2011-2012 - Center for Jungian Studies of South Florida

Transcription

2011-2012 - Center for Jungian Studies of South Florida
The Center for Jungian Studies
Of South Florida
A not-for-profit 501(c)3 organizaƟon
P.O. Box 669
Hallandale, FL 33008
www.JungCenterSouthFlorida.org
201 1-20 12 C ALE ND AR E NC LO SED
... the content of the collective unconscious
is made up essentially of archetypes ...
Carl Jung
24TH SEASON BEGINS
Friday, September 23RD
Join Us!
What moves us? What changes our plans, intentions, and the
course of our lives? What Gods and Goddesses cross our paths
and compel us towards wholeness and meaning?
Archetypes:
Gods and Goddesses
SEASON PASS NOW AVAILABLE – SAVE $110
A SEASON PASS is only $250 for 6 events, a savings of $110 (Membership,
Schoen Workshop, Tarantino Seminar, Annual Event & CEUs are not
included). Send your check (include address, phone & email) with “Season
Pass” noted to:
Patrick Parham, CJSSF Treasurer, P.O. Box 669, Hallandale, FL 33008
Or visit JungCenterSouthFlorida.org to pay under Membership.
THE CENTER IS A NOT-FOR-PROFIT ORGANIZATION that serves the wider
community by presenting lectures, workshops, and discussions to address psychological,
social and spiritual issues and provide a forum for personal reflection and growth inspired
by C.G. Jung’s Analytical Psychology.
Come join us as we explore the paradoxes and ambiguities of the archetypal psychic
powers that manifest in our personalities, relationships, culture, arts, and spirituality,
and as we grow to appreciate that these Gods and Goddesses must be honored…all
within a supportive, welcoming community of mental health professionals and others
actively seeking personal awareness, exploration, and growth.
Jung spoke of his understanding of God days before his death: “To this day, God is
the name by which I designate all things which cross my willful path violently and
recklessly, all things which upset my subjective views, plans and intentions and
change the course of my life for better or worse.”
CJSSF BOARD OF DIRECTORS
PRESIDENT & MEMBERSHIP: Ann Q. Lynch, Ed.D., LMHC
CHAIR: Brenda Astor, R.N., DCN
VICE PRESIDENT & PROGRAM DIRECTOR: Pamela Heider, Ph.D., LMHC
SECRETARY & CONTINUING EDUCATION: Constance Avery-Clark, Ph.D.
TREASURER: Patrick Parham, M.A.
COMMUNICATIONS CHAIR: Jeannette Sullivan, M.A.
COMMUNICATIONS: Lucia Leao, M.A.
BOOKSTORE: Richard Chappell, B.A.
TREASURE COAST CHAPTER CHAIR: Teresa Oster, M.S., M.SW., LCSW
MEMBER-AT-LARGE: Joanna DeAngelo, M.A., LMHC, ATR, CAP
JUNGIAN ANALYST: Fred Fleischer, M.A.
CONTINUING EDUCATION: Hilary Israch, M.S., LCSW
HOSPITALITY: Yehudis Levitin, B.FA.
WEBMASTER: Kristin Rosebrock, B.FA.
JUNGIAN ANALYST ADVISORS:
Santo Tarantino, Ph.D., Linda van Dyck, M.Div., Ph.D., Rick Overman, Psy. D.,
Danila Crespi, M.A., Judith Moscu, Ph.D., & Kaitryn Wertz, M. Ed.
Center for Jungian Studies of South Florida
Visit JungCenterSouthFlorida.org for expanded event descripƟons
with learning objecƟves plus details on CEUs, discounts, and direcƟons
to The Riverside Hotel, All Saints Episcopal Church, The Duncan
Conference Center, and The Flagler Center.
Se pte mb er 2 3
Friday 6:30—9:30 pm
All Saints Episcopal Church, Ft. Lauderdale
Social, Book Sale & Film
Film Featuring Marion Woodman
The Feminine & Addiction
Please join us as we kick off our new season with an
evening of conversation, food, and drinks—all FREE!—
plus amazing bargains. Build your library with new and
classic Jungian and other psychology works, along with
donated books at low, low prices. The DVD presentation
of a poignant, intensely personal interview with world
renowned Jungian Analyst Marion Woodman on her
struggle with her own addiction will serve as a prelude to
our November 18 & 19 workshop on “The War of the
Gods in Addiction: C.G. Jung, Alcoholics Anonymous
and Archetypal Evil” with acclaimed author David E.
Schoen. Ms. Woodman discusses the relationship between
the archetypal feminine and addiction in general, touching
on the negative mother, the positive masculine, the
unravished bride, the body, and connecting to the
feminine through dream imagery. She suggests that we
turn to addictions out of an unconscious yearning for what
is lacking—whether that be joy, love, or nurturing—or in
response to an unhealed childhood trauma. Only by
embracing the positive feminine archetypal presence can
we find our way out of the addiction and into a more
balanced life.
All FREE! RSVPs Appreciated
Oct ob er 15
Saturday 9:30 am—4:30 pm
All Saints Episcopal Church, Ft Lauderdale
Creative Aging
with Ricki Tannen, Ph.D.
“For the aging person it is a duty and a necessity to devote
serious attention to himself,” Jung stated. As the first half
of life is an outbound journey, the second half takes us
inward, requiring time, patience, a reorientation towards
the shadow and inferior functions, and the development
of the relationship with the Self. Jung's focus on the Self
stands in opposition to the collective consciousness
bombarding us with messages about how not to grow old.
CJSSF Presents a Special Event
No ve mb er 1 8 -1 9
Friday 7:30—9:30 pm; Reception 6:30 pm
Saturday 9:00 am—4:00 pm
The Riverside Hotel, Ft. Lauderdale
The War of the Gods
in Addiction: C.G. Jung,
Alcoholics Anonymous,
and Archetypal Evil
David Schoen, M.S.SW , LCSW
Jungian Analyst & Author
with
This special event lecture and workshop will explore the
correspondence between Bill W., one of the founders of
Alcoholics Anonymous, and Carl Jung. Based on David
Schoen’s highly acclaimed book by the same title, this
workshop will suggest an original, psychodynamic view
of addiction that explains the creation and successful
treatment of alcoholism and other addictions through the
dual lenses of A.A. and Jungian psychology.
Mr. Schoen suggests that addiction is not just overindulgence in alcohol, drugs, sex, or fudge, and not just a
lack of will power, motivation, or moral character
weakness, or the inability to resist temptation. Rather, it is
about the total, potentially lethal taking over of healthy
ego functioning by Archetypal Shadow/Evil, namely, the
powers of fear, anxiety, and other obstacles to wholeness.
Mr. Schoen will emphasize Archetypal Shadow/Evil
neutralization as he delineates each of the 12 steps of
recovery programs in terms of analytic theories of
recovery. Clinical, theoretical, mythological, fairy tale,
and dream material will be used for conceptual
illustration and treatment explanation. (Combined 8 CEUs)
David E. Schoen, M.S.SW., LCSW, is presently senior
analyst in the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts. He
lectures and teaches nationally, and has published several articles for
journals in the United States and abroad. His books include
Divine Tempest: The Hurricane as a Psychic
Phenomenon (1998), and The War of the Gods in
Addiction: C. G. Jung, Alcoholics Anonymous, and
Archetypal Evil (2009). He is also a Louisiana poet.
This program will explore Jung's seven tasks of aging in
light of modern research, timeless philosophy, gender
issues, and modern depth psychology. It will include the
trickster approach to aging and the Baby Boomer
demographic. While exploring shadow dynamics, we will
consider the perspectives of James Hillman, Helen Luke,
Marion Woodman and other Jungian sages. (6 CEUs)
Ricki Tannen, Ph.D., has a doctoral degree in Depth
Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute and is also a Harvard
trained attorney. She served as President of CJSSF in 2003-2004
and has presented for the Center many times. She is an author,
including her most recent book, The Female Trickster (2007).
She has a small private practice in Hollywood, FL.
Workshop $75, Student $60, (Lunch)
Both: $175 (M
Member $150);
St Member $135)
Student $150 (S
M $40) St $40 (S
SM $35)
Friday ONLY: $50 (M
M $110)St $110 (S
SM $1
100)
Sat ONLY: $125 (M
~ NO EVENTS In DECEMBER~
Jan uary 21, 201 2
Treasure Coast Chapter
Apr il 14
Saturday 10:30 am – 3:30 pm
The Duncan Center, Delray Beach
Saturday 1:00 – 5:00 pm
A Reading Seminar:
~ NEW VENUE ~ The Flagler Center, Stuart
“Jung's Thought about the
Self in Light of
its Underlying Experience"
by Wolfgang Giegerich
with
Romantic Love
and Immortality
in the Fountain
With
Santo Tarantino, Ph.D.
In 1913 Jung came to the realization that there was no
longer any viable myth, and that out of this demise of myth
(and religion), psychology necessarily emerged as the next
historical phase of consciousness. Paradoxically, Jung
immediately asked, “Then what is my myth?” Wolfgang
Giegerich describes Jung’s psychological development after
the break with Freud when he was wrestling with his myth.
This question was not answered until Jung, in a
transformational encounter on safari in Africa, experienced
consciousness being aware of itself as thought. This “myth
of consciousness” was the pathway to “meaning.” The
seminar will critically and rigorously explore the movement
of consciousness from implicit to more explicit thought as a
defining characteristic of humankind and meaning, and will
suggest reasons that consciousness cannot be a subject for
mythology. It will require the reading of Giegerich’s
Chapter Eight of The Neurosis of Psychology (Spring Journal
Books), available through CJSSF. Giegerich’s article will be
challenging to most readers, but if understood, it will begin
a revolution in one’s views of Jungian psychology.
Santo Tarantino, Ph.D., is a Jungian Analyst with a Diplomate
in Jungian Psychoanalysis and a doctoral degree in Social Psychology.
He served as President of the CJSSF from 1992- 1994. He has been
an Associate Professor of Psychology at FAU (now retired), has
published and presented internationally to Jungian organizations and
is Chair of the Executive Committee of the International Society for
Psychology as the Discipline of Interiority.
Seminar $100 + $20 Book (Lunch)
Limited to 25 CJSSF Members
Febr uary 19
Sunday 11am—3:30 pm
The Riverside Hotel, Ft Lauderdale
THE QUEST FOR HAPPINESS and
the INDIVIDUATION PROCESS
in The Blue Bird
with Linda van Dyck, M.Div., Ph.D.
The Blue Bird is a Russian Fairy
Tale made into a film by the
United States and the Soviet
Union. A poor brother and
sister are sent on a journey by
the Witch/Light to find the
Blue Bird of Happiness and to bring it home. They must
choose their path. They look in various places, including
memory, night (the unconscious), pleasures, and even the
future. However, just when they think they have found the
bird, it eludes them. Inanimate objects, such as fire, bread,
milk, and sugar, come to life and join the children. Their
dog and cat, who can communicate by speaking, also accompany them. This is an enchanting story that suggests the
process of developing wisdom and finding meaning for
ourselves and for our lives. (3 CEUs)
Linda van Dyck, M.Div., Ph.D., of the C.G. Jung Institute in
Zurich holds a Masters in Divinity in psychology and counseling from
Yale University Divinity School, and is a senior training analyst with
the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, and is an Advisor to
the CJSSF Board. Her private practice is in Palm Beach.
Brunch, Film & Discussion $60; St $45
Mar c h 1 6 & 1 7
Friday 7:30 – 9:30 pm; Reception 6:30 pm
Saturday 9:30 am – 4:30 pm
The Duncan Center, Delray Beach
Jung’s Psychology
As One Modern Man
In Search of His Soul
Douglas
Canterbury-Counts, Ph.D.
With
This lecture and workshop will focus on general and
then specific aspects of archetypal power on the
path of individuation. The lecture will explore Jung’s
assertion that "effective psychology is applied
philosophy." If philosophy is the love of wisdom,
by whose wisdom will we live? For Jung, it was the
wisdom of the archetypal Self. Dr. CanterburyCounts will use Jung’s Modern Man in Search of a Soul,
The Undiscovered Self, and dreams to explore examples
of Gods and Goddesses of the Self that represent
the interface between the noumenal world and the
phenomenal world, such as Father Sky and Mother
Earth. The intent of the evening is inspiration,
education, evocation, and initiation into our own
unique paths. (2 CEUs)
The Black Mother Kali:
Archetype
for the 21ST Century
This daylong workshop will focus more specifically
on feminine archetypes and will emphasize the
dangers every individual and modern culture faces
by repressing the feminine archetypal energies.
Much of world social unrest may be the feminine
emerging as Kali, the fierce skull headed Crone with
the power to revitalize old spiritual practice.
Kali’s myth will be retold as transformation of the
ego through shadow work immersed in divine,
unconditional love. Jung’s The Psychology of Kundalini
Yoga, works by James Hillman and Marion
Woodman, and experiential exercises will be used to
personalize concepts of shadow integration through
fierce love and to facilitate our waking up to Kali’s
wisdom. This re-emergence of the feminine is one
of the most significant events of the 21st century.
(6 CEUs)
Douglas Canterbury-Counts, Ph.D., is a licensed
clinical and neuropsychologist, founder and director of the
Center for Sacred Psychology, Regional Coordinator for the
Sacred Passage Wilderness training program, and was a
formative member of the CJSSF Board. He is clinical
consultant for River Fund, a HIV-AIDS project and By the
River, an elderly housing project.
Both $125; Student $100 (Lunch)
Friday Lecture: $30; St $20
Saturday Workshop: $95; St $80
Teresa Oster, M.S., LCSW
Living a more symbolic life, or finding one's myth, as
Jung put it, offers us meaning and purpose in our
distracted modern existence. The Fountain, a centuriesspanning romance about a man who wants to live
forever in service to his “Izzy”/Queen Isabella, weaves
universal threads in Mayan myth, the Christian Quest,
Kaballah, Alchemy and Buddhist reincarnation. The
hero and his queen endure dark gauntlets on their soul
journeys, propelled on by symbols: the tree of life, the
fountain of youth, a golden ring. They show how love,
devotion, and Jungian “individuation” can lead us to
more inspired living, to living in relation to Self. (3 CEUs)
Teresa Oster, MS., MSW., LCSW., is a licensed
psychotherapist in Stuart, FL. She is interested in the
intersection of the arts and psychology, and is Chair of
the CJSSF Treasure Coast Chapter.
Film & Discussion $45
St $30
May 5
Saturday 11 am — 4 pm
The Riverside Hotel,
Ft. Lauderdale
The Tree of Life:
An Exploration of the
Archetype
With Patrick Parham, M.A. &
Brenda Astor, R.N., DCN
The Tree of Life, with its many branches, can represent
good and evil as well as the interconnectedness of all
life on the planet. These motifs, together with the
themes of archetypal love, loss, and forgiveness, are
presented through beautiful imagery and classical music
in the movie, The Tree of Life. It tells the story of a
young protagonist who, while growing up in a small,
1950’s Texas town, has an internal dialogue with God
regarding existential questions. Brenda and Patrick will
have their own dialogue about their felt responses, and
then offer time for sharing together. We want this to
be a very experiential opportunity. (3 CEUs)
Patrick Parham, M.A., is an instructor at St. Thomas
University’s training Spiritual Directors program and serves as
Treasurer of the CJSSF Board.
Brenda Astor, R.N., DCN, is the founder of Wise Woman
Associates and Healing Arts Associates, a consulting practice for
creating Integrative Healthcare programs for individuals and
corporations. She serves as Chair of CJSSF Board.
Brunch, Film & Discussion $60, St $45
24th ANNUAL EVENT
Jun e 3, 20 12
Sunday 3:00 – 7:30 pm
The Riverside Hotel, Ft. Lauderdale
JUNG AND
ACTIVE IMAGINATION
Film featuring James Hillman, Ph.D.,
World Renowned Jungian Analyst
Facilitator: Pamela Heider , Ph.D.
The emergence of C.G. Jung’s Red Book from years of
storage in a Swiss vault has
rekindled interest in Active
Imagination. This method of
self-exploration involves
actively engaging one’s own
imagination in dialogue with
archetypal forces, through
writing, art, or the spoken word.
In this DVD, James Hillman,
introduces the method of
Active Imagination and delves deeply into the
therapeutic value it offers to re-engage us with the
Gods and Goddesses of our psyche who are
dangerously ignored in an increasingly noisy and demanding world. Hillman considers the history and
theory of Active Imagination in Jung’s work, and
offers examples for scrutiny and discussion. He
discusses our fear of inviting in the Gods and Goddesses as they are so often presumed, and sometimes
experienced, as demons. He explores our
apprehensions at opening wounds, and addresses the
difference between the voices of inner figures and
auditory hallucinations.
A discussion follows the film with local Jungian
Analysts and the audience, facilitated by Pamela
Heider, Ph.D. An elegant dinner will complete this
celebration. (3 CEUs)
James Hillman, Ph.D., is a Jungian Analyst, an American psychologist, the first Director of Studies at the Jung Institute in Zurich, and the developer of Archetypal Psychology. He
is the former editor of Spring Publications, devoted to advancing
Archetypal Psychology, mythology, philosophy, and art.
Pamela Heider, Ph.D., a Jungian-oriented and Gestalt
Psychotherapist, received her Doctorate in Clinical Psychology
from Pacifica Graduate Institute. She has a private practice in
Boca Raton and Hollywood and serves as Vice-President and
Program Chair of CJSSF.
Film, Discussion & Dinner $75, St $60
TO REGISTER: Send your check with your contact
information payable to CJSSF with event noted to
Patrick Parham, Treasurer, P.O. Box 669,
Hallandale, FL 33008. For late fees, directions, or to
pay online visit JungCenterSouthFlorida.org.
SORRY, NO REFUNDS.
CEU CREDITS are offered through the Florida
Department of Health for Psychologists (50-324, exp.
5/31/12) and for Licensed Clinical Social Workers,
Marriage & Family Therapists, and Mental Health
Counselors (50-324, exp. 3/31/13.).
BECOME A MEMBER OR RENEW YOUR
MEMBERSHIP for only $40 (student $20). Dues and
donations are tax deductible. Please send your email
address to [email protected] or
call our MESSAGE line at 954-525-4682.
Help
the Center‘s work and keep Jungian ideas and events
alive in South Florida. We are a 501(c)(3) organization.
TAX DEDUCTIBLE DONATIONS ALWAYS NEEDED.

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