Jung on the hudson 2016 brochure

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SEMINAR SERIES • 2016 JULY 17–22, 2016 Letting Go: New Paradigms for Later Life JULY 22–23, 2016 A Weekend with Dr. James Hollis JULY 24–29, 2016 Reinventing Ourselves: Harnessing Hermes RHINEBECK, NEW YORK New York Center for Jungian Studies presents the 23nd annual JUNG HUDSON ON THE

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New York Center for Jungian Studies 23rd annual Jung on the Hudson Seminar Series in Rhinebeck, NY. July 17-29, 2016

Transcript of Jung on the hudson 2016 brochure

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SEMINAR SERIES • 2016JULY 17–22, 2016Letting Go: New Paradigms for Later Life

JULY 22–23, 2016A Weekend with Dr. James Hollis

JULY 24–29, 2016 Reinventing Ourselves: Harnessing Hermes

RHINEBECK, NEW YORK

New York Center for Jungian Studiespresents the 23nd annual

JUNG HUDSON

ON THE

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Twenty-three years ago, when we first began presenting Jungian programs in the Hudson Valley, we had no idea that this program would become an

annual, internationally recognized event in the world of analytical psychology. Over the years, we have always selected themes of personal interest and have chosen presenters from whom we wished to learn.

In this way, our seminars have enabled us to share and deepen our own interest in Jung’s work while attracting presenters and participants from all over the U.S. and abroad. Our program is open to the general public—ideal for individuals interested in their own personal development—as well as mental-health professionals who want to incorporate Jung’s psychology and ideas into their practice.

Providing ample time for discussion, dialogue, and workshops, as well as interaction with exceptional faculty, these high-quality seminars also offer a wonderful way to make new friends and connect with people who share similar interests.

We invite you to join us in the charming, historic village of Rhinebeck to explore the wisdom of Carl Jung with some of today’s most outstanding teachers and authors in the world of Jungian psychology.

— Aryeh Maidenbaum & Diana Rubin, Directors New York Center for Jungian Studies

Our program meets in Rhinebeck, New York. Located in New York’s famous Hudson Valley, the delightful village of Rhinebeck offers visitors rural sophistication and beauty, with a host of opportunities to gather, connect, and discover.

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Letting GoNew Paradigms for Later Life

July 17–22, 2016

“Letting go” in later life can mean many things, but one of them is undeniable: we need to learn to let go of the myths that no longer work for us: that we are immortal, that we can control and have everything

we want, that we can be young and healthy forever, and that there is certainty in the world. Later life is a time to let go of our personal baggage—of old attitudes and complexes that need to be retired. And as we let go, we open ourselves to new ways of thinking, feeling, and being.

Never before have people lived longer or had more choices of how they want to live. For many of us, later life has the potential for being a most productive and satisfying period. We can weed and prune- removing from our lives relationships and activities that no longer serve us and adding new ones that enrich us.

New research shows that the human brain can remain active and highly functional during our later years if we give it something to do. Neuroscientists have proved that the brain can continue to change and grow throughout the life cycle and is far more adaptable and flexible than was once thought. In short, our mental and spiritual health is often less a matter of fate than it is a matter of choice.

As we enter later life, we do have choices: we can focus on the losses associated with aging or we can choose to look at the potential gains and richness of this stage of our lives. We can either shrink from life or enlarge it and we can learn, change, and embrace creativity as we age.

Something new needs to emerge. This, according to Jung, is the Self, the person we left behind decades ago, the person we have always wanted to be—the person we were, in fact, born to be.

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PRESENTATIONS & WORKSHOPS

The Paradox of Letting GoCAROL ZEITZMonday July 18: PresentationLetting go, like child’s play, is both a joyous and a perilous affair. Dr. Zeitz will explore the para-dox that we encounter when faced with the de-mands of letting go in our later years—demands that invite us to revisit much of what we’ve come to accept as meaningful and meaning-making as we approach the reality of mortality and death. We will look at letting go as it relates to time and place and will explore the needs that we—like children—have for containment, as we learn to play at the edge.

Tuesday July 19: WorkshopAt the same time that we are honing our indi-viduality in fluid time, we are facing ourselves in place: the particular place where we and the world intertwine. We will look as carefully and closely as we dare, recognizing that reality will succeed us and that the reality of not know-ing beckons at the threshold of the shimmer-ing place we are used to calling “uncertainty.” Through lecture, poetry, and small- and large-group discussion, we will explore what it means to let ourselves go, containing as best we can the dance of meaning and nonexistence as the world goes on turning.

Carol J. Zeitz, PhD, has been in clinical practice and teaching for over 30 years, including 20 years at Antioch University Los Angeles, where she taught family systems and psychoana-

lytic material. More recently, she has taught at the C. G. Jung Institute of New York, integrating Jungian and psychoanalytic thought. Her most recent study concerns reading Melanie Klein in relationship with Buddhist thought and practice. Dr. Zeitz holds MAs in special education and family therapy as well as a PhD in clinical psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute.

“Later Life” Is NowANN ULANOVWednesday July 20: PresentationLater life can bring fuller awareness of all we have been and still might be. Remember Jung’s counsel in The Red Book: we should live the life that we still can live and think the thoughts that we still can think. A great boon of later life is living in the present because of the urgency of this period of our lives: we do not live forever; we must do it now. What do we let go from, and what do we let go to? What are the dangers of consciousness? What is the necessity of consciousness? What are the roles of the concen-tration of energy and of achieving the ease of living from the center?

Ann Belford Ulanov, MDiv, PhD, LHD, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City, the Christiane Brooks Johnson Professor Emerita of Union Theological Seminary,

and author of numerous books and articles, including Spiritual Aspects of Clinical Work, Attacked by Poison Ivy, The Living God and Our Living Psyche, The Unshuttered Heart, Opening to Aliveness and Deadness in the Self, Madness and Creativity, and Knots and Their Untying: Essays on Psychological Dilemmas.

Release Techniques for the Body/SoulJEANNE BRESCIANIWednesday July 20: Optional Evening Workshop

Using movement-based exercises, Jeanne Bresciani, PhD, founder and artistic director of the Isadora Duncan International Institute, will help us wed action with contempla-

tion as we embody some of Jung’s concepts in learning to “let go.”

Holding On and Letting Go for Dear Life: Choosing the Narratives That We Live By GARY TROSCLAIRMonday July 18: PresentationJung suggested that in the second half of life, the ego needs to let go of control and defer to the Self, submitting to a principle greater than personal identity. Relinquishing old stories of a heroic ego is essential to the individuation process. Yet holding dear the values that bring us joy and meaning is essential as we enter new stages of life. In this presentation, we will explore these dynamics as two aspects of a vital and ever-changing flow of beliefs that keeps life fulfilling.

Tuesday July 19: WorkshopWe will utilize simple exercises to recognize and memorize the felt experience of holding on and letting go. Additionally, participants will be encouraged to choose from and utilize writing, drawing, and small-group sharing to identify the stories, personal as well as archetypal, that we need to hold on to or to let go of. Through these processes, we will connect body, heart, and mind to nurture wholeness and individuation.

Gary Trosclair, DMA, LCSW, is a Jungian analyst practicing in New York City and Westchester County, New York. He is the author of I’m Working On It in Therapy: How to Get the Most Out of Psychotherapy,

described by Psych Central as “a fascinating look at self-growth, and one that’s useful whether or not you go to therapy.” Dr. Trosclair also writes regularly for the Huffington Post. He has served as director of training for the C. G. Jung Institute of New York, where he currently serves on the faculty, and is also on the faculty of the C. G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology.

The afternoon of life is just as full of meaning as the morning, only its meaning and purpose are different.—C. G. Jung

“I was challenged to see and find new possibilities of later life, especially spiritual growth. — Mi S.

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The Alchemy of Renewal: Imagination and Creativity in Later LifeSANFORD L. DROBThursday July 21: Morning PresentationLater life can be a period of renewal, generativity, and wisdom. It is a period that forces us to confront such opposites as love and loss, order and chaos, life and death, and time and eternity—a time in our lives that inevitably brings limitations yet offers us the prospect of greater freedom. Jung held that such opposites be approached creatively, through the power of the imagination. Dr. Drob will illustrate how the imaginative as well as the concrete aspects of such arts as painting, poetry, and literature can lead us to an “alchemy” of renewal and wholeness that deepens our sense of identity yet connects us to what transcends our concrete earthly life.

Thursday July 21: Afternoon WorkshopIn this workshop, Dr. Drob will share aspects of his path as an artist, and participants will be encouraged to share their own imaginative productions and narratives about the place of the imagination and arts in their own life journey. Bring paper for writing; drawing paper and art materials will be provided.

Sanford L. Drob, PhD, is on the core faculty of the doctoral program in clinical psychology at Fielding Graduate University in Santa Barbara, California, and served for many years as director of psychological assessment

and senior forensic psychologist at Bellevue Hospital in New York. He holds PhDs in philosophy and clinical psychology and is the author of four books on the interface between Jewish mysticism, theology, and philosophy, including Kabbalah and Postmodernism: A Dialogue; Kabbalistic Visions: C. G. Jung and Jewish Mysticism; and Reading the Red Book: A Thematic Guide to C. G. Jung’s Liber Novus.

A New Paradigm for Later LifeARYEH MAIDENBAUMFriday July 22: Morning PresentationAs of the 2010 census, more than 42 million people in the U.S. were over the age of 65. More than 666,000 were older than 95, and more than 72,000 were older than 100. It is estimated that there will be more than 2.5 million over the age of 90 by 2050. These statistics are staggering when we realize how many of us have so many years ahead of us.

How will we spend the next decades of our lives? As we leave the period of midlife, with its inherent challenges, growing older provides us with an opportunity to embark on a new journey to find meaning in this next phase. Although some of us may live to be centenarians, most of us have far fewer years ahead of us than behind us. It is a time to learn to live in the present as we accept the immediacy of this period.

In this presentation, Dr Maidenbaum will encourage us to continue our individuation process as we age by helping us to find a new paradigm for later life that includes generativity, insight, creativity and meaning.

Aryeh Maidenbaum, PhD, Jungian analyst, lectures and leads workshops internationally. Former faculty member at NYU for over 18 years, he is a contributing author to Current Theories of Psychoanalysis (ed. Robert Langs). Among Dr. Maidenbaum’s other publications are “The Search for Spirit in Jungian Psychology,” Sounds of Silence,” “Psychological Types, Job Change and Personal Growth,” and Jung and the Shadow of Anti-Semitism.

Discussion and DialogueARYEH MAIDENBAUM, JAN BAUER, SANFORD DROB, DIANA RUBINFriday July 22: Closing SessionDuring the second part of the morning, Dr. Maidenbaum will be joined by Jan Bauer, Sanford Drob, and Diana Rubin, as we review the week’s content and discuss new ways to live and be in the world and explore new paradigms for later life.

Jan Bauer, MA, is a Jungian analyst with degrees in literature from the Sorbonne and in adult education from Boston University. A graduate of the C. G. Jung Institute in Zurich, she lives and practices in Montreal and teaches Jung groups throughout the U.S. and Canada. Former chair of admissions and director of training for the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, Ms. Bauer has written several works, including Alcoholism and Women and Impossible Love.

Diana Rubin, LCSW, in private practice in New York City and the Hudson Valley, specializes in working with creative and performing artists. For many years a staff psychotherapist at the Postgraduate Center’s Institute for the Performing Artist, she has organized and led Jungian seminars and study tours for more than 20 years on topics related to Jung, creativity, and the arts.

What a pleasure to come together with such a wonderful group of people all learning how to live life to the fullest. —Diana D.

SCHEDULE continued

We don’t stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing”—George Bernard Shaw

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Friday, July 22: Evening LectureMythologems: The Darkly Moving Currents of the Soul

A mythologem is a mythic motif or idea. In what ways are our lives mythological? What is our myth, then, as a culture and as individuals? How do we step into the gap between the received myth—the internalized ideas and motifs—and the consciously constructed myth? How do unconscious mythologems play out in personal and public life?

Saturday, July 23: WorkshopThe Mythic Journey

This workshop will explore the lineaments of our personal myth as well as the arche-typal images that rise to mark our collective journey. To what images is our soul in service? Are they consonant with the soul’s agenda? (Please bring pen and notebook in which to write personal reflections.)

James Hollis, PhD, is a Zurich-trained Jungian analyst and the executive director of the Jung Society of Washington, D.C. He is former executive director of the Jung Educational Center of Houston and professor of Jungian studies at Saybrook University in San Francisco. Additionally, Dr. Hollis is a retired senior training analyst for the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, the first director of the Philadelphia Jung Institute, and president emeritus of the Philemon Foundation.

Among his publications are numerous articles and 14 books translated into 18 languages, including The Eden Project: In Search of the Magical Other, Finding Meaning in the Second Half of Life, Living a More Considered Life, The Middle Passage, Hauntings: Dispelling the Ghosts Who Run Our Lives, Mythologems, and What Matters Most.

A Weekend with Dr. James Hollis

July 22–23, 2016

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During the course of our lives, we often seek light, clarity, and truth—the traits of Apollo. We strive to be responsible, to look for stability, and to feel grounded. We also create boundaries for ourselves and our society

that make our lives ordered and feel safe. But our need for security can make us too staid and unwilling to take risks. Too often, we ignore Hermes, the god of travel and roads, whose creative force encourages fluidity, new ways of communication, and receptiveness to change.

Hermes pushes the boundaries; he doesn’t like to be tied down. He moves with the wind and is the bringer of dreams. We may not consciously relate to the trickster or thief that Hermes represents, but we can learn from him to look at different perspectives and take what we need in life. When images of thieves appear in our dreams, it is often Hermes speaking to us. Hermes also gives sacrifices to the gods, and, as patron god of thieves, he is in all of us, as we tend to “rob Peter to pay Paul” in our daily lives.

To be in touch with our inner Hermes means that we are comfortable with the many contradictory sides of our personalities and psyches. It means that we can access our “Shadow” and the masculine and feminine sides of ourselves with ease. It enables us to travel between the conscious and the unconscious with facility. We can mine the magic within and shape-shift when necessary.

What is the wisdom of our personal trickster? What is the secret message of the messenger within us? Hermes, prankster and trickster, reminds us at times to laugh and not take ourselves too seriously.

Being resourceful and resilient is to enable and harness our inner Hermes.

Reinventing Ourselves:Harnessing HermesJuly 24–29, 2016

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Refining the Inner Bullshit Detector: Humor, Hermes, and the Human ShadowMONIKA WIKMANMonday July 25: PresentationThe heart of Jung’s work entails a growing relationship between consciousness and the presence of the Self—learn-ing to see and to hear in ever new ways. This inner ongoing revelation cannot sustain itself within us without opening our minds and lives to refining our own inner bullshit detectors. We must develop an inner compass capable of speaking to us (and we must become capable of hearing it) when we step backward into the unconscious, into the “prima materia,” to know when we ourselves are “full of it.” Using examples from daily life, Dr. Wikman will illustrate how dreams often bring to life the inner bullshit detector to help us gain insight, wis-dom, and humor as the relationship with the Self develops.

Tuesday July 26: WorkshopThe god of alchemical work is Hermes, who has many deriva-tions, including the psychopath, the thief, the light bringer, and the one who can cross boundaries from one kind of landscape to another among the many realms of existence. Hermes also brings life-giving humor and insight into the one-sidedness of consciousness through laughter at our own foibles. During this workshop—through active imagination, writing exercises, and small-group dialogue—the need for daily practice with the inner bullshit detector will be empha-sized, so that the larger psyche may live.

Monika Wikman, PhD, is a Jungian analyst and astrologer. Author of Pregnant Darkness: Alchemy and the Rebirth of Consciousness, she has contributed articles and poems to numer-ous journals. Dr. Wikman lectures and leads workshops internationally on mythology,

dreams, wellness, alchemy, and creativity, including, most recently, a New York Center for Jungian Studies program in Cuba, “Music, Myth, and Spirit.” A graduate of the Jung–von Franz Center for Depth Psychology in Zurich, she has taught in the graduate department at California State University, Los Angeles. Dr. Wikman lives and has a private practice in both Tesuque, New Mexico, and Gaviota, California.

PRESENTATIONS & WORKSHOPS

When the Genie Gets Out of the Bottle: Paradoxical Lessons from Folklore and AlchemyTOM ELSNERMonday July 25: PresentationSelf-exploration can take us out of the collective paths in life, providing a danger as well as an opportunity. The confrontation with the dynamic reality of what has been bottled up in our personal and collective lives releases stored energy but at the expense of the death of our old, idealized, safe assumptions and goals. In the myths and stories of Hermes, we will explore how this dangerous figure threatens the status quo but also incorporates the qualities that we need in order to heal the split in ourselves and deal with the paradoxical nature of the unconscious. Applying the wisdom of folklore, myth, and alchemy, Dr. Elsner will illustrate how consciousness can be transformed, resulting in increased understanding and a more expansive view of life.

Tuesday July 26: WorkshopSymbols, “the best possible representation of the unknown,” according to Jung, mediate between the conscious and unconscious selves. Dreams open the windows to these symbolic dynamics in which the healing quality of living images acts on body and mind. Emerging spontaneously out of the speaking darkness, symbols mediate between opposites so that they no longer merely cause us pain but instead give meaningful shape to life. This workshop will be a time for us to work with one another’s dreams, tell the deeper story of our lives, and enrich one another through the sharing of this dream language of symbols.

Thomas Elsner, JD, MA, is a certified Jungian analyst with the C. G. Jung Study Center of Southern California and faculty at Pacifica Graduate Institute. He left the practice of law to train as an analyst at the Jung–von Franz Center for Depth Psychology in Zurich. Steeped in

folklore, alchemy, and the work with dreams from a depth-psycho-logical point of view, Dr. Elsner has brought this material to classes at Pacifica as well as presentations in England, Ireland, and throughout the United States. His forthcoming book deals with Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” in relationship to the new myth of our time.

All true things must change and only that which changes remains true—C. G. Jung

I have enjoyed and benefitted from the four programs I have attended. —Janet B.

Most valued: Presentation of material and clarification of Jung’s ideas. —Peter G.

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We invite Hermes to be with us whenever we are willing to venture into new territory with an attitude of exploration and openness.—Jean Bolen, Gods in Everyman

Honoring HermesSYLVIA PERERAWednesday July 27: Presentation & WorkshopHermes harks back to early and rural Greek culture, when he was connected to the Herm stones, which marked borders and embodied fertility. Similar to an ancient Irish Druidic/shamanic god and creator of boundaries, Hermes represents the threshold where energies and forms interweave, where consciousness rises from and opens back into the fluid matrix of the psyche to bring gifts of perception, creativity, and healing. To appreciate the role that this messenger between worlds plays in our lives and therapy, we will also explore later stories of Hermes as child, trickster, lover, and healer. Through presentation, sharing, and work with dream imagery and active imagination, we will honor Hermes as a numinous bridging func-tion between the realms that we have come to call conscious and unconscious.

Sylvia Brinton Perera, MA, an internationally known Jungian analyst, lives, practices, writes, and teaches in New York and Vermont. A faculty member of the C. G. Jung Institute of New York, she also lectures and leads workshops internationally. Her publications include Descent to the Goddess: A Way of Initiation for Women; The Scapegoat Complex: Toward a Mythology of Shadow and Guilt; Dreams, A Portal to the Source; Celtic Queen Maeve and Addiction; and

The Irish Bull God: Image of Multiform and Integral Masculinity.

The Magician: Mysterious and Powerful Figure ERIK GOODWYNThursday July 28: Morning PresentationThe magician is the master of transformation—whether it be transformation from lead into gold, or whether from the ego into something greater than it was. Dr. Goodwyn’s presentation will ex-plore the many faces of Hermes (and the many counterparts) as magician and shape-shifter. Seen in the mythology of all peoples and playing out in our everyday lives, the magician is a figure of mystery who transcends boundaries without destroying them, master of language, keeper of secrets, and ruler of death and change. Most important, for those willing to follow this magical figure into the maelstrom, he can lead us to a higher plane of integration and insight.

Thursday July 28: Afternoon WorkshopWe will explore an intimate portrait of transformation at the hands of the magician. We will look further at one of the magician characters from mythology—the enigmatic god Odin—and learn of his relationship with language, runes, mystery, and transformation. Dr. Goodwyn will illustrate how the therapist, in many ways, takes on the mantle of magician as a transforming force in psychotherapy.

Erik Goodwyn, MD, holds BAs in physics and mathematics, an MA in anatomy and neurobiology, and an MD from the University of Cincinnati. Currently on the psychiatry faculty of the University of Louisville, Dr. Goodwyn has received numerous awards and is the author of 11 publications, including The Neurobiol-ogy of the Gods. An officer in the U.S. Air Force for seven years, he has re-searched and written about the dreams of soldiers in combat zones, as well as

authored articles combining archetypal theory with cognitive anthropology.

Encountering Hermes in the EverydaySTEPHEN A. MARTINFriday July 29: PresentationThe presence of the archetypal in our lives does not always come with high drama and mythic dimension. In fact, as individuation proceeds, we often find that life’s meaningful-ness is reflected more in the small, in the subtle, and in the nuance that is the work of Hermes. In this presentation, we will learn about this “friendliest of gods” and how to track hermetic energy as it helps us cross thresholds, be open to change and transformation, experience the enchantment of the everyday, and sense the lived presence of the unexpect-ed in our daily round.

Stephen A. Martin, PsyD, a graduate of the C. G. Jung Institute in Zurich, has been in private practice in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, for over 35 years. Cofounder and president emeritus of the Philemon Foundation and the Philadelphia Association of Jungian

Analysts, Dr. Martin is a leading expert on twentieth-centu-ry decorative arts, focusing on British decorative arts of Art Nouveau and the Arts and Crafts period. Editor of definitive monographs on British artist Archibald Knox, Dr. Martin has been guided by Hermes in many guises over the years, for which he is most grateful.

On the Silk Road with HermesJEANNE BRESCIANI

Wednesday, July 27: Optional Evening ProgramIn this workshop, led by Jeanne Bresciani, Ph.D., founder and artistic director of the Isadora Duncan International Institute, participants will be invited to join Jeanne’s

caravan calling upon the “messenger god” for tricks, treats, signs and the wonders of alchemy.

SCHEDULE continued

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JUNG ON THE HUDSON GATHERS IN RHINEBECK, NEW YORK New York’s Hudson Valley is renowned for its beauty, history, and culture. For the past 23 years of Jung on the Hudson Seminars, we have taken great pride in offering meaningful, in-depth content, while also providing first-class accommodations and gourmet meals. As always, we are delighted to again host our program in the picturesque village of Rhinebeck in New York’s Hudson Valley, located just 90 miles from New York City.

Internationally renowned, the historic Beekman Arms and Delamater complex in the center of Rhinebeck will provide us with both modern conference facilities as well as deluxe accommodations for our seminar. The village offers a variety of restaurants, bookstores and art galleries as well as providing a picturesque setting for morning walks or afternoon strolls through its tree lined streets.

Rhinebeck is easily accessible by means of a 90-minute train ride along the majestic Hudson River from New York City, or by bus or car.

Brochure Art

This year our brochure features the work of Rhinebeck watercolorist Betsy Jacaruso. Her current work explores atmosphere and luminosity in landscape, and has been featured in both regional and international exhibitions, as well as represented in private collections throughout the United States and Europe. You are invited to visit her gallery at 43-2 East Market St in Rhinebeck throughout the week. Or browse her work online: betsyjacarusoartist.com. On the cover: Serenity I; page 5: Clarion Moon; page 11: detail from Tidal March; and page 12: Rhinecliff Cove.

Accommodations and seminar site at the Beekman Arms and Delamater Inn complex.

ABOUT THE NEW YORK CENTER FOR JUNGIAN STUDIESSeminars, Workshops, Study ToursFounded in 1992, the New York Center for Jungian Studies has been offering unique seminars, workshops, and study tours in extraordinary settings for over 24 years.

The Center’s programs offer a rare opportunity for participants to meet and exchange ideas with others who come from diverse backgrounds, yet share a common interest in the psychology and ideas of Carl Jung.

Programs are open to individuals in all fields as well as mental-health professionals, and participants hail from all over the U.S. and abroad. A combination of inspired content, magical settings, superb accommodations, and gourmet meals provide an unforgettable experience and a unique and meaningful learning vacation.

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Aryeh Maidenbaum, PhD, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City. Among his publica-tions are the articles “The Search for Spirit in Jungian

Psychology,” “Sounds of Silence,” and “Psychological Types, Job Change, and Personal Growth,” and editor and contribu-tor to the book, Jung and the Shadow of Anti- Semitism. Dr. Maidenbaum leads workshops internationally and served as moderator for the 2012 Conference on Aging at the Library of Congress.

Diana Rubin, LCSW, in private practice in New York City and the Hudson Valley, specializes in working with creative and performing artists. For many years a

staff psychotherapist at the Postgraduate Center for Mental Health’s Institute for the Performing Artist, she has organized and led Jungian seminars and study tours for more than 20 years, and lectures and leads workshops on a variety of topics related to Jung, creativity, and the arts.

Founders & Directors

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JUNG IN IRELANDJoin us in Ireland as we once again weave the island’s stunning scenery with Jungian themes, and explore the relationship between Ireland’s landscape, myths, music, and legends … and our own psychological journeys.

Join us for one or both programs.

March 24-30, 2017A Special Program with the Monks of Glenstal Abbey

March 31 - April 7, 2017A Seminar (theme to be announced)

For more information, and/or help with your travel plans, please contact the New York Center for Jungian Studies: [email protected] or 845-256-0191

Spring 2017 • 17th annual

HAVE JUNG, WILL TRAVEL!

Travel is unquestionably among the most appealing and engaging of activities. Not only is it stimulating and educational, but it also provides the opportunity for us to develop and expand as individuals through firsthand

experiences of cultures, histories, and traditions that differ from our own. Visiting different countries with unique landscapes, exploring historic sites, touring world-renowned museums, and sampling different foods greatly contribute to expanding our worldview and feeding our souls as no other experience can.

Our Jungian travel programs provide an added value to the travel experience: a bonus that helps participants explore different themes from a Jungian perspective and better understand some of the archetypal patterns intrinsic to the places we visit. Accompanied by superb scholars and expert guides, we enjoy presentations by outstanding analysts and authors, travel in comfort (accommodations are always in deluxe hotels), and delight in getting to meet and interact with fellow like-minded travelers.

Over the past 22 years, we have presented seminars and study tours in Argentina, Cuba, India, Ireland, Israel, Jordan, Portugal, and Spain. Beginning in 2017, we are planning an annual fall travel program—visiting and learning in a different country each year. We are confident that this program will provide an opportunity to turn travel into a learning vacation and gratifying experience.

Tell us where would you like to go most?n Spain n Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonian Morocco n Israel (Jerusalem and the Galilee)

We’ll sweeten the offer if you let us know.Go online and tell us which of these countries would be of most interest to you. In return you’ll get a $100 credit toward any Fall 2017 or 2018 New York Center for Jungian Studies travel program.

Tell us at: nyjungcenter.org/survey

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SAVE-THE-DATES

“The journey to Ireland [was] so enriching and meaningful for me. It was perhaps the best trip I have ever taken, the most insightful program I have ever attended … I look forward to attending more of your programs. —Linda P.

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Page 12: Jung on the hudson 2016 brochure

registration & information: 845-256-0191 • nyjungcenter.org • 2120 • registration & information: 845-256-0191 • nyjungcenter.org

REGISTRATION FORMTo reserve your place, fill out the registration form below, include a deposit of $600 for each seminar and/or $150 for the Hollis weekend.

Return this form to:

New York Center for Jungian Studies, 27 North Chestnut Street, New Paltz, NY 12561Phone: 845-256-0191; Fax: 845-256-0196

Name

Address

City State Zip

Phone

Cell Phone

E-mail

I am unable to attend, but please keep me on your mailing list for future programs.

JUNG ON THE HUDSONJuly 17–22, 2016 — Letting Go: New Paradigms for Later Life

YES! I am registering and my $600 deposit is enclosedI prefer a single room (single-room supplement $395)I prefer a double room I will share a room with

July 22–23, 2016 — A Weekend with Dr. James HollisYES! I am registering and my $150 deposit is enclosed

July 24–29, 2016 — Reinventing Ourselves: Harnessing Hermes YES! I am registering and my $600 deposit is enclosedI prefer a single room (single-room supplement $395)I prefer a double room I will share a room with

Travel Arrangements I will make my own travel arrangements. I would like help in making travel arrangements and will contact the New York Center

office at 845-256-0191 or e-mail [email protected]

Payment

Please charge $____________________ to my: MasterCard Visa American Express

card holder’s name

card number

exp. date: mo/yr validation code

signature

Participation: Open to the general public and mental-health professionals; no pre-requisites required. You may choose one, two, or all three programs. Arrangements can be made for family or friends interested in accompanying participants and not attending programs. All rights are reserved to ask a participant to leave who is disruptive to the program.

Tuition for the Seminar Weeks

$995 per seminar week up to May 16, 2016 • Register early and save: $75 registration fee

(additional) waived for enrollment by May 16, 2016 — or for those registering for both weeks!

• After May 16: $1070 per seminar week (or register for both seminar weeks for $995/week)

• After June 10: $1120 per seminar week (or register for both seminar weeks for $1070/week)

Accommodations & Meals for Seminar Weeks The fee for accommodations and meals per semi-nar week is $775* per person. This fee includes 5 nights at the Beekman Arms and Delamater Inn; daily enhanced continental breakfast, two lunches, festive welcoming and closing dinners, coffee breaks daily, service, taxes, and gratuities.

*Based on double occupancy. Single supplement available for $395. Deluxe room upgrade available for additional charge. For those choosing to arrange their own accommodations, there is an additional $250 fee per person per seminar week (includes the welcoming and closing dinners, two lunches, all daily coffee breaks, service, taxes, and gratuities).

Weekend with James Hollis The tuition is $295 per person. The program schedule: Friday, July 22, 7:30 – 9:30 pm and Saturday, July 23, 9:30 am – 5:00 pm. For information on accommodations, contact our office at: 845-256-0191 or e-mail: Jofisher@ NYJungcenter.org

Tax Deductions: Seminars of this type generally meet requirements for tax deductions.

Cancellations and Refunds: Deposit refundable, less $175 administration fee per person, per program ($75 for the weekend with James Hollis) if request is received in writing on or before June 10, 2016.

Travel: Rhinebeck is easily accessible by train, bus, car, and plane at the three major New York City airports; Stewart International Airport in Newburgh, New York; and Albany International Airport.

If you have transportation questions, need help in booking your flight, or need driving directions, please contact our office at 845-256-0191 or e-mail: [email protected] and we will be happy to help you make your plans.

To Register: A $600 deposit is required for each Jung on the Hudson week and/or $150 deposit for the weekend with James Hollis.

• By Phone: Credit card registration accepted by phone at: 845-256-0191.

• Online: Register through our website using your credit card: NYJungcenter.org. Click on the “Register” button.

• Mail or Fax: Use the Registration Form to your right, or download and print the form from our website: NYJungcenter.org. If you are using mail, send the registration form and your check payable to the New York Center for Jungian Studies to:

New York Center for Jungian Studies 27 North Chestnut Street New Paltz, NY 12561

Or fax the registration form with credit card information to: 845-256-0196.

Payment in full due by June 10, 2016. Participants may still register after this date, subject to availability of space.

Credits and Certificates: 15 CE credits for psychologists are provided by the Spiritual Competency Resource Center which is co-sponsoring this program with the New York Center for Jungian Studies. Spiritual Com-petency Resource Center is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. The Spiritual Competency Resource Center maintains responsibility for the pro-gram and its content. Additionally, 15 LCSW and MFT credits have been approved and are available through the California Board of Behavioral Sciences. Full atten-dance is required at each presentation to receive credit. CE credits for psychologists and California Board of Behavioral Sciences will be issued at a cost of $35 per certificate. Certificates of attendance available at a cost of $10 per certificate. For more details, see our website: nyjungcenter.org.

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Disclaimer of Responsibility: By registering for any or all of the New York Center for Jungian Studies pro-grams, participant specifically waives any and all claims of action against the New York Center for Jungian Studies and its staff for damages, loss, injury, accident, or death incurred by any person in connection with these programs. The New York Center for Jungian Studies and its respective employees assume no responsibility or liability in connection with the service of any coach, train, vessel, carriage, aircraft, or other conveyance, which may be used wholly, or in part, in the performance of their duty to the passengers. Neither will the New York Center for Jungian Studies be responsible for any injury, death, loss, accident, delay, or irregularity through neglect or default of any company or person engaged in carrying out the purposes for which tickets, vouchers, or coupons are issued, or monies collected. No responsibility is accepted for losses or expenses due to sickness, weather, strikes, wars and/or other causes. In the event it becomes necessary or advisable for any reason whatso-ever to alter the itinerary or arrangements, including faculty and/or hotel substitutions, such alterations may be made without penalty.

Page 13: Jung on the hudson 2016 brochure

PRESORTED STANDARDU.S. POSTAGE PAIDQUALPRINT

New

York Center for Jungian Studies

27 North C

hestnut Street N

ew Paltz, N

Y 12561

registration & information

845-256-0191 nyjungcenter.org

register early & save!

SEMIN

AR SERIES • 2016

JULY

17–22, 2016Letting G

o: New

Paradigms for Later Life

JULY

22–23, 2016A

Weekend w

ith Dr. Jam

es Hollis

JULY

24–29, 2016 Reinventing O

urselves: Harnessing H

ermes

RHIN

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