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    analytical psychology

    Explore " analytical psychology" with insightful episodes like "E19 Healing Fire: Orthodox Christianity and Analytical Psychology with Pia Chaudhari", "Jungian Analytical Psychology in the workplace - Murray Stein", "EP 24: The Difference Between Carl Jung's Work and the Work Pioneered by Traditional Indigenous Healers Regarding the Unconscious", "82: Jose Leal – Psychotherapy, Religion, & Fairytales" and "E13 Making conscience conscious: A conversation with Donald Carveth & Sean McGrath" from podcasts like ""Psychology & The Cross", "Leadership 2.0", "Traditional Medicine Podcast with Caara Lovick", "The Sacred Speaks" and "Psychology & The Cross"" and more!

    Episodes (10)

    E19 Healing Fire: Orthodox Christianity and Analytical Psychology with Pia Chaudhari

    E19 Healing Fire: Orthodox Christianity and Analytical Psychology with Pia Chaudhari

    In this episode, I speak to Pia Chaudhari about her book Dynamis of Healing: Patristic Theology and the Psyche published by Fordham University Press. 


    Pia holds a doctorate in theology from the Department of Psychiatry & Religion at Union Theological Seminary in New York. Her research interests include theological anthropology, depth psychology, processes of healing, and the engagement with aestetics and beauty. She is a founding co-chair of the Analytical Psychology and Orthodox Christianity Consultation (APOCC). 


    Thank you for listening in on our conversation. 


    The music played in this episode is licensed under creativecommons.org: Ketsa - Dawn’s Dew.

    Jungian Analytical Psychology in the workplace - Murray Stein

    Jungian Analytical Psychology in the workplace - Murray Stein

    I am a big proponent of the work of Carl Jung and the business world could benefit from his insights. Therefore, I was pleased to have the opportunity to talk to Murray Stein about applying Jungian Analytical Psychology in the workplace. 

    Interestingly enough we met on labor day, something Jung would call undoubtedly label as synchronicity!   

    Murray Stein is a graduate of Yale University (B.A. and M.Div.), the University of Chicago (Ph.D.), and the C.G. Jung Institut-Zurich (Diploma). He is a founding member of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts and of the Chicago Society of Jungian Analysts. He has been the president of the International Association for Analytical Psychology (2001-4), and the President of The International School of Analytical Psychology-Zurich (2008-2012).

    He published tens of books about Carl Jung and analytical psychology, including for instance ‘Jung’s Treatment of Christianity’ and ‘Jung’s Map of the Soul’. The focus of our conversation was a book he edited with John Hollwitz called ‘The Psyche at work - Workplace Applications of Jungian Analytical Psychology’. 

    We discussed a number of topics, including

    - The essence of true leadership

    - The identity of organization

    - Business ethics

    - The need for embracing the shadow to prevent shadow possession and corporate scandals

    - The leadership style of different American presidents

    - The relation between the need for self-reflection by leaders, executive coaching, and psychoanalysis

    - The validity of MBTI

    - The importance of having a personal North star

    EP 24: The Difference Between Carl Jung's Work and the Work Pioneered by Traditional Indigenous Healers Regarding the Unconscious

    EP 24: The Difference Between Carl Jung's Work and the Work Pioneered by Traditional Indigenous Healers Regarding the Unconscious

    In this episode, we compare Carl Jung's work and the disciplines pioneered by Traditional Indigenous Healers in their efforts to work and understand the "unconscious," or what indigenous healers call the energetic and spiritual aspect of reality. We discuss that the main difference between these disciplines lies in their roots. On the one hand, Carl Jung's methods depend on the conscious side of life or the physical side of reality, where the intellect reigns supreme. On the other hand, indigenous healers have built their disciplines and methods using the very framework of the unconscious or the spiritual/energetic aspects of reality.

    www.traditionalmedicinemiami.com

    https://www.instagram.com/traditionalmedicinemiami

    82: Jose Leal – Psychotherapy, Religion, & Fairytales

    82: Jose Leal – Psychotherapy, Religion, & Fairytales

    Conversation starts @ 4:31

    We begin our conversation exploring José’s background, and with the likes of Dr. Andew Samuels and Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés as mentors, his intellectual, professional, and spiritual orientation ranges from depth psychology and meditation to attachment and spiritually integrated psychotherapy. First up is one of José’s papers on spirituality and psychotherapy wherein he takes a critical look at “Jungian” approaches and identifies some of the dangers of both ungrounded psychotherapy and spirituality. We discuss the nature of therapy, ways psychotherapy can support and transform suffering, the nature of the relationship in therapy, meditation, development of a private spiritual process, religion and defining related terms such as spirituality and mysticism, the taxonomy of healers and therapists, the shadow side of spiritual work and healing professions, shamanism, fairytales, the archetype defined, inflation in healing work, differences between mythology and fairytales, we analyze the fairytale “Sleeping Beauty,” or “Briar Rose,” and the importance of inviting the unexplored psychological aspects of self.

    Bio: 
    José has an M.A in Jungian and Post-Jungian Studies from the University of Essex, where Andrew Samuels was his academic supervisor, and an MSc in Systemic Psychotherapy from the Milton Erikson Institute from Monterrey. Since 2013, he has trained with Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés. He works as a psychotherapist in private practice and writes the column ‘The Spiritually Ambivalent Therapist’ for Thresholds, a Journal of Psychotherapy and Spirituality, from the British Association of Counseling and Psychotherapy.

    Class:
    junghouston.org/theevents/the-sev…of-inanna-online/

    Journal:
    www.bacp.co.uk/bacp-journals/thresholds/

    Sleeping Beauty:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleeping_Beauty
    sites.pitt.edu/~dash/grimm050.html

    Website for The Sacred Speaks:

    www.thesacredspeaks.com

    WATCH:

    YouTube for The Sacred Speaks
    www.youtube.com/channel/UCOAuksnpfht1udHWUVEO7Rg

    Instagram:
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    @thesacredspeaks
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    E13 Making conscience conscious: A conversation with Donald Carveth & Sean McGrath

    E13 Making conscience conscious: A conversation with Donald Carveth & Sean McGrath

    “Somewhere Jung says that the only evil is unconsciousness  and this, I think touches to your work Don, that this growth in consciousness, which psychoanalysis aims towards, has to be understood as a moral drive towards  the good.”


    Episode description:


    What’s the role of conscience, ethics, and morals in psychological development and individuation? To investigate this question we invited again the Toronto-based psychoanalyst Donald Carveth (Episode 12) and Philosophy & Theology professor Sean McGrath (Episode 3) for a conversation. As a base for our discussion, we have read the important 1958 Jung essay ‘A psychological view of conscience’. 


    You can access it through our new Substack page


    Donald Carveth is the author of the book "The still small voice: Psychoanalytic reflections on guilt and conscience” (Routledge, 2013). He runs a popular Youtube channel on psychoanalysis and also make some of his readings available on his website https://www.doncarveth.com/


    Sean McGrath is a  Canadian philosopher and Professor of Philosophy at Memorial University of Newfoundland. He is known for his published work in the history of philosophy and the philosophy of religion. Major single-authored works includes for example 'The Dark Ground of Spirit: Schelling and the unconscious'. There is also a separate podcast series, Secular Christ where Jakob Lusensky discusses questions related to Christianity today.

    Jakob Lusensky is a Jungian psychoanalyst with a private practice in Berlin and the host of this podcast.

    Music played in this episode is licensed under creativecommons.org: "Falling Angels" and "Golden teacher" by Ketsa.



    Short Intros Ep.3 - Jung

    Short Intros Ep.3 - Jung

    Hello wise people and welcome to our series 'Short Intros.'

    In this series, we focus on summarising books from the 'Very Short Introduction (VSI)' series published by Oxford University Press. 

    -----------------

    We hope you had a good break, full of lots of festive cheer. I know we did.

    As you will have noticed we took a bit of time off, but now we are back and we have a bunch of plans in motion for the next couple of months to bring you some really great content. 


    Today, however,  we are summarising a Very Short Introduction to Jung by Anthony Stevens.

    Carl Jung was born in 1875 in Switzerland and was the founder of analytical psychology. He is well known for his work on the collective unconscious and archetypal potential and is considered to be a bit of a maverick in his own right.

    Now it's got to be said that Jung’s ideas aren’t the easiest to get your head around, so you have to stay open-minded, they’re essentially paradigms in themselves.  

    Anthony Steven’s does a great job of summarising his biggest ideas which we try to elaborate on in this summary. We cover his Individuation process for self-growth, the collective unconscious, archetypal potential, stages of life, dream analysis and finally psychological types. 

    Obviously, we won’t be able to do it justice and there is so much material out there that it is almost impossible to summarise in an hour, but we hope we are able to provide an insight into this great mind and some of his work which is still having an effect today.

    If you enjoy it, you know the drill, give us a like, a subscribe or a follow and if you’re feeling super inspired, why not leave us a comment and let us know your thoughts. But until then, we hope you enjoy A Very Short Introduction to Jung.

    -------------------

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    A letter from C.G Jung to Hermann von Keyserling, 1928

    A letter from C.G Jung to Hermann von Keyserling, 1928

    A letter from C.G Jung To Count Hermann von Keyserling,

    Küsnacht, 2 January 1928

    "Dear Count,

    Your return to yourself, enforced by illness, is on the right track and is something I have wished and expected for you. You identify with the eternally creative, restless, and ruthless god in yourself, therefore you see through everything personal— a tremendous fate which it would be ridiculous either to praise or to censure!

    I was compelled to respect Nietzsche’s Amor fati until I had my fill of it, then I built a little house way out in the country near the mountains and carved an inscription on the wall: Philemonis sacrum— Fausti poenitentia, and “ dis-identified” myself with the god. I have never regretted this doubtless very unholy act.

    By temperament I despise the “ personal,” any kind of “ togetherness,” but it is so strong a force, this whole crushing unspiritual weight of the earth, that I fear it. It can rouse my body to revolt against the spirit so that before reaching the zenith of my flight I fall lamed to earth. That is the danger you too must reckon with. It is also the fear that prevents our friend X from flying. He can be nothing else but intellectual.

    You have paid a salutary tribute to the earth with your illness. Let’s hope your gods will be equally gracious to you next time!

    With best wishes for the New Year,

    Yours sincerely,

    C.G Jung"

    Jung ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Pages 49-50

    64: Mackenzie Amara – Dreams, Psychedelics, & the Underworld

    64: Mackenzie Amara – Dreams, Psychedelics, & the Underworld

    Join John in his interview with Mackenzie Amara - known to many as the “inked shrink” - as they explore the relationship between trauma and healing, psychedelics and psychosis, and dreams and the underworld. Mackenzie, an early initiate into both psychedelics and psychosis, endured a challenge to her worldview, which subsequently opened the next stage in her life. We discuss Jung’s struggle with psychedelics, repression of moment-to-moment authenticity and spontaneity, psychoanalysis as an acid trip, psychedelic assisted psychotherapy, dreams and waking fantasies, Mackenzie provides a personal example of taking a dream seriously and the impact of that attitude and decision making, rational thinking as a means of defense, trigger warnings and cancel culture, the underworld, and the rational, irrational & reason.

    Bio: 

    By trade Mackenzie is a writer, coach, & 5Rhythms® teacher. By vocation she is a Jungian analyst-in-training & Clinical Psychology doctoral student. By design she is a collection of fractal, holographic cells dancing around some strange attractor for the sake of who knows what to live an insignificant, mythic life reflective of the mysterious vital spark within her. She identifies as a series of memories & unverifiable subjective experiences of self-hood to which she is rather fondly attached. She has a penchant for scholarship, the occult, pedantic erudition, morbid humor, grandiosity, nihilism, & semi-responsible hedonism. Born in the shadow of New Age culture into a fractured family system & the subjective experiencer of (arguably) extreme early childhood trauma, her life’s work is to heal psychic wounds—her’s & other’s—that she & others become strong enough to contend with the unconscious quicksands & transpersonal abysses which lap at the periphery of developing consciousness. She is an emergent property of Being playing at becoming sovereign. She really, really loves butter. 

    https://www.mackenzieamara.com

    Makenzie’s YouTube lecture: 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sYR9JtlWCHE&t=23s

    CLASS:

    http://junghouston.org/program-offering-detail/?id=dfb2b6b6-4eb0-11eb-b993-02dbb43a0b10

    Website for The Sacred Speaks: 

    http://www.thesacredspeaks.com

    WATCH:

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    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOAuksnpfht1udHWUVEO7Rg

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    5: Psychology and Religion. A Conversation with Pittman McGehee

    5: Psychology and Religion. A Conversation with Pittman McGehee

    In today’s episode, Pittman unpacks the definition of religion and broadens the traditional limiting assumptions many immediately experience in relationship to religion. We discuss how many of the actions that have been in the name of religion are not religious. We begin by defining religion, the philosophy of materialism, psychological wholeness, good and evil, individuation, and the Self. Pittman discusses where religion goes wrong and how the human stewards of the various traditions affect the search for wholeness with human impulses, ideologies, and dominance. He defines spirituality as the deep human longing to transfer the transcendent into the immanent through experience and reflection upon it. We explore the profoundly powerful sacred aspects of human sexuality and the assault by the organize structures and the misinterpretation of each tradition that has been destructive of sexuality.

    Biography: 
    Pittman became was ordained as a priest in the Episcopal Church in 1969, The Very Reverend J. Pittman McGehee served, for 11 years, as Dean of Christ Church Cathedral, located in the center of downtown Houston. Since moving to Houston in 1980, Mr. McGehee has been in demand as a lecturer and speaker in the fields of psychology and religion. He lectures regularly at the C. G. Jung Center and has published two papers through that Center: “Water as a Symbol of Transformation” (1985), and “The Healing Wound and the Wounded Healer” (1986). He is a regular book reviewer for The Living Church.
    Dr. McGehee has held many distinguished lectureships, including the 1987 Harvey Lecture at the Episcopal Seminary of the Southwest in Austin, where he received an honorary Doctorate of Divinity; the 1988 Perkins Lecture in Wichita Falls; the 1990 Woodhull Lectures in Dayton, Ohio, and the 1991 St. Luke’s Lectures in Birmingham. He was the 1994 Rockwell visiting Theologian at the University of Houston and 1996 Carolyn Fay Lecturer in Analytical Psychology also at the University of Houston. He is an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of Texas, an Adjunct Instructor at Saybrook University, and a Faculty Member of the C. G. Jung Institute in Zurich, Switzerland. His books are: The Invisible Church: Finding Spirituality Where You Are, Praeger Press, 2008; Raising Lazarus: The Science of Healing the Soul, 2009; Words Made Flesh: Selected Sermons by The Very Reverend J. Pittman McGehee, D.D., 2011; The Paradox of Love, (available 10/1/2011); and Slender Threads: An Interview with Robert Johnson (DVD).
    In addition to his teaching and prose writing, Mr. McGehee is known for his poetry. His work has been chosen for the juried Houston Poetry Fest (1985, 1987, 1988), and his poems “Ash Wednesday,” “Pegasus,” and “Semination” were published in the Poetry Fest Anthology. His poems also have appeared in the Cimarron Review, the Anglican Theological Review, the St. Luke’s Journal, In Art magazine, Cite magazine, Windhover, and New Texas magazine.
    In 1991, Dr. McGehee resigned from Christ Church Cathedral to become the director of The Institute for the Advancement of Psychology and Spirituality. The Institute joins the disciplines of psychology and religion by exploring the concept that mental health comes with the integration of the biological, psychological, and spiritual elements of the human condition. In 1996, the C. G. Jung Institute of Dallas awarded him a diploma in Analytical Psychology. In addition, he is currently in private practice as a priest/psychoanalyst and teacher/lecturer.

    www.jpittmanmcgehee.com

    Music provided by:
    www.modernnationsmusic.com

    Learn more about this project at:
    www.thesa

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