Luis recommended a book at one of our International skype meet ups that I have just started reading. It's a short read, on kindle it says 120 pages.
Written by Robert Johnson who is a noted lecturer and Jungian analyst.
From wikipedia
Editorial Reviews
From Library Journal
Johnson, Robert A.. Owning Your Own Shadow: Understanding the Dark Side of the Psyche (p. 26). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.
So far it seems interesting and I am hoping that he talks about strategies for how to go about integrating the shadow later int he book.
Maybe Luis can comment on this?
Written by Robert Johnson who is a noted lecturer and Jungian analyst.
From wikipedia
He studied at the University of Oregon and Stanford University. In 1945, he went to Ojai, California, as a student of Jiddu Krishnamurti, an Indian spiritual teacher. In 1947 he began his own therapy with Fritz Künkel. He later studied at the C. G. Jung Institute in Zürich, Switzerland, where Emma Jung, the wife of C. G. Jung, was his principal analyst. He completed his analytical training with Künkel and Tony Sussman. He established an analytical practice in Los Angeles in the early 1950s with Helen Luke. In the early 1960s he closed his practice and became a member of St. Gregory's Abbey, Three Rivers, in Michigan, a Benedictine monastery of the Episcopal Church.
After four years in the monastery, Johnson returned to California in 1967. He resumed his career as a psychotherapist and lectured at St. Paul’s Cathedral in San Diego, working closely with John A. Sanford, an Episcopal priest, Jungian analyst, and author. In 1974, a collection of his lectures was published as He: Understanding Masculine Psychology. The book became a bestseller after Harper & Row acquired the rights. He was the first of many books giving a Jungian interpretation, in accessible language, of earlier myths and stories and their parallels with psychology and personal development.
Johnson also studied at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondicherry, India.[2] In 2002 he received an honorary doctorate in humanities and a lifetime achievement award from Pacifica Graduate Institute.
Editorial Reviews
From Library Journal
The shadow in Jungian psychology is the unconscious dumping ground for undesirable characteristics of personality. "Owning" the shadow--accepting it as part of one's self--is seen as the first step toward wholeness. Using examples from history, mythology, and religion, Johnson, author of Inner Work ( LJ 7/86) and Transformation ( LJ 8/91), offers a tour of the shadow, showing its origin and features, and demonstrating how and why it bursts into consciousness when least expected. Returning to the subject of his earlier work We ( LJ 2/1/84), the author reveals how experience of romantic love may lead to awareness of both positive and negative aspects of the shadow, and how integrating the shadow into one's personality can be a challenging religious experience. This clearly written, thought-provoking work is recommended for academic and public libraries.
Johnson, Robert A.. Owning Your Own Shadow: Understanding the Dark Side of the Psyche (p. 26). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.
To refuse the dark side of one’s nature is to store up or accumulate the darkness; this is later expressed as a black mood, psychosomatic illness, or unconsciously inspired accidents. We are presently dealing with the accumulation of a whole society that has worshiped its light side and refused the dark, and this residue appears as war, economic chaos, strikes, racial intolerance.
So far it seems interesting and I am hoping that he talks about strategies for how to go about integrating the shadow later int he book.
Maybe Luis can comment on this?
, it's a small book and it cannot be compared with the value of the of the recommended material, but it was really helpful for me.