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The following quotes are only here temporarily for temporary reference. They are derived from C. Michael Smith, Ph.D. and were found at the url
http://crowsnestshamanism.com/blog/creativity-healing/
"Jung saw the libido as more than Freudian sexual energy, but as a creative power that can spawn and engender, and empower the full flowering of a life into its irreplaceably unique wholeness. He mentioned the “creative instinct” as a sui generis, fundamental reality, irreducible to anything else (including sex, but is expressive in sex). Creativity is a dynamis, an engine of the psyche that brings us alive, the quickens psychological life, and that deepens and extends soul (see James Hillman’s concept “soul-making.”). The “archetypal Self,” Jung’s notion of the divine core and center of the person, as well as the psychic totality, conscious and unconscious, is inherently creative in luring forth the individuation of the human person. "Jung saw the libido as more than Freudian sexual energy, but as a creative power that can spawn and engender, and empower the full flowering of a life into its irreplaceably unique wholeness. He mentioned the “creative instinct” as a sui generis, fundamental reality, irreducible to anything else (including sex, but is expressive in sex). Creativity is a dynamis, an engine of the psyche that brings us alive, the quickens psychological life, and that deepens and extends soul (see James Hillman’s concept “soul-making.”). The “archetypal Self,” Jung’s notion of the divine core and center of the person, as well as the psychic totality, conscious and unconscious, is inherently creative in luring forth the individuation of the human person.
The therapist’s job is to respond sensitively and creatively to the client and catalyze the client’s own creativity in resolving the problem. But Zinker says there are many blocks to creativity. He lists many things such as fear of chaos and the unknown, rejection of playfulness, myopia before the resources, resistance to letting go, subjection to customs, fear of freedom, fear of the unknown, and we might add, fear of self-expression. As much as anything it is what is called “unfinished gestalts,” in the background of experience that leads stereotyped living. The unfinished gestaltungen are processes seeking closure, but have not been permitted or given opportunity to close naturally because circustances or the necessary consciousness has not been available. If there are a great many unclosed gestalts, creativity and aliveness and life-energy for living in the now are greatly reduced, a condition analogous to some descriptions of shamanic “soul loss.” The unclosed “gestaltungen” are the analogue of Jung’s pathological complexes. These little devils drain you of energy, and typically traumatic origins, or origins in social conditioning (learned repression and suppression). So again the therapeutic issue becomes how to activate the patient’s creative aliveness, and reduce the limit structures that are blocking it.
Thursday, December 31, 2009
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