The archetype of the father is associated with gods, kingship, and other images of authority and order. As the image of a “personified affect” fueled by an …
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Copyright (c) 2020 – All rights reserved.
The archetype of the father is associated with gods, kingship, and other images of authority and order. As the image of a “personified affect” fueled by an …
source
© 2020 Copyright - All rights reserved.
This is so wrong. Educate yourself
You’re guys’ channel isn’t getting as much recognition as it needs. This information being discussed is more important now than ever. Thank you all very much for putting this today. It does not go unnoticed by people like myself who are doing the deeper work with depth psychology in a therapeutic setting.
Can a "monster" a negative father complex arise in the girl child from the mother's animus?
Do you all take clients from online?
1:02:00 Jacob dislocates his hip when he wrestles with God.
Thank you very much for these 'Jungian Life' talks guys, while as a therapist myself and an in large part Jungian fellow traveller, they have helped clarify my own thinking as it relates to the topics that you have discussed in each of your excellent episodes. As for the dream analysis in this edition, there may perhaps be some slight commonality here with the great narration, "Der Manne Sippe" that the character Sieglinde provides in Act 1 of Wagner's opera, 'Die Walkure' – a scene in which she describes Wotan (your grungy and gingerbread colored coat wearing middle age man) being present at her wedding to Hunding – while it is also suggests some aspects of Wagner's 'Parsifal' (i.e. the Fisher King archetype)…Anyway, and as any grounded and good dream analysis would confirm, the themes and motifs which are contained within dreams are, in the end, all archetypally interrelated.
Great dream and analysis!