Blogs

Jungian Blog: A Cave by the Sea

by Stephen Parker, Ph.D (Article Selection and Commentary) on August 24, 2010

Michelle Frantom is an artist, a surfer, an Australian, a blogger. Although her blog is not specifically about Jungian topics, she is well-versed in Jung and writes thoughtful and passionate posts covering a wide variety of topics.

She also frequently draws her dreams; there is something quite archetypal about her drawings….

Excerpt for July 17, 2010

My dream life is quite active, I have spent a lot of time writing and making images about it during my lifetime. So it is always a relief when I get some confirmation that what I am doing is contributing in some way to my evolution.

I found this article on the DreamCurrents of my Alaskan cyber-friend Steve who is collecting healing dreams in the name of healing research. I have had quite a lot of these dreams, have shared a few and some of the accompanying images with him, one at least will be appearing on his website. I have mainly paraphrased this article on lucid dreaming (it originally appeared in a Yoga website which I have referenced below):

Lucid dreaming has been refined over the centuries by Tibetan Buddhists and Taoists, who use it as a tool for reaching enlightenment because they believe ‘that the “dream body” is better able to feel subtle channels and chakra’. They use lucid dreaming for yoga and meditation and to communicate with spiritual teachers. Their premise is that the “reality” we inhabit is really just a dream – if you can see through the ‘illusion of your dreams, you can more easily see through the illusion of reality, too’. Scientists in the West have begun to study dream yoga and (typically) finding ‘practical applications’ for it (like how to perform better at sport etc) ‘Sleep researchers say the method probably works something like creative visualization does – only more powerfully’.

It was LaBerge (a psychophysiologist) who ‘discovered’ lucid dreaming in the late 1970s, his research at Stanford University showed that it is a common phenomenon and can be learnt. “Yogis never needed any knowledge about neurology to do this,” he says. “But it’s important that we do the scientific research so we can talk to Westerners about it in their own language.”

I am familiar with the experience of being in a dream that was too difficult to resolve and waking up, and also being ‘awake’ in the dream and being able to make conscious choices, changing the course of the dream – which I recognise as lucid dreaming. Lucid dreaming can be used to break through negative emotions but ‘when you escape from a nightmare by waking up, you haven’t dealt with the problem….staying with the nightmare and accepting its challenge allows you to resolve the dream problem’. I have learnt a lot from my dreams.

(Source)

Link to Dream of Androgynous Twins

Jung Blogger: La Bellette Rouge

by Stephen Parker, Ph.D (Article Selection and Commentary) on August 21, 2010

It is always a pleasure to find (or to be found by) blogs with Jungian content.   It is particularly enjoyable to find  blogs written with style: Ms. Bellette writes with panache, irony, humor…

(Excerpt from her latest blog)

August 18, 2010

… I was hoping I would have a dream before the trip. We psychodynamic therapists are big on what dreams happened prior to big life events. I have been waiting all week for such a dream. No dream. I am writing this Tuesday night…so there is still hope for a big dream or a little dream or some kind of dream that might give me the smallest clue about what my psyche thinks about this journey. I think that the reason that I am not dreaming this week is that I am really tired. I am the kind of tired that has you falling asleep during your favorite show. When He-weasel convinces me to get off the couch and go to bed, I am the kind of tired in which I seriously consider not brushing my teeth, washing my face or applying the various creams, potions and jams and jellies that make up my pre-sleep ritual. I have interpreted my extreme fatigue and my inability to wear anything for the last week but the same black Gap tank top, black yoga pants and a black long sleeved tee, that I wear when I get cold because the air conditioner is too high and yet if I turn it down I will be too hot, as a depression. Only I don’t know what I am depressed about. I have nothing to be depressed about. I have asked myself if maybe I do and if I do what it would be—no answers have come.

[This is what Balette writes in "About Me":]

Belette is a writer, psychotherapist and dream coach.

She has been writing the blog “La Belette Rouge” since 2007. La Belette Rouge was named one of the top ten blogs for Francophiles and is rated as one of the top 15 memoir and psychology blogs. Belette has published essays and short-stories. She has worked as an entertainment editor and had her own column.

Her writing is featured in “The Forgotten Patient” and in Jamie Cat-Callan’s upcoming release, “Bonjour, Happiness.”

She is presently working on her memoir, “Thursdays with Igor.”

She lives in Valencia, California with her husband and her dog-aughter, Lily