The Analytical Psychology Club
of San Francisco
(APC-SF)
The APC is an independent Jungian
organization with many informal and personal links to the Institute.
Founded
January 9, 1940 under the inspiration of Jane Wheelwright, Dr.
Joseph Wheelwright, Dr. Lucile Elliott and Dr. Elizabeth Whitney,
APC-SF continues to:
§
Promote the study and
discussion of analytical psychology and related subjects
§
Give opportunity for
fellowship among those who have experienced Jungian analysis.
Membership Qualifications
§
Personal commitment to the
integrating processes of depth psychology as described by C. G. Jung
§
Maturity, desire and capacity
to pursue cooperatively the aims of APC-SF
§
At least 100 hours of Jungian
analysis
§
Signature of recommending
IAAP analyst or good standing membership in other APC’s with
standards similar to APC-SF.
Membership Benefits
§
Key for use of the APC-SF
library
§
Monthly meetings with
interactive presentations by Jungian analysts or member led
discussions of Jungian topics
§
APC-SF Newsletter
Fees
Regular $65
Associate $35
An Associate is a member who:
- Lives at least 150
miles from San Francisco or
- Is a
Member of the International Association of
Analytical Psychology (IAAP)
or
- Is an advanced candidate in the training program
of the C.G. Jung
Institute of San Francisco
For
More Information: Contact Cynthia Miranda
at 707- 568-1302 or
cmir2001@aol.com
The Process of Jungian Analysis:
A Quote from C. G. Jung’s Writings
In his
introduction to Psychology and Alchemy, Jung includes this
characterization of the analysis process in which the patient and
the doctor engage:
. . .
one could say that while the patient is unconsciously and
unswervingly seeking the solution to some ultimately insoluble
problem, the art and technique of the doctor are doing their best to
help him towards it. “Ars totum requirit hominem!” [“The art
requires the whole person.”] exclaims an old alchemist. It is just
this homo totus [whole person] whom we seek. The
labors of the doctor as well as the quest of the patient are
directed towards that hidden and as yet unmanifest “whole” man, who
is at once the greater and the future man. But the right way to
wholeness is made up, unfortunately, of fateful detours and wrong
turnings. It is the longissima via [longest path],
not straight but snakelike, a path that unites the opposites in the
manner of the guiding caduceus, a path whose labyrinthine twists and
turns are not lacking in terrors. It is on this longissima via
that we meet with those experiences which are said to be
“inaccessible.” Their inaccessibility really consists in the fact
that they cost us an enormous amount of effort: they demand the very
thing we most fear, namely the “wholeness” which we talk about
so glibly and which lends itself to endless theorizing, though in
actual life we give it the widest possible berth.
–––
Jung, Carl Gustav, “Part I: Introduction to the Religious and
Psychological Problems of Alchemy,” Psychology and Alchemy.
Collected Works, Vol. 12, Second edition, completely revised,
Princeton University Press, 1968, par. 6, p. 6.
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