Applies to any concept and idea that is subordinate to the conceptual umbrella of Jung’s psychology.

The Red Book: Liber Novus

Figure 1. Carl Jung.       Carl Gustav Jung (Figure 1) was a Swiss psychologist who lived between 1875 and 1961. Jung is best known as the founder of analytical psychology (i.e., complex psychology). Analytical psychology is predicated on [...]

By |2022-02-12T14:00:23-08:00February 12th, 2022|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Philosophy, Science, Spirituality, The unknown|Comments Off on The Red Book: Liber Novus

Joseph Campbell and the Monomyth

Fig 1. Joseph Campbell     Because one of the aims of coaching-in-depth is to come to terms with one’s personal myth, it is helpful to explore the work of the mythologist Joseph Campbell (Figure 1) who introduced the idea [...]

By |2022-01-01T11:33:04-08:00January 1st, 2022|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Philosophy, Practical Ideas, The unknown|Comments Off on Joseph Campbell and the Monomyth

Jung and Mythology

      In the prologue of Memories, Dreams, Reflections, Jung introduced his autobiography as a telling of his personal myth (1961/1989, p. 3). “I can only make direct statements, ‘only tell stories.’ Whether or not the stories are ‘true’ is not the [...]

By |2021-12-01T04:48:13-08:00December 1st, 2021|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Philosophy, Practical Ideas, The unknown|Comments Off on Jung and Mythology

Life-Lines: Measuring the Currents of Libido

Figure 1. Carl Jung       Although C.G. Jung (Figure 1) does not go to great lengths to explain the concept of a life-line, that he introduced the concept merits additional commentary. Jung alluded to life-lines only a few [...]

By |2021-11-01T06:43:30-07:00November 1st, 2021|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Practical Ideas, The unknown|Comments Off on Life-Lines: Measuring the Currents of Libido

The Mandala: Jung’s Pattern of Wholeness

Figure 1. Carl Jung       Carl Jung (Figure 1) viewed the appearance of a mandala—a circular or squared symbol of wholeness—as highly beneficial to one’s own personal development. Mandalas can appear in a person’s dreams, visions, or fantasies, and [...]

By |2021-10-05T20:59:02-07:00October 1st, 2021|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Philosophy, Practical Ideas, Spirituality, The unknown|Comments Off on The Mandala: Jung’s Pattern of Wholeness

Alchemical Metaphors in Personal Development

      This blog explores the principal alchemical metaphors of personal development and transformation. These ideas are based on the work of Carl Jung who during the second half of his career conducted an extensive survey of alchemy and its relationship to the [...]

By |2021-11-14T15:53:13-08:00September 3rd, 2021|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Philosophy, Practical Ideas, Spirituality, The unknown|Comments Off on Alchemical Metaphors in Personal Development

Dreams (Part 3 of 3)

      The next and final dream in the series takes place a week later. The dream contains several similar leitmotivs that suggest a direct connection with the first and second ones. This is what the man recalled from this [...]

By |2021-08-22T15:19:17-07:00August 1st, 2021|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Practical Ideas, Science, The unknown, Uncategorized|Comments Off on Dreams (Part 3 of 3)

Dreams (Part 2 of 3)

     The next dream in the series takes place a few months later. The dream contains several similar leitmotivs that suggest a direct connection with the first one. This is what the man recalled from his dream: July 4, 2014 – Last [...]

By |2021-07-01T07:07:56-07:00July 1st, 2021|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Philosophy, Practical Ideas, Science, The unknown|Comments Off on Dreams (Part 2 of 3)

Dreams (Part 1 of 3)

Figure 1. Carl Jung.       In 1936, C.G. Jung (Figure 1) first introduced his essay “Dream Symbols of the Process of Individuation.” Jung (1944/1970) later renamed the same essay "Individual Dream Symbolism in Relation to Alchemy" and published it in [...]

By |2021-06-01T06:58:58-07:00June 1st, 2021|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Practical Ideas, Science, The unknown, Uncategorized|Comments Off on Dreams (Part 1 of 3)

The Transcendent Function: Building a Symbolic Bridge

In the wake of his confrontation with the unconscious (1913-1916), C. G. Jung wrote a short essay titled “The Transcendent Function;” and although the essay was not published until 1957, it is in my opinion one of his most important works. [...]

By |2021-05-01T07:45:30-07:00May 1st, 2021|Jungian Psychology, Personal Development, Philosophy, Practical Ideas, Science, Spirituality, The unknown|Comments Off on The Transcendent Function: Building a Symbolic Bridge