How Do We Overcome the Power of Unconscious Patterns
that Hold Us Back?
5 consecutive Mondays, 7:00 – 8:30 pm, Eastern Time, USA
Online only via Zoom.
Beginning November 11, 2024
Distinguished Senior Instructor: David Rottman, MA
This course is not offered for NYS CE contact hours.
Although we get what Jung means when he talks about “living under the negative influence of a major complex,” Jung often said he preferred the term “curse” (as compared to the newer psychological language), because the old term did a better job of conveying the experience of pain and suffering of real people.
In this course, we will explore what it means to live in the persistent grip of a dark and unhappy pattern, and how three such patterns can best be resolved, redeemed, and overcome.
We will start with the most well-known, the infamous “Family Curse,” which is a destructive pattern that lives on through generations and is placed in the crib of the newborn at the moment of birth (or before!). We will ask the questions: How do we extract our personal fate and identity from that of our family of origin? How do we “humanize” a long-lasting curse?
Then we will look at curses about love, such as seeking but not finding the proper mate, getting involved in a repetitive series of bad relationships, and missing out on the call to love and be loved. Opportunities for love are abundant, says Jung, so the resolution of a “love complex” is a prerequisite for life to flow about relationships. In such cases, the “bewitchment” of consciousness requires work before love can unfold as a natural process. We will discuss how the therapeutic encounter has the benefit of de-potentiating the energy of a curse by shining the light of consciousness on what was seeking to be known through the curse.
As a third topic, we will examine curses about career and profession, such as not finding work commensurate with one’s gifts, lacking avenues for self-expression at work, finding too much opposition in the outer world--such as struggling to make a living despite having intelligence and even talent--and the reverse, i.e. missing out on the experience of doing meaningful work even though outer success has been achieved.
In exploring solutions to these three curses, we will follow Jung’s idea that there is a positive core underneath fateful negative complexes and that solutions arise as a synthesis out of the conflict between opposites. Here is how he describes it:
“In the psychology of the individual there is always, at such moments, an agonizing situation of conflict from which there seems to be no way out—at least for the conscious mind, since as far as this is concerned, tertium non datur. But out of this collision of opposites the unconscious psyche always creates a third thing of an irrational nature, which the conscious mind neither expects nor understands. It presents itself in a form that is neither a straight “yes” nor a straight “no,” and is consequently rejected by both. For the conscious mind knows nothing beyond the opposites and, as a result, has no knowledge of the thing that unites them. Since, however, the solution of the conflict through the union of opposites is of vital importance, and is moreover the very thing that the conscious mind is longing for, some inkling of the creative act, and of the significance of it, nevertheless gets through.”
(C.G. Jung, Collected Works, Vol. 9i, paragraph 285)
We will discuss examples of those “inklings” and how they first appear as seemingly unlikely solutions to family curses, love problems, and career dilemmas. Then as the solutions take hold (provided they do!), we will look at their most valuable dimensions for personal growth, and we will draw some conclusions about the nature of transformation of a curse.
The examples and illustrations in the course will include dreams of people who overcame the burden of comprehensive complexes. The readings, in the form of handouts provided by the instructor, will be from Jung's and Marie-Louise Von Franz's writings on this topic.
Supplemental Reading:
The Psychology of a Fairy Tale, David Hart
The Cat: A Tale of Feminine Redemption, Marie-Louise Von Franz
The Psychological Meaning of Redemption Motifs in Fairytales, Marie-Louise Von Franz
The Way of the Image, Yoram Kaufmann
FACULTY
Mary Apikos taught at Parsons School of Design NYC for 17 years. She taught inter-disciplinary courses about aspects of design culture that fell through the cracks to people who fell through the cracks. She is ABD in Cultural Anthropology from CUNY Graduate Center and has worked as an ethnographic textile conservator at the Museum of the American Indian, George Heye Foundation NYC and in private practice where she specialized in the care of sacred materials. In 2022 Mary completed a one-year remote applied arts program at the Centre for Applied Jungian Studies in South Africa and is on staff at The London Arts Based Research Centre. She is a working artist and currently resides in Chicago. Her work can be seen on her website maryapikos.com
Maxson J. McDowell, PhD, LMSW, LP, is a senior Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City. Former President of the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology, he is also a longtime faculty member. He has taught courses in dream interpretation online and in person for over 25 years. He has published numerous papers on dream interpretation, Jungian psychology, narcissistic injury, systems theory and autism.
David Rottman, MA, is past President of the C.G. Jung Foundation and is a distinguished senior member of the Jung Foundation’s Continuing Education Faculty. He is the author of The Career as a Path to the Soul. He was the editor and publisher for The Way of the Image by Yoram Kaufmann. He has a private practice in New York City.
Maria Taveras, LCSW, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City. She is also an award-winning creator of Dream Art. She creates art from images in her own dreams and is the recipient of two Gradiva Awards from the National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis for her Dream Art. Her Dream Art has been exhibited in New York, San Francisco, Berkeley, London, Montreal, and Cape Town.
Program Information
PROGRAM COSTS
$150 per single-day program registration. There are no scholarships available for this program.
YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT. HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH CREDIT CARD: On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDITCARD.
LOCATION
These are online courses, given through the program Zoom. Please download the Zoom program in advance of the first class session at Zoom.us
PAY ONLINE: YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT.
HERE IS HOW TO PAY WITH A CREDIT CARD:
On the Paypal login page, look below login fields for a boxed link
that reads PAY WITH DEBIT OR CREDIT CARD.
TUITION
All 5-week courses are $175 for the general public and $150 for members.
REGISTRATION
The full fee must be paid at the time of registration.
Please register through the payment buttons on this website.
$175 General Public
IMPORTANT NOTES:
When you pay you must also email your current email address and telephone number to the Foundation at cgjungny@aol.com. The Foundation will send you an email message and you must reply to confirm receipt. If you are taking this course for 7.5 CE contact hours for licensed NYS Social Workers, Psychoanalysts and Creative Arts Therapists, please specify which license you hold and give your NYS license number.
Class size is limited. Early registration is strongly recommended. Refunds for continuing education courses, less $15 for administrative services, will be made up to seven days before the first session. There will be no refunds issued after classes have begun. No exceptions will be made. Programs are subject to change without notice.
For more information, call or write:
Office of the Executive Director
The C.G. Jung Foundation of New York
28 East 39th Street
New York, New York 10016
Telephone: (212) 697-6430
Email: cgjungny@aol.com
Web address: www.cgjungny.org
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