By Dan Gronwald, on May 9th, 2011 #CarlJung #Quotes #dreams
"Whispers of Aloha," Zentangle Inspired Art by Lois Heinani Stokes, CZT®
As individuals we are not completely unique, but are like all other men. Hence the dream with a collective meaning is valid in the first place for the dreamer, but it expresses at the same time the fact that his . . . → Read More: When the Dream has Collective Meaning
By Dan Gronwald, on April 20th, 2011 #CarlJung #quotes #dreams
Though dreams contribute to the self-regulation of the psyche by automatically bringing up everything that is repressed or neglected or unknown, their compensatory significance is often not immediately apparent because we still have only a very incomplete knowledge of the nature and the needs of the human psyche. There are psychological compensations . . . → Read More: Jung: Compensation – From the Collective to the Individual
By Dan Gronwald, on March 26th, 2011 #JosephCampbell #CarlYoung #quote
. . . The two attitudes and four functions-are all interior, psychological dynamics. They flowed through our psyches like ocean tides. Within the mine, Jung also identified certain structures. These structures aren’t learned, Freudian interjections.In Jung’s view,They are there for more birth. They evolved as part of the human mind, just as . . . → Read More: Jung’s Concept of the Self and Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious
By Dan Gronwald, on March 25th, 2011 For myths, like dreams, arise out of the imagination. Now, there are two orders of dream. There is the simple, personal dream where you get tangled up in your own twists and resistances to your life, the conflict between wish and prohibition, the stuff of Freudian analysis, and so forth, all of which I will . . . → Read More: Myths, Like Dreams, Arise Out of the Imagination
By Dan Gronwald, on March 24th, 2011 Adolphe Bastien was a very great German medical man, traveler, and anthropologist back in the 19th century; in the 1860s, the University of Berlin created their chair of anthropology in his name. Bastion had traveled a great deal, paying considerable attention to the customs of the people he encountered. The universal and local aspects of . . . → Read More: Elementary vs. Ethnic ideas
By Dan Gronwald, on January 25th, 2011 The elements (the bricks) of this marvelous dream-the tree at the world center, the crossing there of the two roads, the world hoop (+), the world mountain, the guides, the world guardians, and their tokens, magical powers, etc.–are such as are known to mythologies of many orders. The landscape and the animals involved, on the . . . → Read More: Myths as collective and individual dreams…
By Dan Gronwald, on September 23rd, 2010 But not only in the higher cultures; even among the so-called primitives, priests, wizards, and visionaries interpret and reinterpret myth as symbolic of “the Way”: “the Pollen Path of Beauty,” as it is called, for example, among the Navaho. And this Way, congenial to the wholeness of man, is understood as the little portion of . . . → Read More: The Way of the individidual is the microcosmic reiteration of the Way of the All and of each.
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