4.8 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 19 May 2022
⏱️ 64 minutes
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From Homer’s Odyssey to the Wizard of Oz our native soil draws us home, whether home is a small Greek island or a simple Kansas farm. The soul has a natural longing to return to the place of its beginning and belonging. Home is a state of safety and changelessness; it is our foundational experience of original completeness, containment and care. As we mourn the loss of the familiar and face the unknown, homesickness generates neural activity similar to physical pain. Its underlying intent is to spur us into detaching from the familiar and investing in the foreign. Homesickness asks that we bear leave-taking and loneliness in service to belonging to a wider world, building new relationships, and the eventual realization that the soul’s true home is a transcendent source of personal being.
Here’s The Dream We Analyzed:
“I am walking up the street toward my apartment at night. Near my building I see a man with a small dog on a leash. The dog is a tiny Yorkshire terrier and the man is very large. He is wearing a long, dark trench coat and has wild black hair. He looks a bit threatening. The dog is on one side of the sidewalk, the man is on the other, and the leash is between them, blocking my path. I try to step out into the street to go around, but as I do, the man swings around and the dog runs around my legs. I get all bound up in the leash and am pressed up against the man. He puts his face right up to mine, like he might try to kiss me, and I see that he is the Devil from the Rider-Waite Tarot deck. He begins to blow some kind of smoke into my mouth. I think he is trying to get inside of me--to possess me or steal my soul. I blow the smoke back into his mouth and it forms a kind of ring that circles between his mouth and mine. I know that I won't have the strength to keep him out for very long.”
REFERENCES:
John Hill. At Home in the World: Signs and Symmetries of Belonging. https://www.amazon.com/dp/1685030211/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_VBGPAMVEX5X2DA2XB3HQ
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0:00.0 | We want to let our listeners know that some of our colleagues have organized a fundraiser for Ukrainian Jungian analysts and trainees. |
0:10.0 | And on Saturday, the 21st of May, on Zoom, there will be an event and all of the proceeds will go to our Ukrainian colleagues. |
0:21.8 | There's going to be a social dreaming matrix. |
0:25.6 | There will be a presentation by Anne Yulinoff called Ukraine and Jung's Red and Black Books, |
0:32.3 | making the unsayable experiential. |
0:35.4 | And there will be an auction, an opportunity to bid for an hour on Zoom |
0:40.1 | to meet personally with one of a number of prominent Jungians for perhaps some supervision, |
0:46.0 | mentoring our conversation. And I, Lisa Martiano, will be one of those unions for whom you can bid for time. |
0:56.5 | So the website is for Ukrainian unions.com. |
1:02.7 | That's F-O-R-U-K-R-A-I-N-I-N-I-N-G-I-N-S.com for Ukrainian-Y-Y-Yans. Thank you so much. |
1:21.1 | Welcome to this Jungian life. Three good friends and Jungian analysts, Lisa Marciano, Deborah Stewart, and Joseph Lee invite you to join them for an intimate and honest conversation that brings a psychological perspective to important issues of the day. |
1:38.9 | I'm Lisa Marchiano, and I'm a Jungian analyst in Philadelphia. |
1:42.9 | I'm Joseph Lee, and I'm a Jungian analyst in Virginia Beach, Virginia. |
1:47.9 | I'm Deborah Stewart, a Jungian analyst, on Cape Cod. |
1:57.1 | The Roman poet Avid writes, |
2:01.0 | Our native soil draws all of us by I Know Not What sweetness, |
2:07.0 | and never allows us to forget. |
2:11.0 | There is something about home and the way that we carry the images of home, |
2:17.2 | such that when we are pulled away, |
2:22.5 | some of us can experience a kind of sickness in the longing for what is now missing. |
2:30.5 | In 1887, newspapers reported cases like that of the Irish Reverend McHale, who allegedly |
2:40.0 | died of homesickness in Brooklyn. Somewhere around the mid-18th century, which was prompted |
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