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This book describes how dreamwork can help alleviate depression, in
both long-term and time-limited psychotherapy, and in
self-treatment. The author shows how dreams shed light on issues
contributing to depression-including drug and alcohol abuse,
divorce, death and bereavement, conflicts about sex, health and
body image, parenting, workplace stress and burnout, and ancestral,
intergenerational trauma. Greg Bogart presents a synthesis of
Jungian and existential psychotherapy, detailing how attention to
archetypal symbolism brings into immediate focus new responses to
pressing life challenges. He shows that allowing oneself to be
affected by dream images and narratives promotes emotional,
relational, and spiritual rejuvenation.
There have been many previous books on the physiology of dreaming,
the history of dream interpretation, and the meaning of specific
dream symbols. But there have been relatively few books exploring
the moment-by-moment process of interpreting dreams. This book
guides you through this interpretive process, and illustrates how
dreamwork promotes emotional, relational, and spiritual
transformation. It explores how working with dreams enhances our
emotional life, deepens our capacity for relationship, and helps us
gracefully navigate change and transitions. The author shows that
dreamwork is a natural antidepressant, is effective in transforming
anger, bereavement, couples conflicts and impasses, and aids the
process of individuation. The book explores archetypal themes and
complexes, synchronistic experiences and spiritual awakening in
dreams, and representations of the body in dreams. The final
chapter, "Taming Wild Horses", explores animal dream symbolism and
its importance for enhancing our human sexuality. The book also
describes the Dream Mandala, a method of self-transformation
through the union of opposites - the charged polarities of the
personality.
There have been many previous books on the physiology of dreaming,
the history of dream interpretation, and the meaning of specific
dream symbols. But there have been relatively few books exploring
the moment-by-moment process of interpreting dreams. This book
guides you through this interpretive process, and illustrates how
dreamwork promotes emotional, relational, and spiritual
transformation. It explores how working with dreams enhances our
emotional life, deepens our capacity for relationship, and helps us
gracefully navigate change and transitions. The author shows that
dreamwork is a natural antidepressant, is effective in transforming
anger, bereavement, couples conflicts and impasses, and aids the
process of individuation. The book explores archetypal themes and
complexes, synchronistic experiences and spiritual awakening in
dreams, and representations of the body in dreams. The final
chapter, "Taming Wild Horses", explores animal dream symbolism and
its importance for enhancing our human sexuality. The book also
describes the Dream Mandala, a method of self-transformation
through the union of opposites - the charged polarities of the
personality.
This work clearly and succinctly explains the interpretation of the
language and techniques of astrology, the deep psychological,
transpersonal and spiritual meaning of planetary symbolism, and its
power to heal and transform.
This book describes how dreamwork can help alleviate depression, in
both long-term and time-limited psychotherapy, and in
self-treatment. The author shows how dreams shed light on issues
contributing to depression-including drug and alcohol abuse,
divorce, death and bereavement, conflicts about sex, health and
body image, parenting, workplace stress and burnout, and ancestral,
intergenerational trauma. Greg Bogart presents a synthesis of
Jungian and existential psychotherapy, detailing how attention to
archetypal symbolism brings into immediate focus new responses to
pressing life challenges. He shows that allowing oneself to be
affected by dream images and narratives promotes emotional,
relational, and spiritual rejuvenation.
Explains how to successfully navigate each of the nine stages of
spiritual apprenticeship, from choosing a teacher to teaching
others
- Explores how to approach a teacher for initiation, including
gauging your inner response for trust and resonance with the
teacher
- Reveals how most students eventually need to separate from their
teacher and how to negotiate the emotional conflicts that can arise
at this stage
- Shares his encounters with several provocative spiritual mentors
and details spiritual lessons learned through confronting doubts
and fears
In the search for inner awakening and self-realization, a spiritual
mentor can be key to advancement. Yet the process of finding an
authentic spiritual teacher who resonates with you can be daunting,
especially for anyone who has had a negative experience with a
guide. Exploring the emotional nuances of mentoring relationships,
Greg Bogart details the nine stages of spiritual apprenticeship,
from choosing a teacher to teaching others, and explains how to
successfully navigate each.
The author explores how to gauge your inner response for trust and
resonance with a teacher and then how to approach them for
initiation. He explains how the teacher-student relationship
affects the student's state of consciousness over time and how most
students eventually need to become independent from their teacher.
Describing emotional conflicts that can arise at this stage, he
shows how wise teachers accept our need to separate and graduate
while immature teachers try to thwart and control us.
Openly sharing his own interior journey, the author illustrates the
lasting resonance of his encounters with several provocative
spiritual mentors, including Swami Muktananda and Dane Rudhyar. He
shares stories showing how unpredictable "crazy wisdom" teachers
cause us to confront doubts and sharpen our commitments and how
"fierce" teachers expose our fears and lack of confidence, rousing
dormant energies and expanded states. Examining practices in Hindu
and Tibetan Buddhist Yoga, Sufism, and Jewish and Christian
mysticism, he also explores the deeper mystical aspects of the
guru-student relationship.
The author shows how, ultimately, initiation leads the spiritual
seeker to find the teacher within and how this can naturally lead
to teaching others. Describing nine stages of the spiritual
seeker's journey, the author affirms that a direct path to
self-liberation is still attainable through initiation in the
company of sages.
Astrology and Meditation explores the idea that the most powerful
astrological technique is a quiet, meditative mind. The book
presents astrology as a form of active meditation where we
contemplate whatever is arising with expectancy, receptivity, and
conscious use of will to shape what unfolds. The author presents
meditations on the spiritual lessons of the planets and zodiacal
signs, and, with the plentiful use of case histories, describes the
technique of symbol amplification, which enables us to unfold the
deepest meanings of chart symbols. The book ends with a discussion
of astrology as a spiritual practice, a training for perfection
that can instill qualities such as discernment, humor, steadiness
in times of suffering, and an expanded capacity to love.
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