Jung believed that the psyche contained all that is required for wholeness, but the ego is trapped in a rational reductive perspective which cuts us off from the healing power of the imagination. Imagination creates an internal landscape connecting us to our desires, brings together the past, present and future and provides us with the means to build a cohesive story of our lives, to discern the meaning of our lives. Imagination is therefore the agency that enables us to create our world and to keep creating new and endless possibilities. Imagination connects us with movement and change, compels us towards the new.
In the words of Jung:
“The great joy of play, fantasy and the imagination is that for a time we are utterly spontaneous, free to imagine anything. In such a pure state of pure being, no thought is ‘unthinkable.’ ( Jung on Active Imagination p.5)
Throughout his work, Jung came to recognise that the imaginal world, the world of our imagination, fantasies and dreams was an authentic reality, in other words just as real as the world in which we live and that this imaginal world contained a “witches cauldron” of inner knowledge and wisdom.
“Every good idea and all creative work are the offspring of the imagination, and have their source in … fantasy. Not the artist alone, but every creative individual whatsoever owes all that is greatest in his life to fantasy. The dynamic principle of fantasy is play, a characteristic also of the child, and as such it appears inconsistent with the principle of serious work. But without this playing with fantasy no creative work has every yet come to birth. The debt we owe to the play of imagination is incalculable.” (CW 6, par 93)
Here Jung is telling us that whether we are children or adults and whether we are conscious of it or not, imaginative activity goes on within us all the time and that this imaginative activity is part of our inborn psyche, expressed in many ways, through – play, dreams, fantasy, creativity and active imagination.
This course offers a phenomenological and experiential approach, which is a profound and effective way to not only grasp but integrate Jungian theory.
10 Modules:
O1: THE POWER OF IMAGINATION & FANTASY
Exploring the Imaginal
02: JUNGS THEORY OF ACTIVE IMAGINATION
The theory and overview
03: CULTIVATING THE INNER ATTITUDE
Guidelines and approach
04: ACCESSING THE UNCONSCIOUS
Learning how to Access the Imaginal
05: ENTERING THE IMAGE
How to work with what is presented
06: ASSOCIATIONS
Extracting Associations and Amplifications
07: AMPLIFICATION PART 1
Analyze the Active Imagination
08: AMPLIFICATION PART 2
Assimilation and Education
09: ANALYSIS
Adaptation and Assessment
10: ACTUALISATION
Insight brought into Reality

