jung on the hudson 2014

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SEMINAR SERIES • 2014 JULY 20-25 Sense and Nonsense: Yearning for Meaning JULY 25-26 What Is My Myth? A Weekend with James Hollis JULY 27-AUGUST 1 Chaos and Creativity RHINEBECK, NEW YORK New York Center for Jungian Studies presents the 21st annual JUNG HUDSON ON THE Vera Kaplan

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Join us in Rhinebeck, New York this summer. The New York Center for Jungian Studies presents its 21st annual Jung on the Hudson Summer Seminars. We invite you to join us in the historic village of Rhinebeck, New York, to explore the wisdom of Carl Jung with some of today’s most outstanding teachers and authors in the world of Jungian psychology. This unique program combines presentations with smaller workshops as well as provides ample time for discussion, dialogue, and interaction with the faculty. The series also creates a meaningful opportunity to meet interesting people from around the world.

TRANSCRIPT

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SEMINAR SERIES • 2014JULY 20-25Sense and Nonsense: Yearning for Meaning

JULY 25-26What Is My Myth? A Weekend with James Hollis

JULY 27-AUGUST 1Chaos and Creativity

RHINEBECK, NEW YORK

New York Center for Jungian Studiespresents the 21st annual

JUNG HUDSON

ON THE

Vera Kaplan

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Welcome! We invite you to join us in the historic village of Rhinebeck, New York, to explore the wisdom of Carl Jung with some of today’s most outstanding teachers and authors in the world of Jungian psychology. What began as a dream of presenting Jungian programs in New York’s Hudson Valley 20 years ago has become an annual, internationally recognized event in the world of Analytical Psychology — one that has attracted presenters and participants from all over the U.S. and abroad.

Our Jung on the Hudson summer seminar series combines high-quality presentations with ample time for discussion, dialogue, workshops, and interaction with our exceptional faculty — as well as opportunities to explore the charming village of Rhinebeck and its beautiful surroundings.

Jung on the Hudson creates a meaningful opportunity to meet interesting people from around the world — from individuals interested in their own personal development and spiritual growth to mental-health professionals who want to incorporate Jung’s psychology and ideas into their practice. These seminars offer a wonderful setting to make new friends and meet up with old friends.

Join us for a unique and unforgettable learning vacation.

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

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.

t

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Fee-fi- fo-fum.Hickory dickory dock. Hey diddle diddle…

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N onsense words and phrases from childhood immerse us in the unexpected, the absurd and ridiculous. As adults, the

“nonsensical” world is sometimes overlooked as we pursue meaning and make sense of our lives — but it is just as important. For in seeking to create wholeness, we must often venture beyond thinking, to follow the non-rational impulses, to allow spontaneous silliness and the wellspring of our unconscious to permeate our psyches. We must learn to trust a more innate wisdom embodied in archetypes such as the Holy Fool and the Trickster, and in stories like Winnie-the-Pooh, where Pooh comes up with creative and simple solutions to life’s complexities. Nonsense, absurd situations, and fun language appear again and again in folk songs, fairy tales, satire, comic operettas, children’s books, and in jokes — evoking laughter but also insight, awareness and meaning. Of most value perhaps is the awareness that what appears to be nonsense and therefore not of importance, when decoded and examined through a different lens, can create clarity and consciousness.

Fee-fi- fo-fum.Hickory dickory dock. Hey diddle diddle…

JULY 20-25Sense and Nonsense: Yearning for Meaning

Vera

Kap

lan

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Nonsense may be seen as a lack of coherent meaning — or, that

which is ridiculous or absurd. As we try to make sense of our lives and our personal and collective histories and psychologies, we need to understand that finding sense and meaning requires us to explore and honor the “non-sense,” the intuitive, and the irrational. For it is through role-playing, imagination, and games that we, like children, explore ourselves and our surroundings and relationships, and prepare ourselves for the challenges of life. So too, if we allow ourselves to play and engage our imaginations, we can venture into unknown terrain in order to learn and grow.

Our Quest for Meaning in Life: Strategies and SuggestionsLionel CorbettThe discovery of meaning in life increases satisfaction, improves mood, and enhances general health. But prolonged states of meaninglessness are demoralizing, so it is not surprising that our illnesses and social problems are sometimes thought of as “diseases of meaning.” However, “non-sense” and nonsense also have an important role to play in our lives. For without them there can be no sense — just as without humor we are lacking self-knowledge or insight. Drawing from the work of Carl Jung and Victor Frankl, as well as his own wonderful sense of humor, Dr. Corbett will discuss the importance of meaning and explore ways we might find meaning in life.

Lionel Corbett, MD, trained in psychiatry in England and as a Jungian analyst at the Jung Institute of Chicago. His primary interests are in the religious function of the

psyche and in the development of psycho-therapy as a spiritual practice. Dr. Corbett is a core faculty member of Pacifica Graduate Institute. Among his many publications are Psyche and the Sacred: Spirituality Beyond Religion; The Religious Function of the Psyche; The Sacred Cauldron: Psychotherapy as a Spiritual Practice and, with Dennis Patrick Slattery, co-editor of Depth Psychology: Meditations in the Field and Psychology at the Threshold: Selected Papers.

PRESENTATIONS & WORKSHOPSJULY 20-25

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The gardens at Blythewood on the Bard College campus in Annandale-on-Hudson.

Sense or Nonsense? Manisha RoyThe word “sense” refers to an ability to judge, to discriminate with sound reasoning. Nonsense, on the other hand, is understood to be sense-less, absurd, silly, foolish, and useless. Yet, we cannot ignore the function of nonsense in making sense of life’s twists and turns, our fortunes and misfortunes. It is the nonsense that permeates numerous expres-sions of both individual and collective creativity — from nonsense poetry and theater of the absurd to the ‘Dumling’ in fairy tales and the Court Jester or Fool. Through lecture and workshop, Dr. Roy will help us explore the value of nonsense in our lives.

Manisha Roy, PhD, is a trained anthropologist and Jungian Analyst. A training analyst on the faculty of the Jung Institute in Boston, she has taught both anthropol-

ogy and analytical psychology at several universities. In private practice in Cam-bridge, Massachusetts, Dr. Roy is author of numerous books and articles, including Bengali Women; Cast the First Stone: Ethics in Analytic Practice, and The Reckoning Heart: An Anthropologist Looks at Her Worlds. Her memoir, My Four Homes, is scheduled to be published in 2014 along with a new edition of her novel, Professor Hamilton’s Passage to India.

The Archetype of the TricksterJ. Pittman McGeheeJung believed that the Trickster is both a mythical figure and an inner psychic experience. Whenever this figure appears — often in our dreams — it brings the possibility of transformation and has the potential to turn what may appear meaningless into a meaningful experience. Archetypally, the Trickster’s primary psychic purpose is to compensate, make us lose our footing, puncture pretense, and reveal shadow material. In addition to the many manifestations of this figure in myth, fairy tales, and literature, we will examine the variety of ways the Trickster appears in our everyday lives.

J. Pittman McGehee, MDiv, lecturer and educator in psychology and religion, is a widely published author, poet, and essayist. A practic-ing Jungian analyst and

Director of the Institute for the Advancement of Psychology and Spirituality in Houston, Texas, he was formerly Carolyn Fay Adjunct Lecturer in Analytical Psychology at the University of Houston, and faculty member at the Jung Institute in Zurich. His many publications include The Invisible Church: Finding Spirituality Where You Are and Raising Lazarus: The Science of Healing the Soul.

Gretchen Kelly

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The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool—William Shakespeare, As You Like It: Act 5, Scene 1

Vera Kaplan

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Divine Nonsense, the Holy Fool, and the Depth of Contrary WisdomTess CastlemanIn this workshop, Holy Fools or Sacred Clowns of some North American indig-enous peoples will be explored as they relate to Jungian psychology and the pro-cess of individuation. Heyoka, Windego-kon, and Koshare are some of the names given to this shamanic path related to shadow, humor, fear, and the Trick-ster. Indigenous spiritual beliefs pro-vide an opportunity to glimpse into the depths where the leftover, the silly, the rejected, and the foolish were seen as the Holy Other, the medicine that can bring balance and healing to individuals and the community. In this workshop setting, participants will examine an opposite aspect of self through meditation, group process, writing, embodiment, and art.

Tess Castleman, MA, LPC, Jungian author and training analyst, is a graduate of the C.G. Jung Institute in Zurich and in private practice in Dallas,

Texas. President of the Jung Institute of Dallas and a Clinical Supervisor for licensed professional counselors, she has a profound interest in the creative process as it applies to the analytical journey, both as an exploration of the psyche’s potential and a vehicle to heal broken souls. Her publications include Threads, Knots, Tapestries: How a Tribal Connection Is Revealed Through Dreams and Synchronici-ties and Sacred Dream Circles: A Guidebook to Facilitate Jungian Dream Groups.

The Wisdom of Jewish Non-SenseAryeh MaidenbaumFrom prayer to superstition, from mysticism to ritual and ancient dream interpretation, the power of the non-rational is everywhere evident in Judaism. While Freud acknowl-edged the importance of humor in our daily lives as containing meaning, perhaps no-where is humor more alive and more present than in Jewish life. Indeed, the sadness and tragedy of Jewish history was made bearable by the use of humor and satire. Weaving together the tradition of Jewish humor, myths, tales, and legends, Dr. Maidenbaum will illustrate the meaning inherent in what appears to be nonsensical.

Aryeh Maidenbaum, PhD, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City and Special Consultant to the Jewish Museum of New York. Among his

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. Formerly on the faculty of New York University for 18 years, Dr. Maidenbaum lectures internationally and is a contributing author to Current Theories of Psychoanalysis, Robert Langs, ed.

“What I valued the most was the variety of distinguished presenters and interactions with participants as well as presenters and staff. —Barbara B.

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JULY 25–26What Is My Myth? A Weekend with JAMES HOLLIS, PhDFriday Evening

Jung asked himself this question, What is my myth?, and real-ized it was a question he could not answer. Can we answer it? In order to begin, we first have to understand what is meant by myth. Then, we need to consider what the question itself means. Why we even have to ask this question is yet another question. What is the cultural context in which we raise these questions? How do our personal journeys intersect with the climate of our time? Answers to these and other questions will be explored in Dr. Hollis’ presentation as he offers puta-tive approaches to discovering our myth and challenges us to a more thoughtful engagement with our own personal “myth” and journey.

Saturday

During the course of today’s program, Dr. Hollis will elaborate on the questions raised in his presentation on Friday evening, and provide even more questions in order to provoke participants into further personalizing the issues and answering the question, What is my myth?Please bring pad and pen on which to reflect and to write.

James Hollis, PhD, is a Zurich-trained Jungian analyst in private practice in Houston, Texas. Inter-nationally acclaimed analyst and author, Dr. Hollis is former Executive Director of the Jung Educational Center of Houston and professor of Jungian Studies at Saybrook University, San Francisco, California. Additionally, he is retired Senior Training Analyst for the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts, first Director of the Philadelphia Jung Institute, and President Emeritus of the Philemon Foundation.

Among his many publications are numerous articles and fourteen books (some of which have been translated into sixteen languages) including The Eden Project: In Search of the Magical Other; Finding Meaning in the Second Half of Life; What Matters Most: Living a More Considered Life; The Middle Passage; and his most recent book, Hauntings: Dispelling the Ghosts Who Run Our Lives.

Vera

Kap

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“You must have chaos within you to give birth to a dancing star.”—Friedrich Nietchze

“In all chaos, there is a cosmos; in all order, disorder.”—Carl Jung

How do we learn to live with chaos? Many great artists have recognized chaos as an integral part of the creative process —

the necessary breaking down of the known that ultimately leads to something new and unique. Within the creative act of life, chaos can offer the opportunity “to turn our lead into gold” and to psychologically mine the richness of madness. Chaos happens — accidents, divorces, traumas, as well as setbacks in life, transitions, everyday interruptions, and unexpected events — even falling in love! Chaos untethers us; it changes everything. Life continually challenges us to grow by breaking things apart. Yet if we understand that this is a necessary part of the creative process, we can harvest something positive from what is at first experienced as disjointed. When we learn to respect and invite the fragmentation or “falling apart,” we begin to allow something new to emerge.

JULY 27–AUGUST 1Chaos and Creativity

Vera

Kap

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From Chaos to a New OrderMichael ConfortiThere exists an inexorable connection between psyche and matter, and between nature and spirit. Chaos Theory and the science of Emergence help us understand nature’s creative urge, and how in response to increasing levels of disorder, new and greater levels of order come into being. So too within the psyche, similar transfor-mations occur in response to eruptions and disturbances from the unconscious. Dr. Conforti will explore the relationship between archetypes, complexes, and the “new sciences.” With illustrations from his clinical practice, dreams, and literature, we will come to understand how the psyche continually finds the golden threads that help heal and can lead one to a genuine life of spirituality and creativity.

Michael Conforti, PhD, is a Jungian analyst, lecturer, and author. Founder and Director of the Assisi Institute, Dr. Conforti’s research has resulted in a

training institute and new discipline based on his work: Archetypal Pattern Analysis. Additionally, he has applied his insights as a consultant to business, government, and the film industry. Lecturing and presenting workshops internationally, he is the author of Field, Form and Fate: Patterns in Mind, Nature & Psyche; Threshold Experiences: The Archetype of Beginnings; and the forth-coming Hidden Presence: Complexes, Possessions and Redemption.

“The setting, the insights offered by the presenters, and the contributions of the participants made the conference enjoyable, fascinating, and fun. It was filled with very stimulating information. —William S.

PRESENTATIONS & WORKSHOPSJULY 27–AUGUST 1

Special Evening Workshop

Creativity: Conjured from the Fireswith Jeanne Bresciani, PhDFounder and Artistic Director

of the Isidora Duncan International Institute, Jeanne Bresciani will lead an optional evening workshop in archetypal movement. Engaging the origins of creativity’s heat, Jeanne will help us reignite the fire of life at its source, where archetypes hold us in sway — both exhilarating and dangerous.

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Chaos, Complexity, CreativityAnn Belford UlanovThe creative process can be chaotic, complex, and paradoxical — one often not understood by the very artists that create. An example of this can be seen in Jung’s personal periods of emotional turmoil and chaos, which were integral to his creation of the Red Book. Indeed, our own inner chaos and suffer-ing can lead to important growth, healing, and creativity. On the way from chaos to creativity, we run into complexity, projection. And on the way from creativity to chaos, we run into projection and complexity. What to make of this jumble, so much a part of living, both personal and collective? In our time together, we will find ourselves sorted out by these processes.

Ann Belford Ulanov, PhD, is a Jungian analyst in private practice in New York City, a member of the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association, and Christiane Brooks

Johnson Professor of Psychiatry and Religion at Union Theological Seminary. She is the author of numerous articles and books, including Spiritual Aspects of Clinical Work; Religion and the Unconscious; The Wisdom of the Psyche; Deadness in the Self; and The Living God and Our Living Psyche. Her most recent book is Madness and Creativity.

The Fertile Potential of Chaos Erik GoodwynIn order to access the creative potential of chaos in our lives, we are often challenged to break down our ego structures in order to facilitate development and growth. Other-wise, we stay in a state of stagnation, rigidity, and suffering. During the course of the day, Dr. Goodwyn will examine the neurobio-logical process known as “decentering,” the cross-cultural phenomenon of the ecstatic journey, and the modern Jungian method of active imagination. By understanding these processes, we will explore the fertile potential of chaos, destruction, ambivalence, and liminality.

Erik Goodwyn, MD, earned a bachelor’s degree in physics and mathematics at Western Kentucky Univer-sity, a master’s degree in anatomy and neurobiology

at the University of Louisville, and a medical degree from the University of Cincinnati. Currently on the faculty of the University of Louisville, Department of Psychiatry, Dr. Goodwyn is the author of The Neurobiology of the Gods, as well as articles that have generated scholarly debates among top theorists in the field of analytical psychology. An officer in the U.S. Air Force for seven years, he has researched and written on the dreams of soldiers in combat zones, as well as articles combining archetype theory with cognitive anthropology.

Residential street in the village of Rhinebeck. James Gurney

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When Things Fall Apart Jacqueline J. West How do we each meet moments when things fall apart and the center does not hold? How do we manage to find the flexibility in our spines, the ground under our feet, and the resilience in our souls, to dare to wrestle with such chaos? The es-sential presence of consciousness enables us to enter a relationship with chaos. The deepening of this relationship subjects consciousness to demanding transfor-mative processes, including challenging confrontations with archetypal forces. These processes will be discussed in de-velopmental, mythopoetic, and alchemical terms, enlivened by images of the work of several artists, including Jung’s Red Book paintings.

Jacqueline J. West, PhD, is a Jungian Analyst practicing in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She has served in both teaching and adminis-trative capacities in the

C.G. Jung Institute of New Mexico as well as in the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts and is currently President of the Council of North American Societies of Jungian Analysts. Dr. West is co-author of The Matrix and Meaning of Character: An Archetypal Approach.

Trickster and the Chaotic Threshold of CreativityAllen D. KoehnThe cross-cultural figure of the Trickster speaks to the universal process of creativ-ity. We are drawn by this archetype to be more fully alive, for Trickster creates surprise and chaos — within and without. Because we are resistant to change and the unpredictable, Trickster will change our lives in ways we cannot even imagine. From Winnicott’s descriptions of play to Jung’s process of active imagination and alchemy, this presentation will speak to and embody the fact that Trickster is everywhere.

Allen D. Koehn, DMin, MFT, is a Jungian analyst in private practice and is a core faculty member of the Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara, Califor-

nia. Former Executive Director of the C.G. Jung Institute in Los Angeles, Dr. Koehn has taught, lectured, and led workshops nationally and internationally on Jungian themes. His areas of specialty include Theological Foundations of Depth Psychology; Myth, Literature, and Religion; the Archetype of the Trickster; Psychological Type; Relationships; and the Creative Process.

The village of Rhinebeck. James Gurney

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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 20 years, we have prided ourselves on offering meaningful and in-depth content, while also providing superior accommodations and gourmet meals. Once again we are delighted to be holding the Jung on the Hudson summer seminar series in the picturesque village of Rhinebeck, New York — just 90 miles from New York City. It is is a perfect spot for exploring the scenic Hudson Valley, with its hiking and nature trails, historic mansions, vineyards, and stunning river views.

Internationally renowned, the historic Beekman Arms and Delamater Inn complex in the center of Rhinebeck will provide us with both beautiful and modern conference facilities and deluxe accommodations for our seminar.

The village offers a variety of restaurants, cafes, boutiques , book stores, and art galleries. The local neighborhood provides opportunities for a morning walk or afternoon run through tree-lined streets.

Join us and discover the refreshingly beautiful countryside of New York’s Hudson Valley.

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.

Artists featured in this brochure: Rhinebeck is known for its rich community of artists. Vera Lambert Kaplan is an artist for whom painting is a “waking dream on canvas.” James Gurney, painter, is the author and illustrator of the Dinotopia book series. Gretchen Kelly, artist, paints in nature and in the studio. All three artists live in the Hudson Valley.

James GurneyMarket Street, Rhinebeck.

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

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Cuba! Myth, Music & SpiritJanuary 3 - 10, 2015

The trip to Cuba was exhilarating! Superb content, well planned — and with incredible music.—Jonathan M.

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We are pleased to announce that once again we will offer a special travel program to Cuba.

The heritage of Cuba is rich and many layered. Influenced by African, Caribbean, Spanish, and American culture, we will experience this

fascinating country through its archetypal myths, music, and culture. Led by Director of the New York Center for Jungian Studies, Aryeh Maidenbaum, our group will be traveling to Cuba under the auspices of an approved Treasury Department license. Our program will include presentations by Jungian analyst Monika Wikman, meetings with local scholars and professors, and discussion, demonstrations, and performances of Cuban music as well as visits to cultural sites of interest. Departing from Florida on a charter flight to Cuba, we will begin our explorations in the captivating city of Havana with its outstanding fine arts and ceramic museums, colonial mansions, cathedrals, fortresses, and cobblestone plazas.

From Havana, we will travel to the jeweled city of Trinidad de Cuba — designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site and often called a “living museum.” Throughout our travels, we will familiarize ourselves with the roles archetype and myth play in Cuba’s psychology and spirituality. We will meet Cuban artists and experience the wonderfully diverse music, spirit, and culture of this exotic island.

We invite you to join us on this extraordinary program — limited to 36 participants. C.E. credits have been applied for. (Please note: we expect this trip to fill quickly; last year we had to turn away many interested people. Please register soon to ensure your participation.)

Cost of program: $3900* includes:

• Round-trip airfare from Florida aboard a charter flight

• 7 nights’ accommodations at deluxe hotels• Full breakfast daily; three lunches and

three dinners• Lectures, presentations, and meetings with

local scholars• All transportation within Cuba by deluxe,

air-conditioned coach• Admission to historic sites and museums* Based on double occupancy; Cuban visa ($50) and gratuities ($125) additional. Single supplement available at $375. Airport tax in Havana ($30) is additional and will be collected by authorities in Havana upon departure from Cuba.

For more information, including a tentative itinerary and help with your travel plans, please contact the New York Center for Jungian Studies at 845-256-0191 or by e-mail at Jof [email protected]

Thanks to Hollis Melton for sharing photos.

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Jung in IrelandWe invite you to Ireland as we 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.April 13 –18, 2015Devotion and Betrayal:A Special Program with the Monks of Glenstal Abbey

April 19 – 26, 2015Resilience and the Gift of Adversity: A Seminar

SAVE-THE-DATES

Spring 2015 •15th annual

“… 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., seminar participant 2012

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Founders & DirectorsAryeh Maidenbaum, PhD, is a Jungian analyst and a consultant to corporations and

family-owned businesses. Among his publications are “The Search for Spirit in Jungian Psychology,” “Psychological Types, Job Change and Personal Growth,” and Jung and the Shadow of Anti-Semitism. Formerly on the faculty of NYU for 18 years, he lectures and leads workshops internationally and is a contributing author to Current Theories of Psychoanalysis, Robert Langs, ed.

Diana Rubin, LCSW, in private practice in New York City and the Hudson Valley, specializes in

working with creative and perform-ing 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.

The New York Center for Jungian StudiesSeminars, Workshops, and Study ToursFounded in 1992, for over 20 years the New York Center for Jungian Studies has been offering unique seminars, workshops, and study tours in extraordinary settings.

Each year, the New York Center for Jungian Studies presents a spring program in Ireland, a summer seminar series in the Hudson Valley, and a journey abroad with a Jungian focus. Some of our more recent travels have taken us to Argentina, Cuba, Israel, Spain, and Portugal — each with accompanying Jungian analysts and local scholars to augment some of the fascinating sites we have visited.

The Center’s programs offer a rare opportunity for participants to meet and exchange ideas with others who come from diverse backgrounds, yet all having 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.

The PracticeThe Center offers Jungian-oriented individual counsel-ing and analytic psychotherapy in New York City and the Hudson Valley by Diana Rubin and Aryeh Maidenbaum, Directors of the Center (some out-of-network insurance accepted). Additionally, Dr. Maidenbaum is available for executive coaching and business consulting.

Fall 2014 Short-term Support & Study Groups in NYCLunch-time Support Group for Performers and Creative Artists with Diana Rubin Thursdays, October 2—November 20, 201412:00 –1:15 p.m. 8 sessions: $400

Judaism through a Jungian Lens: An Evening Study Groupwith Aryeh Maidenbaum Tuesdays, October 7, 14, 21, 28, 20146:00—7:30 p.m. Program fee: $395

For more information and/or to register, call our office at 845-256-0191

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Participation: Open to the general public and mental-health professionals; no pre-requisites required. You may choose one, two, or all three programs. A suggested reading list will be mailed upon registra-tion. 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$975 per seminar week up to May 16, 2014 • Register early and save: $75 registration fee

(additional) waived for enrollment by May 16, 2014 — or for those registering for both weeks!

• After May 16: $1025 per seminar week (or register for both seminar weeks for $975/week)

• After June 7: $1,050 per seminar week (or register for both seminar weeks for $1025/week)

Accommodations & Meals for Seminar Weeks The fee for accommodations and meals per seminar week is $595* 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 $375. For those choosing to arrange their own accommodations, there is an additional $225 fee per person per seminar week. This fee 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 25, 7:30 – 9:30 pm and Saturday, July 26, 9:30 am – 5:00 pm. For information on accommodations, contact our office at: 845-256-0191 or e-mail: Jofisher@ NYJungcenter.org

Disclaimer of Responsibility: By registering for any or all of the New York Center for Jungian Studies programs, 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 con-nection 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, vouch-ers, 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 whatsoever to alter the itinerary or arrange-ments, including faculty and/or hotel substitutions, such alterations may be made without penalty.

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 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 June 5, 2014. Participants may still register after this date, subject to availability of space.

Credits and Certificates: All three Jung on the Hudson programs are co-sponsored by the Jung Platform and the New York Center for Jungian Studies. The Jung Platform is approved by the American Psychological Association to offer continuing education credits for psychologists. Each week’s Seminar offers 20 C.E. credits; Weekend with James Hollis: 8 C.E. credits. LCSW and MFT credits also available through the California Board of Behavioral Sciences. Certificates of Attendance and Credit Certificates will be issued at a cost of $10 per certificate. For psychologists requiring C.E. credits, Program Objectives will be provided upon request (please contact our office for this information prior to registration). C.E. credits for the Cuba program have been applied for. If approved, it will carry 18 C.E. credits. The programs do not engage in unfair discrimination based on age, gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, culture, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, disability, socio-economic status, or any basis proscribed by law. The Jung Platform maintains responsibility for each program.

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

Cancellations and Refunds: Deposit refundable, less $175 administrative fee ($75 for the Weekend with James Hollis), if request is received in writing on or before May 16, 2014.

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

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registration & information: 845-256-0191 • nyjungcenter.org • 23

REGISTRATION FORMTo reserve your place, fill out the registration form below, include a deposit of $600 for each semi-nar and/or $150 for the Hollis weekend and return to:

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

Name

Address

City State Zip

Daytime Phone

Evening 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 20–25, 2014: Sense and Nonsense: Yearning for Meaning

YES! I am registering and my $600 deposit is enclosedI prefer a single room (single-room supplement $375)I prefer a double room I will share a room with

July 25–26, 2014: A Weekend with James HollisYES! I am registering and my $150 deposit is enclosed

July 27–August 1: Chaos and CreativityYES! I am registering and my $600 deposit is enclosedI prefer a single room (single-room supplement $375)I prefer a double room I will share a room with

CUBAJanuary 3–10, 2015 Cuba! Myth, Music and Spirit

YES! I am registering and my $600 deposit is enclosedI prefer a single room (single-room supplement $375)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]

PaymentPlease charge $____________________ to my: MasterCard Visa American Express

card holder’s name

card number

exp. date: mo/yr validation code

Signature

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PRESORTED STANDARDU.S. POSTAGE PAIDQUALPRINT

JULY 20–25, 2014Sense and N

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eaningJULY 25–26, 2014W

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Weekend w

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ollisJULY 27–AUGUST 1, 2014C

haos and Creativity

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, MU

SIC & SPIRIT JANUARY 3 – 10, 2015

New

York Center for Jungian Studies

27 North C

hestnut Street N

ew Paltz, N

Y 12561

registration & information

845-256-0191 nyjungcenter.org

JUN

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register early & save!