13-14, 2007
RICHARD TARNAS: Cosmos and Psyche: Jungian Archetypes
and Astrology |
| LECTURE & WORKSHOP
Jung began to examine astrology as early as 1911, when he mentioned
his inquiries in a letter to Freud. That interest gradually developed
into a major focus of investigation, and in his later years Jung
devoted himself with considerable passion to astrological research.
“Astrology,” he stated, “represents the sum of all the psychological
knowledge of antiquity.” Insights from these studies influenced
many of his most significant formulations in the final, extraordinarily
fruitful phase of his life’s work, including archetypal theory,
synchronicity, and the philosophy of history. Since his death, reports
from his family and others close to him have revealed that in his
last decades Jung came to employ the analysis of his patients’ astrological
charts as a regular and integral aspect of his clinical work.
Yet astrology runs so directly counter to the long-established cosmology
that encompasses the modern world view that one can appreciate Jung’s
reluctance to make public the extent of his use of astrology, and
the resistance of many Jungian analysts to further explore the astrological
direction their founder had pursued. However, recent research by
Richard Tarnas and Stanislav Grof gives new support for Jung’s intuition
of the value of astrology and of the trans-psychic (or “psychoid”)
nature of the archetypes. These observations suggest the existence
of an extraordinarily consistent synchronistic correspondence between
planetary movements and the archetypal patterns of human experience,
reflecting something like a cosmic anima mundi in which the human
being participates.
On Friday, Dr. Tarnas will summarize this evidence, discuss the
new light it sheds on the human psyche and the unfolding drama of
history, and explore the implications it holds for Jungian psychology.
Saturday will be devoted to a more in-depth survey of the observed
archetypal correlations, the relevant principles of astrological
analysis, and the new horizon of possibility this perspective opens
up for facilitating both individuation and collective self-awareness.
RICHARD TARNAS, Ph.D., is professor of philosophy
and psychology at the California Institute of Integral Studies in
San Francisco, where he teaches archetypal studies and the history
of Western thought and culture. He was the founding director of
the Ph.D. and Master’s program in Philosophy, Cosmology, and Consciousness.
He also teaches on the faculty of the Pacifica Graduate Institute
in Santa Barbara. He is the author of Cosmos and Psyche: Intimations
of a New World View (Viking, 2006).
Register (click here) Reading
List (click here) |
Lecture: Friday, April 13, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$12 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, April 14, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Fireside Room
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $60 if registered by 4/6; $70 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| May
11-12, 2007
JAMES HOLLIS: Why Good People Do Bad Things: Revisiting
the Shadow |
| LECTURE
For each of us there are energies, motives, agendas which operate
outside our conscious control and sometimes are contrary to our
professed values. These energies, which Jung collectively identified
as the Shadow, might best be defined not as evil, but as that which
makes us uncomfortable with ourselves. Such energies represent an
enormous invitation for greater consciousness, for living more ethically,
and whose integration brings a greater possibility of wholeness.
This program will define and illustrate the many ways in which the
Shadow operates in personal and social life.
Engaging the Personal Shadow
WORKSHOP
What is our personal Shadow? How may we come to know that which
is by definition unconscious within us? A series of exercises and
questions will help provide greater self-awareness. Our learning
objectives will be to explore:
What is meant by the concept of the Shadow?
- How does the Shadow show up in personal, psychological life?
- How does the Shadow manifest collectively in social settings?
- How does one gain a greater awareness of the personal and the
collective Shadow?
Please bring a pen and journal for these exercises.
JAMES HOLLIS, Ph.D., is the Executive Director
of the Jung Educational Center of Houston, the co-founder of Philadelphia
Jung Institute, and author of twelve books, the latest being, Why
Good People Do Bad Things: Understanding our Darker Selves.
He graduated as an analyst from the Zurich Jung Institute in 1982.
His other books include: The Middle Passage: From Misery to
Meaning at Mid-Life, Under Saturn’s Shadow: the Wounding and Healing
of Men, Swamplands of the Soul: New Life from Dismal Places, and
Finding Meaning in the Second Half of Life.
Register (click here) Reading
List (click here)
|
Lecture: Friday, May 11, 7:30 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
$12 at the door; Members free. |
| Workshop: Saturday, May 12, 9:30 am
- 4:00 pm
First United Methodist Church, Sanctuary
1838 SW Jefferson St, Portland
Public: $85. Members: $60 if registered by 5/4; $70 afterwards.
|
| Continuing Education Credit is
available for both lecture and workshop. |
|
| June
2, 2007
ANNUAL LIGHT-HEARTED EVENING |
|
|
You are invited to our annual
meeting and potluck, with
amusements to follow.
Enjoy good food, a chance to
meet other members (nonmembers
are welcome) and
some lighthearted celebrations.
Please bring a dish to share.
|
Saturday, June 2th, 5 - 8pm
Friendship Masonic Lodge
5625 NE Alameda, Portland
Located on the north side of Sandy Boulevard, just past 56th Avenue.
Park in the lot across the street from the lodge on Alameda Street.
Free to members and guests.
|
| July
28 , 2007
USED BOOK SALE |
|
|
Hundreds of titles!
* Jungian, non-Jungian, even Freudian!
* Fiction and non-fiction
* Music and myth
* Books, CDs, tapes, and LPs
Cash, checks with ID accepted
Used book dealers welcome to buy in bulk between 3 and 4 PM.
|
Saturday, July 28th, 11 - 4 pm
on the lawn in front of the OJCGJ library
811 NW 20th Avenue, Portland
|