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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
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TZID:America/Los_Angeles
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DTSTART:20220313T100000
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DTSTART:20221106T090000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220326T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220326T160000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T121645Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T091356Z
UID:10001553-1648288800-1648310400@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:REIMAGINING TRAUMA: DEPTH-ORIENTED APPROACHES TO ANGUISH IN OUR TIMES
DESCRIPTION:From the trauma of culturally condoned hate\, including systemic racism and its historical underpinnings\, to under-recognized forms of trauma in childhood\, to modern-day traumas of a global pandemic with its panoramic dance of death\, we are living a cacophony of traumatic events â€” and collectively seized by history in the making. Informed by depth-oriented\, Jungian and psychoanalytic perspectives\, we will explore understanding trauma with patience\, justice-seeking\, peacemaking\, curiosity\, imagination\, and the body. We will consider the archetype of the wounded healer and spiritual attunement in supporting the emergence of untold stories\, meaning-making\, and new understanding. We will explore how the capacity within each of us to grieve\, forgive\, make reparation\, and live creatively can contribute\, collectively\, to transforming contemporary trauma. From micro-agonies of everyday life to manifestations of evil in power — trauma can catalyze growth and transformation. Even as we are seized by the disruptive darkness of these times\, it is possible to churn our experiences into something new; to compost a creative will toward renewal and restoration\, both individually and collectively. \nROBIN EVE GREENBERG\, MFT\, is an analyst member of the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, and an associate editor for Jung Journal: Culture and Psyche. Robin has written and lectured on a variety of subjects related to the art of psychotherapy\, creativity and opening to the imagination. She maintains a private practice in Kensington and San Francisco\, CA. \nBEGUM MAITRA\, MRCPsych\, MD\, is an analyst in private practice in London\, England. Her interest in cultural difference\, and imagined â€œuniversals\,â€? began with her origins in India\, and her long experience as a psychiatrist. Her writing and lectures explore ways of thinking about sameness and difference\, particularly considerations of race and gender. She published a book/film Culture and Madness. \nHELEN MARLO\, PhD\, is an analyst member of the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco; Professor and Chair of the Department of Clinical Psycholog y at Notre Dame de Namur University; and Reviews Editor for Jung Journal: Culture and Psyche. She is a psychologist in private practice in San Mateo\, CA and author of the co-edited book\, The Spiritual Psyche in Psychotherapy. \nSUSAN WILLIAMS\, MFT\, is a London trained Jungian personal/ supervisory analyst at the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. She has a practice in Berkeley\, CA where she sees adults\, adolescents and children. She has published and taught on topics including the numinous\, truth\, expanded states of consciousness\, psychedelic enhanced psychotherapy\, aliveness and deadness and autistic states of mind.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/reimagining-trauma-depth-oriented-approaches-to-anguish-in-our-times/
LOCATION:CA
CATEGORIES:Archived
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/1020reimagining20trauma-w1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220328T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220328T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T094911Z
UID:10001369-1648494000-1648502100@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-03-28/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220328T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220328T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001514-1648494000-1648502100@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-03-28/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220403T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220403T160000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T100351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T094927Z
UID:10001543-1648990800-1649001600@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY FOR EVERYDAY LIFE
DESCRIPTION:Jungian psychology for everyday life course is a study of key concepts in Analytical Psychology developed by C. G. Jung and expanded on by post-Jungians. \nA depth-oriented Jungian approach to life strives for personal transformation\, establishing a dialogue between consciousness and the unconscious\, authentic expression\, increasing self-knowledge\, and deepening of meaning in the service of psychological growth. \nThe course is designed for members of the community interested in a concentrated study of Jungian thought and practice. The course is for people on a personal soul-guided path towards individuation. \nThis is not a clinically oriented course although it may inform one’s personal analysis\, depth-oriented psychotherapy\, or psycho-spiritual practice.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-psychology-for-everyday-life-2022-04-03/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JEcourse1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220404T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220404T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T095003Z
UID:10001370-1649098800-1649106900@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-04-04/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220404T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220404T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001515-1649098800-1649106900@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-04-04/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220411T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220411T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T095207Z
UID:10001371-1649703600-1649711700@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-04-11/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220411T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220411T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001516-1649703600-1649711700@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-04-11/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220418T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220418T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T095246Z
UID:10001372-1650308400-1650316500@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-04-18/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220418T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220418T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001517-1650308400-1650316500@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-04-18/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220425T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220425T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T212803Z
UID:10001373-1650913200-1650921300@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-04-25/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220425T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220425T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001518-1650913200-1650921300@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-04-25/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220501T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220501T160000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T100351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220525T182358Z
UID:10001544-1651410000-1651420800@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY FOR EVERYDAY LIFE
DESCRIPTION:Jungian psychology for everyday life course is a study of key concepts in Analytical Psychology developed by C. G. Jung and expanded on by post-Jungians. \nA depth-oriented Jungian approach to life strives for personal transformation\, establishing a dialogue between consciousness and the unconscious\, authentic expression\, increasing self-knowledge\, and deepening of meaning in the service of psychological growth. \nThe course is designed for members of the community interested in a concentrated study of Jungian thought and practice. The course is for people on a personal soul-guided path towards individuation. \nThis is not a clinically oriented course although it may inform one’s personal analysis\, depth-oriented psychotherapy\, or psycho-spiritual practice.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-psychology-for-everyday-life-2022-05-01/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JEcourse1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220502T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220502T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T095424Z
UID:10001374-1651518000-1651526100@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-05-02/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220502T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220502T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001519-1651518000-1651526100@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-05-02/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220509T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220509T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T095445Z
UID:10001375-1652122800-1652130900@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-05-09/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220509T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220509T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001520-1652122800-1652130900@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-05-09/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220515T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220515T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20220202T093754Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214255Z
UID:10001556-1652623200-1652634000@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:ALCHEMICAL ALEMBIC AND THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE
DESCRIPTION:SUNDAY\, MAY 15\, 2022 \n2 – 5PM \nPRESENTED BY STACY HASSEN\, PhD \nFRIENDS MEMBERS: FREE \nGENERAL ADMISSION: $20 \nINSTITUTE CANDIDATES/GRAD STUDENTS/INTERNS: $15 \nThe moment of crisis holds potential\, like a tender seed. In the \nof recent dramatic shifts in our world: a global pandemic\, \nsocio-political unrest\, and ecocide\, how do we navigate these tumultuous times and respond both individually and in community? Alchemy not only provides a symbolic expression and language that describes how crisis catalyzes a psychological process\, but also offers a way to relate with and contain powerful energies of change. \nThrough alchemy\, C. G. Jung understood that the real alchemical work begins in the inner world\, where the process transforms the structure of our psyche\, turning lead into gold. Enlivening this light within us\, reciprocally awakens the light within nature — the lumen naturae as the alchemists called it\, and the light of the Anima Mundi — the feminine Soul of the World\, essential to the work. \nIn exploring the importance and role of the feminine and the valuing of women needed in our present time in deep relationship\, in coniunctio\, with the masculine\, we will look to socio-political\, scientific\, and ecological movements that illustrate how alchemy gives us the light to see from a new perspective that can nurture the seeds of true transformation and benefit the whole. \n  \nSTACY HASSEN\, PhD\, is curator of ARAS\, Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism\, at the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. She received her degree from Pacifica Graduate Institute with a focus on alchemy as a depth psychological process. She writes and lectures on ARAS\, alchemy\, and symbolism.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/alchemical-alembic-and-the-philosophers-stone/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/alchemical-alembic.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220516T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220516T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230720T215544Z
UID:10001376-1652727600-1652735700@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-05-16/2022-05-16/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220516T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220516T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001521-1652727600-1652735700@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-05-16/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220521T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220521T160000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T122900Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214345Z
UID:10001554-1653127200-1653148800@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:ARCHETYPES\, AESTHETICS AND CULTURE IN THE LIFE AND ART OF ROMARE BEARDEN
DESCRIPTION:The healing properties of the archetypes\, aesthetics\, and culture in the symbolism\, iconography\, the life and art of the master collagist\, painter and printmaker Romare Bearden (1911 – 1988) will be explored. The artist archetype expressed in Romare Bearden’s journey through the African diaspora\, posits that no artist of his generation better exemplifies the psychological depth and connection to the historiography of the African diaspora and to the rich culture of African-American psychology\, history and art. The presentation illuminates the breadth and depth of Bearden’s aesthetics and imagination in his art\, intellectual interests\, pursuit of political consciousness and social activism. Influenced by the Harlem Renaissance\, jazz\, African and European aesthetics\, Bearden as Griot\, guides us through a rich complex maze of symbols\, images\, memories\, metaphors\, dreams\, mythology\, spiritualism\, rituals\, cosmology and symbology. He proposed an African – Black aesthetic and identity that has been excavated and reconstructed as a healing salve and celebration of life within the global framework and historiography of the African diaspora. \nGRACE C. STANISLAUS\, MA in art history from Columbia University and BA in art history from Fordham University\, graduating summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. Former Executive Director of the Museum of the African Diaspora and President of the Romare Bearden Foundation\, among others\, she has published and lectured on art and artists and currently provides management consulting services. \nALAN G. VAUGHAN\, PhD\, JD\, is a member of the C.G Jung Institute of San Francisco\, in private practice as an analyst and a clinical & consulting psychologist. He is a psychology professor at Saybrook University\, an artist and scholar. His scholarship interests are at the intersections of analytical psychology\, U.S. Constitutional Jurisprudence and African diaspora studies.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/archetypes-aesthetics-and-culture-in-the-life-and-art-of-romare-bearden/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/romarebearden-w1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220523T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220523T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230720T215544Z
UID:10001377-1653332400-1653340500@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy-2022-05-16/2022-05-23/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220523T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220523T211500
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20210728T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220628T214610Z
UID:10001522-1653332400-1653340500@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Oriented Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:This course is designed for California licensed mental health clinicians in their early to mid-phase careers\, with interests in the application of Jungian concepts into their clinical practices. Participants will include those who work in a broad range of clinical settings; public sector community-based organizations\, colleges and universities\, medical organizations\, private practice\, and other mental health/behavioral health treatment settings. \nSEMINARS WILL BE TAUGHT BY CERTIFIED JUNGIAN ANALYSTS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE C.G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SAN FRANCISCO AND THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY.\nTHIS COURSE MAY BE CONSIDERED A STEP IN CLINICAL EDUCATION PRECEDING AN APPLICATION TO OUR ANALYTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. \nCancellation Policy: Refunds\, less a $25 cancellation fee prior to September 9\, 2021. After class begins\, only partial refunds possible – Space is limited. \nPartial scholarships are available on a case-by-case basis. \nSECTION ONE:\nCourse Introduction and Jungian History\nMonday\, September 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nThe history of analytical psychology will be the focus of this section\, both its relationship to Freudian theory and its roots in the intellectual culture of the times. Similarities and differences between psychoanalysis and analytical psychology will be explored to clarify their meaning within their respective theory. \nSECTION TWO:\nA Symbolic Attitude\nMondays\, September 20\, 27;\nOctober 4\, 2021\nYvonne Smith Tarnas\, MFT\, PhD\nThe development of a symbolic attitude in clinical case work is essential for recognizing symbolic expression through imagery\, dreams\, affect\, and to amplify symbols within an intersubjective transferential field. \nSECTION THREE:\nThe Complex of Identity: Ego\, Ego Development and the Phases of Life\nMondays\, October 11\, 18\, 25;\nNovember 1\, 2021\nShoshana Fershtman\, JD\, PhD\nWe will discuss C. G. Jung’s concept of the ego as the center of consciousness\, identity\, and the ego complex and the relationships with other aspects of the psyche including shadow\, the persona\, and the Self. \nSECTION FOUR:\nComplexes\, Persona\, and Shadow\nMondays\, November 8\, 15\, 22;\nDecember 6\, 2021\nMario Starc\, MSW\, PhD\nJung’s description of the psyche begins with the concept of “Complexes” and their relationship to “Persona” and “Shadow.” This section will look into developing both an understanding of the concepts and the capacity to make use of them in clinical work. \nSECTION FIVE:\nCourse Integration\nMonday\, December 13\, 2021\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nParticipants will be given the opportunity to gain clarity of concepts\, to ask questions\, discuss the successes\, the challenges of integrating and approaching the material into clinical practice and to evaluate the course to date. \nSECTION SIX:\nArchetypes\, Myths\,\nand the Personal Psyche\nMondays\, January 3\, 10\, 24\, 31 2022\nAlan Ruskin\, PhD\nPast the domain of the personal unconscious we encounter the impersonal realm of what Jung termed archetypes; energies in what he conceived of as the collective unconscious. We will study how archetypes manifest themselves in various cultures’ myths\, as well as our individual mythologies\, and how they influence the process of transference during the clinical hour. \nSECTION SEVEN:\nPsychological Types\nMondays\, February 7\, 14\, 21\, 28\, 2022\nJohn Beebe\, MD\nJung’s psychological types are not types of people but types of consciousness. In this course\, we will learn to differentiate the eight types of consciousness Jung identified\, as well as examine what Jung meant by the terms “rational” and “irrational” as well as extraverted and introverted as qualities of consciousness. We will learn to recognize the types of consciousness and see how types relate to archetypal roles each of us take up. \nSECTION EIGHT:\nApproaching the Unconscious:\nAn Analytic Attitude\nMondays\, March 7\, 14\, 21\, 2022\nTina Stromsted\, PhD\, MFT\, LPCC\, BC-DMT\, RSME/T\nOur goal will be to reflect on approaches to accessing the unconscious including the creative arts\, the body in analysis and applying embodied methods of inner work toward a range of populations and clinical settings along with the importance of nonverbal\, creative dimensions in the healing process. \nSECTION NINE:\nAnima and Animus\, Female and Male\nMondays\, March 28;\nApril 4\, 11\, 18\, 2022\nLauren Cunningham\, LCSW\nChristopher Cunningham\, PhD\nUsing Jung’s seminal writing\, we will start with a historical account of his concepts of anima and animus\, which pertain to the union of opposites and the emergence of the Self. Clinical material will be presented and compared to alchemical images. We will bring our conversation into relationship with modern cultural constructions of gender and sexuality and consider ways to inform our clinical work with contemporary gender theory and cultural struggles. \nSECTION TEN:\nThe Self\, Ego-Self Alignment and Estrangement\nMondays\, April 25;\nMay 2\, 9\, 16\, 2022\nPatricia Katsky\, MFT\, PhD\nThese classes will probe the relationship between the ego and the Self in the individuation process\, covering the development of the ego out of the Self as well as the Self as an entity of wholeness and organization. \nSECTION ELEVEN:\nFinal Course Integration\nMonday\, May 23\, 2022\nPaul Watsky\, PhD\nMichael Bala\, MA\, MFT\nA focus on integrating course concepts and practical applications\, a discussion of participants’ clinical development\, identification of avenues for further study\, and a course evaluation will comprise our final session.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/jungian-oriented-psychotherapy/2022-05-23/
LOCATION:C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco\, 2610 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/JOP1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220910T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220910T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20220628T220351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220930T222735Z
UID:10001560-1662804000-1662811200@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:ALEXANDER TECHNIQUE AND THE PSYCHOLOGY OF C. G. JUNG
DESCRIPTION:GROUP 1: SATURDAY\, SEPTEMBER 10 & 17\, 2022 \n10AM – NOON \nFACULTY: LARRY BALL and MONICA NORCIA \nTUITION: $100 (SPACE IS LIMITED) \nC. G. Jung and F. M. Alexander believed that\, by nature\,\nwe strive to manifest our full potential — our wholeness\, our “Self.”\nLet’s explore the interplay of Jung’s Psychology and the Alexander\nTechnique to better know and experience our wholeness. \nThis interplay allows our wholeness to open the invisible doors of\nthe indivisible unity of our psyche and body to our conscious ego.\nExperiencing psyche and body as one allows us to experience our\nwholeness — here and now. Our striving towards wholeness brings\nus joy\, creativity\, strength and clarity of choice and decision\,\nand all of life’s other gifts\, known and unknown. \nMonica and Larry will use their touch\, words and presence to help\neach of you\, individually and in group\, in this exploration. They ask\nyou to bring your own life experiences as grist for the mill. \nLARRY BALL graduated from the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and taught at the school from 1981 to 2004. He has been a\nserious student of Jung’s psychology since 1976 and was an analysand with a\nJungian analyst for over a decade. He currently teaches a confluence and\ninterplay of the work of Jung and Alexander in his San Rafael studio. \nMONICA NORCIA is a graduate of the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and was certified by the American Society of Teachers of the\nAlexander Technique in 2002. A voice teacher\, performer and music\ndirector\, she teaches both Alexander and singing at her San Rafael studio.\nMonica has held a lifelong interest in the works of C. G. Jung and his\nstudents and was in Jungian analysis for more than 30 years. \n 
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/alexander-technique-and-the-psychology-of-c-g-jung/2022-09-10/
LOCATION:The C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/man-taking-canoe-into-vast-ocean.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220917T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220917T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20220628T220351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220930T222735Z
UID:10001561-1663408800-1663416000@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:ALEXANDER TECHNIQUE AND THE PSYCHOLOGY OF C. G. JUNG
DESCRIPTION:GROUP 1: SATURDAY\, SEPTEMBER 10 & 17\, 2022 \n10AM – NOON \nFACULTY: LARRY BALL and MONICA NORCIA \nTUITION: $100 (SPACE IS LIMITED) \nC. G. Jung and F. M. Alexander believed that\, by nature\,\nwe strive to manifest our full potential — our wholeness\, our “Self.”\nLet’s explore the interplay of Jung’s Psychology and the Alexander\nTechnique to better know and experience our wholeness. \nThis interplay allows our wholeness to open the invisible doors of\nthe indivisible unity of our psyche and body to our conscious ego.\nExperiencing psyche and body as one allows us to experience our\nwholeness — here and now. Our striving towards wholeness brings\nus joy\, creativity\, strength and clarity of choice and decision\,\nand all of life’s other gifts\, known and unknown. \nMonica and Larry will use their touch\, words and presence to help\neach of you\, individually and in group\, in this exploration. They ask\nyou to bring your own life experiences as grist for the mill. \nLARRY BALL graduated from the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and taught at the school from 1981 to 2004. He has been a\nserious student of Jung’s psychology since 1976 and was an analysand with a\nJungian analyst for over a decade. He currently teaches a confluence and\ninterplay of the work of Jung and Alexander in his San Rafael studio. \nMONICA NORCIA is a graduate of the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and was certified by the American Society of Teachers of the\nAlexander Technique in 2002. A voice teacher\, performer and music\ndirector\, she teaches both Alexander and singing at her San Rafael studio.\nMonica has held a lifelong interest in the works of C. G. Jung and his\nstudents and was in Jungian analysis for more than 30 years. \n 
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/alexander-technique-and-the-psychology-of-c-g-jung/2022-09-17/
LOCATION:The C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/man-taking-canoe-into-vast-ocean.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220924T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220924T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20220628T220815Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220930T235312Z
UID:10001562-1664013600-1664020800@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:ALEXANDER TECHNIQUE AND THE PSYCHOLOGY OF C. G. JUNG
DESCRIPTION:GROUP 2: SATURDAY\, SEPTEMBER 24 & OCTOBER 1\, 2022 \n10AM – NOON \nFACULTY: LARRY BALL and MONICA NORCIA \nTUITION: $100 (SPACE IS LIMITED) \nC. G. Jung and F. M. Alexander believed that\, by nature\,\nwe strive to manifest our full potential — our wholeness\, our “Self.”\nLet’s explore the interplay of Jung’s Psychology and the Alexander\nTechnique to better know and experience our wholeness. \nThis interplay allows our wholeness to open the invisible doors of\nthe indivisible unity of our psyche and body to our conscious ego.\nExperiencing psyche and body as one allows us to experience our\nwholeness — here and now. Our striving towards wholeness brings\nus joy\, creativity\, strength and clarity of choice and decision\,\nand all of life’s other gifts\, known and unknown. \nMonica and Larry will use their touch\, words and presence to help\neach of you\, individually and in group\, in this exploration. They ask\nyou to bring your own life experiences as grist for the mill. \nLARRY BALL graduated from the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and taught at the school from 1981 to 2004. He has been a\nserious student of Jung’s psychology since 1976 and was an analysand with a\nJungian analyst for over a decade. He currently teaches a confluence and\ninterplay of the work of Jung and Alexander in his San Rafael studio. \nMONICA NORCIA is a graduate of the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and was certified by the American Society of Teachers of the\nAlexander Technique in 2002. A voice teacher\, performer and music\ndirector\, she teaches both Alexander and singing at her San Rafael studio.\nMonica has held a lifelong interest in the works of C. G. Jung and his\nstudents and was in Jungian analysis for more than 30 years. \n 
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/alexander-technique-and-the-psychology-of-c-g-jung-2/2022-09-24/
LOCATION:The C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/man-taking-canoe-into-vast-ocean.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220925T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220925T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20220811T001438Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230720T215514Z
UID:10001589-1664114400-1664125200@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:AN APPRENTICESHIP WITH SORROW: TENDING THE LOSSES OF EVERYDAY LIFE
DESCRIPTION:“Where there is sorrow\, there is holy ground.” —Oscar Wilde \n\n  \nGrief and loss touch us all\, arriving at our door in many ways. It comes swirling on the winds of divorce\, or the death of someone dear\, as an illness that alters the course of a life. For many of us\, our grief is tied intimately to the ravages we witness daily to watersheds\, and forests\, the disappearance of species\, the silencing of languages\, and the coarsening of culture. And yet our encounters with sorrow are often met with confusion\, fear\, and overwhelm. We are uncertain how to meet this difficult guest when it surfaces in our lives. \n  \n  \nIt is through the rites of grief that we are\, in turn\, ripened as human beings. Grief invites gravity and depth into our world. Our work is to understand grief not only as an emotion but also as a core faculty of being human. This is soul activism intended to foster deep cultural change. Cultivating the skills of grief work is critical in these days of wild uncertainty and rampant loss. We need to fortify our inner and outer connections to not only weather the storms but to be tempered by them. We do this work not solely for our own healing\, but also to make us capable of responding to the critical needs of our times. \n  \n  \nFRANCIS WELLER is a psychotherapist\, writer\, and soul activist. Author of The Wild Edge of Sorrow: Rituals of Renewal and the Sacred Work of Grief\, and In the Absence of the Ordinary: Essays in a Time of Uncertainty\, he has introduced the healing work of ritual to thousands of people. He is completing his third book\, The Alchemy of Initiation: Soul Work and the Art of Ripening.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/an-apprenticeship-with-sorrow-tending-the-losses-of-everyday-life/
LOCATION:The C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
CATEGORIES:Archived
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/37096778582_646849c66a_o.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221001T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221001T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20220628T220815Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220930T235312Z
UID:10001563-1664618400-1664625600@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:ALEXANDER TECHNIQUE AND THE PSYCHOLOGY OF C. G. JUNG
DESCRIPTION:GROUP 2: SATURDAY\, SEPTEMBER 24 & OCTOBER 1\, 2022 \n10AM – NOON \nFACULTY: LARRY BALL and MONICA NORCIA \nTUITION: $100 (SPACE IS LIMITED) \nC. G. Jung and F. M. Alexander believed that\, by nature\,\nwe strive to manifest our full potential — our wholeness\, our “Self.”\nLet’s explore the interplay of Jung’s Psychology and the Alexander\nTechnique to better know and experience our wholeness. \nThis interplay allows our wholeness to open the invisible doors of\nthe indivisible unity of our psyche and body to our conscious ego.\nExperiencing psyche and body as one allows us to experience our\nwholeness — here and now. Our striving towards wholeness brings\nus joy\, creativity\, strength and clarity of choice and decision\,\nand all of life’s other gifts\, known and unknown. \nMonica and Larry will use their touch\, words and presence to help\neach of you\, individually and in group\, in this exploration. They ask\nyou to bring your own life experiences as grist for the mill. \nLARRY BALL graduated from the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and taught at the school from 1981 to 2004. He has been a\nserious student of Jung’s psychology since 1976 and was an analysand with a\nJungian analyst for over a decade. He currently teaches a confluence and\ninterplay of the work of Jung and Alexander in his San Rafael studio. \nMONICA NORCIA is a graduate of the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and was certified by the American Society of Teachers of the\nAlexander Technique in 2002. A voice teacher\, performer and music\ndirector\, she teaches both Alexander and singing at her San Rafael studio.\nMonica has held a lifelong interest in the works of C. G. Jung and his\nstudents and was in Jungian analysis for more than 30 years. \n 
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/alexander-technique-and-the-psychology-of-c-g-jung-2/2022-10-01/
LOCATION:The C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
CATEGORIES:Archived,Public Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/man-taking-canoe-into-vast-ocean.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221022T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221022T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20220628T221111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230720T215253Z
UID:10001564-1666432800-1666440000@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:ALEXANDER TECHNIQUE AND THE PSYCHOLOGY OF C. G. JUNG
DESCRIPTION:GROUP 3: SATURDAY\, OCTOBER 22 & OCTOBER 29\, 2022 \n10AM – NOON \nFACULTY: LARRY BALL and MONICA NORCIA \nTUITION: $100 (SPACE IS LIMITED) \nC. G. Jung and F. M. Alexander believed that\, by nature\,\nwe strive to manifest our full potential — our wholeness\, our “Self.”\nLet’s explore the interplay of Jung’s Psychology and the Alexander\nTechnique to better know and experience our wholeness. \nThis interplay allows our wholeness to open the invisible doors of\nthe indivisible unity of our psyche and body to our conscious ego.\nExperiencing psyche and body as one allows us to experience our\nwholeness — here and now. Our striving towards wholeness brings\nus joy\, creativity\, strength and clarity of choice and decision\,\nand all of life’s other gifts\, known and unknown. \nMonica and Larry will use their touch\, words and presence to help\neach of you\, individually and in group\, in this exploration. They ask\nyou to bring your own life experiences as grist for the mill. \nLARRY BALL graduated from the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and taught at the school from 1981 to 2004. He has been a\nserious student of Jung’s psychology since 1976 and was an analysand with a\nJungian analyst for over a decade. He currently teaches a confluence and\ninterplay of the work of Jung and Alexander in his San Rafael studio. \nMONICA NORCIA is a graduate of the Alexander Technique Institute of\nSan Francisco and was certified by the American Society of Teachers of the\nAlexander Technique in 2002. A voice teacher\, performer and music\ndirector\, she teaches both Alexander and singing at her San Rafael studio.\nMonica has held a lifelong interest in the works of C. G. Jung and his\nstudents and was in Jungian analysis for more than 30 years. \n 
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/alexander-technique-and-the-psychology-of-c-g-jung-2-2/2022-10-22/
LOCATION:The C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
CATEGORIES:Archived
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/man-taking-canoe-into-vast-ocean.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221023T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221023T170000
DTSTAMP:20260417T053215
CREATED:20220829T214840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230720T215333Z
UID:10001590-1666533600-1666544400@sfjung.org
SUMMARY:POETRY AND THE SPIRITUAL
DESCRIPTION:“What is this wild prayer of longing that issues from the heart?” Nathan Scott Jr. writes. \n\nIn a secular age\, modern and contemporary poetry has been concerned with where the sense of the sacred and the numinous can be found outside the parameters of traditional religious doctrine. \nOne might look at the moments when we can suddenly “rejoice with things”; we might consider religious hope and despair as permanent conditions in the depths of the mind. \nTwo poets from the Bay Area will read from their own work and the work of some of the poets they most admire\, and will engage in a dialogue about poetry and the sacred. \nJEANNE FOSTER\, Professor Emerita\, Saint Mary’s College\, and ordained Unitarian Universalist minister\, addresses in an early book\, A Music of Grace\, what continues to be a compelling concern: poetry and the sacred. Her other books include A Blessing of Safe Travel; Goodbye\, Silver Sister; Appetite; and the award-winning translation with Alan Williamson of The Living Theatre: Poems of Bianca Tarozzi. \nALAN WILLIAMSON recently retired from the University of California\, Davis\, and teaches in the Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers. His books of poems include The Pattern More Complicated and Franciscan Notes. His sixth book of criticism\, Dante and the Night Journey is forthcoming. He and Jeanne Foster co-translated The Living Theatre: Selected Poems of Bianca Tarozzi.
URL:https://sfjung.org/event/poetry-and-the-spiritual/
LOCATION:The C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco
CATEGORIES:Archived
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://sfjung.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/poetry-e1661809686322.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR