updated 4mo ago
Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement
my marriage?” (Hillman, 1992, p. 219).
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
weeps, cringes, shakes. It’s wrong, simply wrong, what’s going
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
answer. The answers will come, if they come, when they come, to you, to others, but don’t fill in the emptiness of the protest with positive suggestions before their time. First, protest! I don’t know what should be done about most of the major political dilemmas, but my gut (my soul, my heart, my skin, my eyes)
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
Kenosis puts the emptiness in a new light. It values the emptiness. It says ‘empty protest’ is a via negativa, a non-positivist way of entering the political arena. You take your outrage seriously, but you don’t force yourself to have answers. Trust your nose. You know what stinks. Don’t
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
Woodstock, CT: Spring.
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
eat is not right, where the air I breathe is not right, where the architecture in which I spend my time assaults me, the lighting and the chairs and the smells and the plastic are not right. Where the words I hear on TV and are printed in the newspaper are lies, where the people who are in charge of things are not right because they are hypocritica
... See morefrom Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
cannot repair it in myself in my own relationships alone, because my problem is social dysfunctions . . . . Where the school isn’t right for my kids, where the food
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
an important way that things get passed on from generation to generation” (p. 236).
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
“And instead of imagining that I am dysfunctional, my family is dysfunctional, you
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg
realize . . . [that] society if dysfunctional. The political process is dysfunctional. And we have to work on cures that are beyond my cure. That’s revolution” (Hillman, 1992, pp. 218-219).
from Occupy Psyche: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on a Movement by Jason Sugg