Steve Myers
36 / Culture and Cultural Typology / Organizations, Teams, and Career Development
Tags: Andrew Samuels, authenticity, Bill George, C. G. Jung, collective unconscious, Edinger, ego-self axis, Epimetheus, hero myth, integrity, James MacGregor Burns, John Beebe, leadership, Lee Barr, opposites, personal unconscious, Prometheus, spine of personality, Steve Myers, transformation, transformational leadership
October 4, 2018

To develop our authentic individual self, we need to go deeper, into the cultural and phylogenetic layers of the collective unconscious. Importantly, from a leadership point of view, we become more aware of what our culture is repressing—aware of the unintended consequences of the culture even though we are participating in it. This enables us to progress, as individuals and as a society.
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Teresa Nowak
33 / Counseling, Coaching, and Psychotherapy
Tags: Animus, archetypal ego, archetypal psychology, Beebe, collective unconscious, Demon/Daimon, dream imagery, dream interpretation, dream tending, extraverted feeling (Fe), extraverted sensation (Se), extraverted thinking (Te), guided imagery, Hero, images, INTJ, introverted intuition (Ni), introverted sensation (Si), introverted thinking (Ti), James Hillman, Mother, Opposing Personality, personal unconscious, personality spine, Puella Aeterna, Stephen Aizenstat, Teresa Nowak, Trickster, Witch
January 10, 2018

“Interpretations” of dreams must be filtered through a layer of consciousness. One contribution of dream tending as an effective tool for Jungian dream work is the value it places on the sensing function as an imaginal way of knowing. Thus, it de-emphasizes the intuitive and thinking functions many Jungians use in traditional dream analysis and brings sensing and feeling to the fore.
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Jennifer Soper
21 / Archetypes / Personal Development, Health, and Spirituality / The Red Book
Tags: active imagination, Ammonius, Anima, C. G. Jung, collective unconscious, extraverted sensing (Se), Hero, individuation, INTJ, introverted intuition (Ni), introverted sensing (Si), Jennifer Soper, mandala, personal unconscious, The Red Book, the Red One
October 1, 2014

First comes the development of the Hero; next is the “fall,” which brings awareness that something is missing, leading to the rejection of the heroic inflation and the longing for more. Then comes the real “journey,” holding the tension between our highly conscious dominant/superior function and our much less conscious inferior function.
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