Psychologist Jerry Ruhl talks about the value of Jungian Dream Groups for interpreting dreams.
01:11 min
CLEAR ALL
Dreaming is something that everyone experiences. This book is your guide to understanding your dreams and what they mean. This book was originally a compilation of newspaper columns featuring dreams submitted to me by my readers and my interpretation of their dreams.
Have you ever wondered if there is some hidden meaning behind your dreams? Are there any benefits of lucid dreaming and how to achieve it? Why do specific people tend to show up in dreams? Is it true that some dreams can be warnings? Going beyond basic explanations, “How to Understand the...
Self-defeating behavior is the single most common reason that people seek psychotherapy. It is a poison, preventing us from achieving the love, success and happiness we want in our lives.
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When we experience frustrations in daily life, many of us hold ourselves to blame. Self-criticism is often our default setting. But we can have a more gracious posture toward ourselves. We can practice disciplines of self-kindness.
Jungian therapy, or Jungian analysis,* is a type of psychodynamic psychotherapy which utilizes the instinctual motivation for psychological development in addition to those of love and power.
Integrating family therapy with dream and body work, the relationship between classical analysis and information theory is explored.
Arnold Mindell draws on his work with the comatose to suggest that the coma state is an altered state of consciousness that is meaningful and important.
Arnold Mindell is the founder of a new school of therapy called Process-Oriented Psychology and is known throughout the world for his innovative synthesis of dreams, bodywork, Jungian therapy, group process, consciousness studies, shamanism, quantum physics, and small and large group conflict...
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Dreambody is the foundational introduction to process oriented psychology, by its founder Arnold Mindell, an MIT Physicist and Jungian Analyst. The Dreambody bridges the gaps between depth psychology, somatic psychology, spirituality, and energy-based mind-body practices.
One of Carl Jung’s great gifts to depth psychology was his recognition that mind and body are one and that our symptoms, psychological and physical, can be viewed as manifestations of some part of us that “wants to be known.”