Dr. Shackelford presents "Mother Consciousness and The Great Mother Archetypes"
Oct
28
7:00 PM19:00

Dr. Shackelford presents "Mother Consciousness and The Great Mother Archetypes"

Jung Society of Austin

“Mother Consciousness and The Great Mother Archetypes”

A presentation by Dr. Shackelford


When: Friday, October 28, 2022
Where: Virtual Lecture on Zoom
Time: 7:00pm


Click here for event tickets


If you have any questions:
Email: drvshack@gmail.com
Phone: 210.602.3002


Objectives of Lecture:

The object of this lecture is to enlighten and deepen the understanding of the archetype of the Mother and the importance of “Mother consciousness” on Modern humans today. It turns out that that there is not just one Mother!


We have important versions evolving out of “Mother Consciousness.” We will explore these three:

1. The Good Mother, Nurturing Mother

2. The Death Mother, Teeth Mother, Stone Mother

3. The Ecstatic Mother, Dancing Mother, Abundant Mother


This talk follows Dr. Shackelford’s continuing study of the importance of bringing to contemporary 21st century consciousness, the repressed Dark Feminine energies found in the fairy tales and myths abundant in the minds of modern men and women. However, the darker nature of Dark Feminine, does not stand alone. There are more mother archetypes operating in our psyche and in the collective psyche of Modern Humans. We must look at all three of these Mother Archetypes and continue the conversation on how “Great Mother Consciousness” represented in the “Good Mother”, “Death Mother” and “Ecstatic Mother” impacts our Modern Psyche and thus our World view and relationship with each other.


Instructor Biography:

Dr. Shackelford holds a PhD in Depth Psychotherapy from Pacifica Graduate Institute in Carpinteria, California, specializing in Jungian and Analytical Psychology with a focus on clinical case presentation and advanced supervision for licensed Psychotherapists.

She also is a Distinguished Graduate from St. Mary’s University, in Community Counseling and holds a MFA from the University of Texas at Austin.


Theoretical Philosophy and Population Served:

Dr. Shackelford works to engage the unconscious forces of myth and archetype that guides our lives as understood from the theoretical philosophy derived from the teachings of Carl Jung, James Hillman, Esther Harding, Marie-Louise von Franz, and others.

This perspective, guides her work to provide counseling services for adults and adolescents experiencing unhealthy relationships at home, work or play. In addition couple and partner therapy includes, sexuality problems, gender concerns, anger symptoms, depression, addiction, self-esteem, Trauma recovery, PTSD, anxiety and stress, all symptoms of living an un-balanced, unaware life.


Recommended Reading:

The inspiration for this work comes from a little book of poems by the poet Robert Bly

Robert Bly, (1985), “Sleepers Joining Hands”, Harper & Row Publishers, N.Y., N.Y.

View Event →
Dream Time Group (On Zoom)
Apr
3
to Apr 24

Dream Time Group (On Zoom)

Welcome Dreamers!

When: April 3rd - April 24th (Sundays)
Time: 6:30 - 8:00pm
Where: Zoom
Price: $30 each session or $100 for 4 sessions
Payment: Please pay through my website - go to the ‘payments’ link and you’ll see Dream Time Group 1 session and Dream Time Group 4 sessions.

Please text Dr. Shackelford on Sunday at (210) 602-3002 to confirm your participation for each dream time group session. If you have any questions, leave a voicemail and she will call you back.

I will send a Zoom link to your email shortly before the Session begins. Please have ready at your table:

1.  Computer 
2.  Water or tea or something other--your choice
3.  Your dream ( we will work on only one dream for this 4 week period)
4.  Dream journal and dream typed out that you want to work with.
5.  A drawing pad and color markers, crayons and or oil crayons etc.

Working With Your Dreams as They Work You
What follows is a step-by-step process for working with your dreams and learning how to dialogue with them and express their images:

1.  Keep a dream journal or large yellow pad with a big black magic marker by your bed.

2.  Upon first beginning to open your eyes, scribble down any images or story line that comes to you. Don’t worry about accuracy. There is no right way for your writing and scribble to look on the pad.

3.  After collecting your dream in this way, thank your dream and then immediately using the images and word description you jotted down, rewrite your dream in the present tense. You can use a computer or rewrite in your dream journal. 

4.  Write the dream story down in the present tense as in ”I am walking etc.” In this way we are honoring the dream process and becoming more aware of the fact that the dream is always present, always being dreamed. It is only the limitations of our consciousness perspective that confines the dream to ‘a last night when I was sleeping’ event. Now your dream is alive in your present waking life.

5.  Sit with the dream. Check in with yourself. Ask yourself these questions. What makes this dream remarkable, scary or mundane? What images or story in the dream is curious, inspires you or makes you frightened. What about this dream calls to you, evokes strong feelings etc. Describe the dreams ambiance (dark, light, moving, familiar, etc.).

6.  Lets look at the landscape of the dream. Is your dream a big picture landscape with deserts, oceans or a neighbor hood, city?

7.  In your imaginational psyche where would this particular dream hale from – from a kingdom, or continent, is it a high or low place, hidden, mysterious, a cave or glade, garden, wilderness, a dangerous place or warm and welcoming. Describe the wholeness of the dream.

8.  Lets use active imagination to go to a lucid “twilight dreaming” exercise:

·     Repeat the dream story to yourself over and over.
·     Put yourself in the dream.
·     Close your eyes.
·     Feel the dream images wash over you and carry you alone in the images of the dream.
·     Allow yourself to sense, feel, see, smell and hear anything new in the dream.
·     Stay with what ever comes forward in your “twilight lucid dream state” 
·     You can write down what ever you experience after this lucid state.

9.  Pick an image from this twilight exercise and draw it. Anything will do even scribbles - try to capture the mood evoked in your twilight lucid state.

10.  Ask the question. 
·     Is there any figure in the dream in need of special attention, that is strange, scary, revolting.
·     How might this aspect of life, this figure be alienated, ignored, or represent some part of myself I have failed to honor.
·     What have I ignored? If we look at our dreams very carefully, we can more often than not find some disowned part of our psyche begging to be loved and seen.
·     Place yourself within this image and ask it, “ What do you have to say to me?” Try to only speak in the voice of the image rather than your own voice.  

11. Continue active imagination with this disowned image from your dream. Create a dialogue and ask this dream figure to forgive you if needed, using their language, for instance: a lost child cry, scared mouse hiding, abandoned pet seeking affection, a caged bird may want freedom etc. Work to make your emotionally charge image the message, this is the language of the psyche.

12. Be immersed in the dream images that resonate with you. What else might your dream image feel?  Try this exercise with whatever object, animal figure image, animate or inanimate, you feel most drawn to as you survey the landscape of your dream. You can draw, write songs, poetry, paint and dance around and sing, what ever evokes truth to you and feels right.

13.  Now choose to honor this dream image when you go home. Create a dream altar. Sit with this, your dream images and active imagination work and dialogue with your dreams. Ask what they want. What figure, image or emotion is asking for, a prayer, a ritual, write draw, sing, dance, and honor your dream gift. Psyche will reward your attention to your dreams.

“Working with Your Dream Images as They Work you, “ are the insights, notes and writings of DR. Tiffany Baugher given in a workshop at the Houston Jung Center in 2011. She was my colleague, and friend and I thank her for her brilliant teachings and work in how to keep your dream work images present and alive bringing rich consciousness into waking lives. Thank you Tiffany for sharing your work so we can continue to contribute to the life of the dream.

View Event →
Dream Time Group (On Zoom)
Feb
6
to Feb 27

Dream Time Group (On Zoom)

Welcome Dreamers!

When: Feb 6th - Feb 27th (Sundays)
Time: 6:30 - 8:00pm
Where: Zoom
Price: $30 each session or $100 for 4 sessions
Payment: Please pay through my website - go to the ‘payments’ link and you’ll see Dream Time Group 1 session and Dream Time Group 4 sessions.

Please text Dr. Shackelford on Sunday at (210) 602-3002 to confirm your participation for each dream time group session. If you have any questions, leave a voicemail and she will call you back.

I will send a Zoom link to your email shortly before the Session begins. Please have ready at your table:

1.  Computer 
2.  Water or tea or something other--your choice
3.  Your dream ( we will work on only one dream for this 4 week period)
4.  Dream journal and dream typed out that you want to work with.
5.  A drawing pad and color markers, crayons and or oil crayons etc.

Working With Your Dreams as They Work You
What follows is a step-by-step process for working with your dreams and learning how to dialogue with them and express their images:

1.  Keep a dream journal or large yellow pad with a big black magic marker by your bed.

2.  Upon first beginning to open your eyes, scribble down any images or story line that comes to you. Don’t worry about accuracy. There is no right way for your writing and scribble to look on the pad.

3.  After collecting your dream in this way, thank your dreamand then immediately using the images and word description you jotted down rewrite your dream in the present tense.You can use a computer or rewrite in your dream journal. 

4.  Write the dream story down in the present tense as in ”I am walking etc.” In this way we are honoring the dream process and becoming more aware of the fact that the dream is always present always being dreamed. It is only the limitations of our consciousness perspective that confines the dream to a last night when I was sleeping event. Now your dream is alive in your present waking life.

5.  Sit with the dream. Check in with your self. Ask your self these questions. What makes this dream remarkable, scary or mundane? What images or story in the dream is curious inspires you or makes you frightened. What about this dream calls to you, evokes strong feelings etc. Describe the dreams ambiance, (dark, light, moving, familiar, etc.).

6.  Lets look at the landscape of the dream. Is your dream a big picture landscape with deserts, oceans or a neighbor hood, city?

7.  In your imaginational psyche where would this particular dream hale from---from a kingdom, or content, is it a high or low place, hidden, mysterious, a cave or glade, garden, wilderness, a dangerous place or warm and welcoming. Describe the wholeness of the dream.

8.  Lets use active imagination to go to a lucid “twilight dreaming” exercise:

·     Repeat the dream story to yourself over and over.
·     Put yourself in the dream.
·     Close your eyes.
·     Feel the dream images wash over you and carry you alone in the images of the dream.
·     Allow yourself to sense, feel, see, smell and hear anything new in the dream.
·     Stay with what ever comes forward in your “twilight lucid dream state” 
·     You can write down what ever you experience after this lucid state.

9.  Pick an image from this twilight exercise and draw it. Anything will do even scribbles --- try to capture the mood evoked in your twilight lucid state.

10.  Ask the question
·     Is there any figure in the dream in need of special attention, is strange, scary, revolting.
·     How might this aspect of life, this figure be alienated, ignored, or represent some part of myself I have failed to honor.
·     What have I ignored? If we look at our dreams very carefully, we can more often than not find some disowned part of our psyche begging to be loved and seen.
·     Place yourself within this image and ask it, “ What do you have to say to me?” Try to only speak in the voice of the image rather than your own voice.  

11. Continue active imagination with this disowned image from your dream. Create a dialogue and ask this dream figure to forgive you if needed, using their language, for instance: a lost child cry, scared mouse hiding, abandoned pet seeking affection, can caged bird may want freedom etc. Work to make your emotionally charge image the message, this is the language of the psyche.

12. Be immersed in the dream images that resonate with you. What else might your dream image feel?  Try this exercise with whatever object, animal figure image, animate or inanimate, you feel most drawn to as you survey the landscape of you dream. You can draw, write songs, poetry, paint and dance around and sing, what ever evokes truth to you and feels right.

13.  Now choose to honor this dream image when you go home. Create a dream altar. Sit with this your dream images and active imagination work and dialogue with your dreams. Ask what they want. What figure, image or emotion is asking for, a prayer, a ritual, write draw, sing, dance, and honor your dream gift. Psyche will reward you attention to your dreams.

14. These notes: 
“Working with Your Dream Images as They Work you, “ are the insights, notes and writings of DR. Tiffany Baugher given in a workshop at the Houston Jung Center in 2011. She was my colleague, and friend and I thank her for her brilliant teachings and work in how to keep your dream work images present and alive bringing rich consciousness into waking lives. Thank you Tiffany for sharing your work so we can continue to contribute to the life of the dream.

View Event →
Dream Time Group (On Zoom)
Sep
19
to Oct 10

Dream Time Group (On Zoom)

Welcome Dreamers!

When: starting Sept 19th (Harvest Full Moon)
Time: 6:00 - 7:30pm
Where: Zoom (Dr. V will email a Zoom link to you just before the meeting starts)
Who: Limit 5 participants
Price: $30 each session or $100 for all 4 sessions
Payment: Please prepay through my website. Just go to the ‘RESOURCES’ link on the top right and then ‘PATIENT INFO’. Look for ‘Dream Time Group’. If paying for all 4 sessions use ‘Other Payments‘ and enter $100.

Please call Dr. Shackelford at (210) 602-3002 with any questions. Leave a voicemail and she will call you back.

I will send a Zoom link to your email before the Session. Please have ready at your table:

1.  Computer 
2.  Water or tea or something other--your choice
3.  Your dream ( we will work on only one dream for this 4 week period)
4.  Dream journal and dream typed out that you want to work with.
5.  A drawing pad and color markers, crayons and or oil crayons etc.

Working With Your Dreams as They Work You
What follows is a step-by-step process for working with your dreams and learning how to dialogue with them and express their images:

1.  Keep a dream journal or large yellow pad with a big black magic marker by your bed.

2.  Upon first beginning to open your eyes, scribble down any images or story line that comes to you. Don’t worry about accuracy. There is no right way for your writing and scribble to look on the pad.

3.  After collecting your dream in this way, thank your dreamand then immediately using the images and word description you jotted down rewrite your dream in the present tense.You can use a computer or rewrite in your dream journal. 

4.  Write the dream story down in the present tense as in ”I am walking etc.” In this way we are honoring the dream process and becoming more aware of the fact that the dream is always present always being dreamed. It is only the limitations of our consciousness perspective that confines the dream to a last night when I was sleeping event. Now your dream is alive in your present waking life.

5.  Sit with the dream. Check in with your self. Ask your self these questions. What makes this dream remarkable, scary or mundane? What images or story in the dream is curious inspires you or makes you frightened. What about this dream calls to you, evokes strong feelings etc. Describe the dreams ambiance, (dark, light, moving, familiar, etc.).

6.  Lets look at the landscape of the dream. Is your dream a big picture landscape with deserts, oceans or a neighbor hood, city?

7.  In your imaginational psyche where would this particular dream hale from---from a kingdom, or content, is it a high or low place, hidden, mysterious, a cave or glade, garden, wilderness, a dangerous place or warm and welcoming. Describe the wholeness of the dream.

8.  Lets use active imagination to go to a lucid “twilight dreaming” exercise:

·     Repeat the dream story to yourself over and over.
·     Put yourself in the dream.
·     Close your eyes.
·     Feel the dream images wash over you and carry you alone in the images of the dream.
·     Allow yourself to sense, feel, see, smell and hear anything new in the dream.
·     Stay with what ever comes forward in your “twilight lucid dream state” 
·     You can write down what ever you experience after this lucid state.

9.  Pick an image from this twilight exercise and draw it. Anything will do even scribbles --- try to capture the mood evoked in your twilight lucid state.

10.  Ask the question
·     Is there any figure in the dream in need of special attention, is strange, scary, revolting.
·     How might this aspect of life, this figure be alienated, ignored, or represent some part of myself I have failed to honor.
·     What have I ignored? If we look at our dreams very carefully, we can more often than not find some disowned part of our psyche begging to be loved and seen.
·     Place yourself within this image and ask it, “ What do you have to say to me?” Try to only speak in the voice of the image rather than your own voice.  

11. Continue active imagination with this disowned image from your dream. Create a dialogue and ask this dream figure to forgive you if needed, using their language, for instance: a lost child cry, scared mouse hiding, abandoned pet seeking affection, can caged bird may want freedom etc. Work to make your emotionally charge image the message, this is the language of the psyche.

12. Be immersed in the dream images that resonate with you. What else might your dream image feel?  Try this exercise with whatever object, animal figure image, animate or inanimate, you feel most drawn to as you survey the landscape of you dream. You can draw, write songs, poetry, paint and dance around and sing, what ever evokes truth to you and feels right.

13.  Now choose to honor this dream image when you go home. Create a dream altar. Sit with this your dream images and active imagination work and dialogue with your dreams. Ask what they want. What figure, image or emotion is asking for, a prayer, a ritual, write draw, sing, dance, and honor your dream gift. Psyche will reward you attention to your dreams.

14. These notes: 
“Working with Your Dream Images as They Work you, “ are the insights, notes and writings of DR. Tiffany Baugher given in a workshop at the Houston Jung Center in 2011. She was my colleague, and friend and I thank her for her brilliant teachings and work in how to keep your dream work images present and alive bringing rich consciousness into waking lives. Thank you Tiffany for sharing your work so we can continue to contribute to the life of the dream.

View Event →
Dream Time Group (On Zoom)
Jun
6
to Jun 27

Dream Time Group (On Zoom)

Welcome Dreamers!

When: June 6th (Sundays through June 27th)
Time: 6:00 - 7:30pm
Where: Zoom
Who: Limit 5 participants
Price: $25 each session
Payment: Please pay through my website. Just go to the ‘RESOURCES’ link on the top right and then ‘PATIENT INFO’. Look for ‘Dream Time Group’.

Please call Dr. Shackelford at (210) 602-3002 with any questions. Leave a voicemail and she will call you back.

I will send a Zoom link to your email before the Session. Please have ready at your table:

1.  Computer 
2.  Water or tea or something other--your choice
3.  Your dream ( we will work on only one dream for this 4 week period)
4.  Dream journal and dream typed out that you want to work with.
5.  A drawing pad and color markers, crayons and or oil crayons etc.

Working With Your Dreams as They Work You
What follows is a step-by-step process for working with your dreams and learning how to dialogue with them and express their images:

1.  Keep a dream journal or large yellow pad with a big black magic marker by your bed.

2.  Upon first beginning to open your eyes, scribble down any images or story line that comes to you. Don’t worry about accuracy. There is no right way for your writing and scribble to look on the pad.

3.  After collecting your dream in this way, thank your dreamand then immediately using the images and word description you jotted down rewrite your dream in the present tense.You can use a computer or rewrite in your dream journal. 

4.  Write the dream story down in the present tense as in ”I am walking etc.” In this way we are honoring the dream process and becoming more aware of the fact that the dream is always present always being dreamed. It is only the limitations of our consciousness perspective that confines the dream to a last night when I was sleeping event. Now your dream is alive in your present waking life.

5.  Sit with the dream. Check in with your self. Ask your self these questions. What makes this dream remarkable, scary or mundane? What images or story in the dream is curious inspires you or makes you frightened. What about this dream calls to you, evokes strong feelings etc. Describe the dreams ambiance, (dark, light, moving, familiar, etc.).

6.  Lets look at the landscape of the dream. Is your dream a big picture landscape with deserts, oceans or a neighbor hood, city?

7.  In your imaginational psyche where would this particular dream hale from---from a kingdom, or content, is it a high or low place, hidden, mysterious, a cave or glade, garden, wilderness, a dangerous place or warm and welcoming. Describe the wholeness of the dream.

8.  Lets use active imagination to go to a lucid “twilight dreaming” exercise:

·     Repeat the dream story to yourself over and over.
·     Put yourself in the dream.
·     Close your eyes.
·     Feel the dream images wash over you and carry you alone in the images of the dream.
·     Allow yourself to sense, feel, see, smell and hear anything new in the dream.
·     Stay with what ever comes forward in your “twilight lucid dream state” 
·     You can write down what ever you experience after this lucid state.

9.  Pick an image from this twilight exercise and draw it. Anything will do even scribbles --- try to capture the mood evoked in your twilight lucid state.

10.  Ask the question
·     Is there any figure in the dream in need of special attention, is strange, scary, revolting.
·     How might this aspect of life, this figure be alienated, ignored, or represent some part of myself I have failed to honor.
·     What have I ignored? If we look at our dreams very carefully, we can more often than not find some disowned part of our psyche begging to be loved and seen.
·     Place yourself within this image and ask it, “ What do you have to say to me?” Try to only speak in the voice of the image rather than your own voice.  

11. Continue active imagination with this disowned image from your dream. Create a dialogue and ask this dream figure to forgive you if needed, using their language, for instance: a lost child cry, scared mouse hiding, abandoned pet seeking affection, can caged bird may want freedom etc. Work to make your emotionally charge image the message, this is the language of the psyche.

12. Be immersed in the dream images that resonate with you. What else might your dream image feel?  Try this exercise with whatever object, animal figure image, animate or inanimate, you feel most drawn to as you survey the landscape of you dream. You can draw, write songs, poetry, paint and dance around and sing, what ever evokes truth to you and feels right.

13.  Now choose to honor this dream image when you go home. Create a dream altar. Sit with this your dream images and active imagination work and dialogue with your dreams. Ask what they want. What figure, image or emotion is asking for, a prayer, a ritual, write draw, sing, dance, and honor your dream gift. Psyche will reward you attention to your dreams.

14. These notes: 
“Working with Your Dream Images as They Work you, “ are the insights, notes and writings of DR. Tiffany Baugher given in a workshop at the Houston Jung Center in 2011. She was my colleague, and friend and I thank her for her brilliant teachings and work in how to keep your dream work images present and alive bringing rich consciousness into waking lives. Thank you Tiffany for sharing your work so we can continue to contribute to the life of the dream.

View Event →
Dream Time Group (on Zoom)
Apr
4
6:00 PM18:00

Dream Time Group (on Zoom)

Welcome Dreamers!

When: April 4th (Sundays through April 18)
Time: 6:00 - 7:30pm
Where: Zoom
Who: Limit 5 participants
Price: $25 each session
Payment: Please pay through my website. Just go to the ‘RESOURCES’ link on the top right and then ‘PATIENT INFO’. Look for ‘Dream Time Group’.

Please call Dr. Shackelford at (210) 602-3002 with any questions. Leave a voicemail and she will call you back.

 

I will send a Zoom link to your email before the Session. Please have ready at your table:

1.  Computer 
2.  Water or tea or something other--your choice
3.  Your dream ( we will work on only one dream for this 4 week period)
4.  Dream journal and dream typed out that you want to work with.
5.  A drawing pad and color markers, crayons and or oil crayons etc.

Working With Your Dreams as They Work You
What follows is a step-by-step process for working with your dreams and learning how to dialogue with them and express their images:

1.  Keep a dream journal or large yellow pad with a big black magic marker by your bed.

2.  Upon first beginning to open your eyes, scribble down any images or story line that comes to you. Don’t worry about accuracy. There is no right way for your writing and scribble to look on the pad.

3.  After collecting your dream in this way, thank your dreamand then immediately using the images and word description you jotted down rewrite your dream in the present tense.You can use a computer or rewrite in your dream journal. 

4.  Write the dream story down in the present tense as in ”I am walking etc.” In this way we are honoring the dream process and becoming more aware of the fact that the dream is always present always being dreamed. It is only the limitations of our consciousness perspective that confines the dream to a last night when I was sleeping event. Now your dream is alive in your present waking life.

5.  Sit with the dream. Check in with your self. Ask your self these questions. What makes this dream remarkable, scary or mundane? What images or story in the dream is curious inspires you or makes you frightened. What about this dream calls to you, evokes strong feelings etc. Describe the dreams ambiance, (dark, light, moving, familiar, etc.).

6.  Lets look at the landscape of the dream. Is your dream a big picture landscape with deserts, oceans or a neighbor hood, city?

7.  In your imaginational psyche where would this particular dream hale from---from a kingdom, or content, is it a high or low place, hidden, mysterious, a cave or glade, garden, wilderness, a dangerous place or warm and welcoming. Describe the wholeness of the dream.

8.  Lets use active imagination to go to a lucid “twilight dreaming” exercise:

·     Repeat the dream story to yourself over and over.
·     Put yourself in the dream.
·     Close your eyes.
·     Feel the dream images wash over you and carry you alone in the images of the dream.
·     Allow yourself to sense, feel, see, smell and hear anything new in the dream.
·     Stay with what ever comes forward in your “twilight lucid dream state” 
·     You can write down what ever you experience after this lucid state.

9.  Pick an image from this twilight exercise and draw it. Anything will do even scribbles --- try to capture the mood evoked in your twilight lucid state.

10.  Ask the question
·     Is there any figure in the dream in need of special attention, is strange, scary, revolting.
·     How might this aspect of life, this figure be alienated, ignored, or represent some part of myself I have failed to honor.
·     What have I ignored? If we look at our dreams very carefully, we can more often than not find some disowned part of our psyche begging to be loved and seen.
·     Place yourself within this image and ask it, “ What do you have to say to me?” Try to only speak in the voice of the image rather than your own voice.  

11. Continue active imagination with this disowned image from your dream. Create a dialogue and ask this dream figure to forgive you if needed, using their language, for instance: a lost child cry, scared mouse hiding, abandoned pet seeking affection, can caged bird may want freedom etc. Work to make your emotionally charge image the message, this is the language of the psyche.

12. Be immersed in the dream images that resonate with you. What else might your dream image feel?  Try this exercise with whatever object, animal figure image, animate or inanimate, you feel most drawn to as you survey the landscape of you dream. You can draw, write songs, poetry, paint and dance around and sing, what ever evokes truth to you and feels right.

13.  Now choose to honor this dream image when you go home. Create a dream altar. Sit with this your dream images and active imagination work and dialogue with your dreams. Ask what they want. What figure, image or emotion is asking for, a prayer, a ritual, write draw, sing, dance, and honor your dream gift. Psyche will reward you attention to your dreams.

14. These notes: 
“Working with Your Dream Images as They Work you, “ are the insights, notes and writings of DR. Tiffany Baugher given in a workshop at the Houston Jung Center in 2011. She was my colleague, and friend and I thank her for her brilliant teachings and work in how to keep your dream work images present and alive bringing rich consciousness into waking lives. Thank you Tiffany for sharing your work so we can continue to contribute to the life of the dream.

 
View Event →
Dream Time Group (on Zoom)
Mar
28
6:30 PM18:30

Dream Time Group (on Zoom)

 

Welcome Dreamers!

When: March 28 (ongoing every Sunday)
Time: 6:30 - 7:30pm
Where: Zoom
Who: Limit 5 participants
Price: $25 each session
To Sign Up: call Dr. Shackelford at (210) 602-3002
( Leave a message and Dr. Shackelford will add you to the list! )

Dr. Shackelford’s upcoming Dream Time Group begins March 28, a full moon event. There will be paper work to fill out and homework to do as we each make our way into dreamtime.

It is 2021 and we need help from our Dreams as we make our way in these challenging and transformative times.

Welcome to Dreaming

Dr. Victoria Shackelford is a Jungian Psychotherapist and Licensed Professional Counselor in Austin Texas. She guides each dreamer and the group through the process of:  remembering, and working with dream images, dream feelings, dream stories, dream landscapes, and honoring of the dream as a gift from the both the personal unconscious and the collective unconscious.

Sigmund Freud, (1900) in his work on the analysis of dreams, described dreams as a “complex psychic product, creation, a piece of work which has its own motives and associations as non-rational energy patterns” (Jung, 1974. p. 3). The dream takes on meaning for the dreamer as these patterns compete for victory of one archetypal image over another. When the dreamer figures out the patterns the dream begins to have meaning for the dreamer.

Psychological and emotional meaning of course is the goal and begs the question:

Why does each particular person dream this particular dream?

According to Freud the Dream is therefore individual to each dreamer and relates to that dreamers psychological disposition, all influenced by the dreamers psyche past.

According to Carl Jung the images in dreams are not only each dreamers personal past held in the personal unconscious but also a universal collective unconscious psychic past, as in antiquity and in all cultures through all time. 

This includes the classifications of dream image with typical motifs drawn from mythological references and universal human symbols.

Look to the following guides to find meaning and understanding as each dreamer learns to unlock the “Royal Road to the Unconscious”:

·      Dream images that provoke strong emotions are of great importance with these strong feelings having a particular tone and or image form.

·      These emotionally toned dream images evoke complex associations to a group of ideals that include a wish and a resistance to that wish.

 ·      This conflict between a wish image and the resistance to that wish image make a constellating force in the psyche structure of the dreamer.

 ·      This is felt by the dreamer as a strong gathering and pattern of emotions and feelings tones impacting greater psychic influence on the dreamer’s psychology.

 ·      This dream material then becomes the “secret thought” in a dreamer’s psyche: being worked out in the patterns or gathering of dream images that evoke one emotional makeup.

 ·      The recollection of our dreams is unstable.

 ·      Their narrative is fantastic, i.e. not reality thinking or a sequence of ideals.

 ·      Freud empirically discovered the hidden meanings of dreams coming from the personal unconscious.

 ·      Fables and fairy tales help break down the “manifest content” of the dream images so we can use them.

 ·      The process of working with the dream images analytically is the process that collects a group of past conscious historical images and then free associates with them through a variety of ways: associations, dance, movement, art, words as poetry, reflection and feedback from others etc.

·      Dreams represents a psyche force to tell the truth about what the dreamer is repressing.

·      The prospective function represents the future as in the anticipation in the unconscious of future conscious achievements or events in a dreamer’s life. (Jung, Dreams, 1974, p. 41)

·      The compensatory function represents the repressed elements and memories from the past and or previous day in a dreamer’s life as in-- compensations not able to express in conscious life (Jung, Dreams, 1974, p. 41).

Our life is spent in struggles for the realization of our wishes. All our actions proceed from the wish that something should or should not come to pass. The dream represents our wish fulfilled or put another way each dream representing the fulfillment of a repressed wish.

The powerful yet fleeting dream force is manifesting to tell the dreamer the truth about what they are repressing.

 

References

S. Freud, (1920 & 2007), Dream Psychology for Beginners, World Publication Group, East Bridgewater, MA.

C.G Jung. (1974). Dreams from “The Collected Works of C.G. Jung” Volumes 4,8,12,16, Bollinger Series XX, Princeton, New Jersey.

E. C. Whitmont, & S. B Perera, (1989). Dreams, A Portal to the Source, Routledge, London

F. Boa and Louise von Franz, (1994). The Way of the Dream: Conversations on Jungian Dream Interpretations, Shambhala, Boston & London.

R. Duncan… et. al.(1996). Spring Journal 59, A Journal of Archetype and Culture, Opening the Dream Way in the Psyche of Robert Duncan, Spring Publications, Woodstock, Connecticut.

 
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Out of the Shadows: An Expressive Art Therapy Workshop
Jan
23
1:00 PM13:00

Out of the Shadows: An Expressive Art Therapy Workshop

By Dr. Victoria Shackelford

Saturday, January 23rd

1:00 -4:00 PM

3 CEUs available

 

Dr. Shackelford presents a workshop using techniques of active imagination, expressive art therapy, and meditation to explore the shadow-personality. Learn how to enlist the aid of archetypal images through doodle drawing to activate unconscious material from the psyche.

 

Bio. Of Dr. Shackelford
Victoria Shackelford, PhD is in private practice in Austin Texas. The theoretical depth psychology that informs Dr. Shackelford engages the psyche in response to the body utilizing the analytical studies of Carl G. Jung, the archetypal work of James Hillman and the somatic work of Marion Woodman. You may find Dr. Shackelford at:     

210.602.3002 or 512.464.9544

 

Materials include:

·      Black markers,

·      Color markers,

·      Oil crayons.

·      A drawing tablet of white paper at least the size of office print paper.

 

Outline of the day:

 

1:00 - 1:30 PM
Introductions and short discussion about this outline including the following:


We began the day with a definition of the archetype of the psyche shadow and the archetypal possession of that shadow based on the psychological theories of Carl Jung and James Hillman.  

This includes a discussion of how the shadow archetype as a pattern of behaviors shows up in the body.

 

 BREAK OF 5 MIN.

 

1:30 - 2:00 PM
a demonstration of the meditation and the activity of “Psychic Automatism” the techniques used by the surrealist in the 19th century art and taken up by Carl Jung and Freud as “Free Association”.

 

Psychic Automatism or Free Association a type of Automatic drawing or doodling, according to Jung and Freud, helps release a form of truth and authenticity from the darker areas of the psyche. It is from the images seen on the paper that we can dig deeper into our own shadow psyche and see what it has to say about our true self.

 

The process of the inquiry is based the Carl Jung perspective:

 

WHEN A THING IS TRULY SEEN IT USUALLY TRANSFORMS!

 

BREAK OF 5 MIN

 

2:00 - 2:45 PM
We begin an actual mediation of 5- 10 min while drawing at the same time and drawing immediately afterwards. We may repeat this several times. There is no talking during this time.

There will be a bell sound for the beginning and end of each meditation /drawing activity.

 

 BREAK OF 5 MIN

 

3:00 - 4:00 PM
We together participate in A ZOOM showing of each participant’s automatic drawing and a sharing of the images seen in the drawings that had the strongest emotional affect.

 

EACH PARTICIPTANT CAN ALSO CHOOSE TO NOT SHARE AND LISTEN ONLY. THIS IS POWERFUL SHADOW MATERIAL FROM EACH PERSON’S OWN PSYCHE. IF ONE FEELS TRIGGERED PLEASE ONLY LISTEN AND LET ME KNOW PRIVATELY AT THE END AND WE CAN TALK ON THE PHONE INDEPENDATELY AND PRIVATERLY AS NEEDED.

 

Look forward to meeting every one of you Brave Souls.

 

ph: 210.602.300

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Out of the Shadows
Oct
23
6:00 PM18:00

Out of the Shadows

 

Jung Society of Austin
presents

“Out of the Shadows”
A lecture and discussion by Dr. Victoria Shackelford
on Zoom

 Date & Time:
Friday October 23, 2020
6-9pm

More info is forthcoming on the Austin Jung Society’s website:

https://jungsociety.org

 

Objectives of Lecture:

Together lets examine and even flirt with the archetype of the Witch. That eternal feminine character in fairytales and myth that finds its meaning in the story as an old woman in the woods, the evil stepmother, the dark sister in the underworld and all those characters that transform the one-sided life changing situation, in these ancient stories. 

These mythological stories of destructive ‘Goddesses and witches represents fractures, chaos and disruptive psychological events in the collective psyche. Their inclusion results in necessary psychological movement, to create individuation and transformation of the main character in the story. We need her transformative and chaotic energy.

Barbara Sullivan writes, (1992), “ …the feminine, like a black stalking cat remains attuned to the dark forces swirling rounder, “ waiting for the emergence of her exact moment in history (p.22).  

Sullivan’s black cat representing the dark force of the feminine waits patiently in the unconscious. looking for cracks in our psyche from which to emerge into conscious life , (Victoria Shackelford, 2014, p. 66). I think she need not wait any longer. I will offer up one such story to engage our dark feminine witch, join me to see what she has for us in 2020.

 

Teaching Methods:
Lecture and discussion with Images. 

 

Instructor Biography: 

Victoria Shackelford, Jungian Psychotherapist provides counseling services for adults and adolescents experiencing unhealthy relationships at home, work or play.  In addition, couple and partner therapy includes, sexuality problems, gender concerns, anger symptoms, depression, addiction, self-esteem, trauma recovery, PTSD, anxiety and stress.

She has a PhD in Depth Psychotherapy from Pacifica Graduate Institute in Carpinteria, California, a Jungian and Analytical Psychology program with a focus on clinical case presentation and advanced supervision for licensed Psychotherapists.

She graduated as a Distinguished Graduate with her MA from St. Mary’s University, in Community Counseling and holds a MFA from the University of Texas at Austin.

 

Recommended Reading

Psyche’s Stories: Jungian Interpretation of Fairy Tales,  volume One
Edited by Murray Stein and Lionel Corbett

Shadow and Evil in Fairy Tales
Marie-Louise von Franz

Reclaiming the Dark Feminine, The Price of Desire,
Carolyn Baker, PhD

Eros and Chaos, The Sacred Mysteries and Dark Shadows of Love,
Veronica Goodchild PhD

Mary’s Mandala Story, Archetypes of Creative Chaos
Victoria Shackelford, PhD

 
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(Dates To Be Ongoing) Explore the Landscape of Your Dreams
Sep
15
6:00 PM18:00

(Dates To Be Ongoing) Explore the Landscape of Your Dreams

 

Gain insight and meaning into the next passage in your life by learning how to remember, write down, tend, dialogue and engage with your own dreams. This Sunday evening dream group is designed especially for adults experiencing a transition in life.

 

The dream offers each dreamer and the group the images to be consciously tended, dialogued with and made meaningful. It is in this conscious tending that the dream images bring the dreamer alive to one’s authentic  ‘Self’—transforming confusion, change and chaos to one of creativity and meaning.

 

The group of dreamers sharing the images and messages from their individual dreams offers insight and support, guidance and even a group presence to the dream as a universal messenger for any situation of change from loss and the chaos of disintegration too often vested upon human beings.

 

Dr. Shackelford is a Jungian Psychotherapist and Licensed Professional Counselor with an office in Austin, Texas. This dream group accepts 6 dreamers for 6 Sunday evenings from 6 to 8 pm, at Dr. Shackelford’s Austin office. $48.00 per each Sunday evening.

 
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DrV Presents Lecture & Art Therapy Class on “The Dream Body" CEU’s Available
Apr
21
11:00 AM11:00

DrV Presents Lecture & Art Therapy Class on “The Dream Body" CEU’s Available

Jung Society of Austin

2017/2018 Presentation

Presenter(s): Victoria Shackelford, PhD

Email: drvshack@gmail.com

Webb: www.doctorvictoria.net

Phone: 512-461-9544 & 210.602.3002

Title: Charting Your “Dream Body” Image as a Lens Into The Unconscious

  1. Shackelford presents to the public and the members of the Austin Jung Society a lecture/ discussion and therapeutic arts workshop based on Jungian analysts, Arnolds Mindell’s book: “The Dream Body: The Body’s Role in Revealing the Self”, (SIGO Press, Santa Monica CA., 1982).

Requested dates to lecture/teach: April, 21 and 22, 2017

Please digitally attach a picture of yourself and an image that is expressive of your topic

I will be proposing a Lecture/ Discussion and Therapeutic Arts Workshop

Lecture/discussion Friday night form 7-9 pm

Workshop: # of sessions___1___ Time: 9-12 am Saturday morning

Workshop size limited to 10 participants 

Objectives of Course:

The major course objective:

Engage Arnold Mindell’s perspective on the relationship between the somatic feelings in the body, our dreams and the unconscious. First we began with a review of Mindell’s perspective on this relationship. This leads naturally into the Saturday morning workshop-using image by way of the therapeutic arts through the somatic experience of the dream body as a between place between consciousness and unconsciousness.

 

 

Course Description

Engaging the concepts presented by using the format of a lecture/discussion then leading into therapeutic arts to engage the image presented at this intersection between the dream and the body.

Teaching Methods: lecture/Discussion and next day “Dream Body” therapeutic arts workshop

Instructor Biography:

Victoria Shackelford, MFA, MA, PhD, completed her Doctorate in Depth Psychotherapy with an emphasis in advanced supervision from Pacifica Graduate Institute. She graduated as a Distinguished Graduate with her MA from St. Mary’s University, in Community Counseling and holds a MFA from the University of Texas at Austin.

Dr. Shackelford runs a counseling office at Psychology Counseling Group in Austin, Texas and in San Antonio at Psychology Counseling Associates.

Specializing in Trauma, PYSD, anxiety including anger management and working with families and couples in conflict she utilizing the modalities of Jungian psychotherapy. Dr. Shackelford utilizes he interventions of archetypal psychology, expressive arts therapies, and sand try work from the holistic perspective of Carl Jung and in tandem with the clinical perspective of Cognitive restructuring and CBT.

You may find her on line atwww.doctorvictoria.net & www.counselingsanantonio.com

To contact her call: 210.602.3002 or 512.464.9544

Supplies/Required: DR. Shackelford will bring paper and drawing supplied for Saturday workshop

AV needs for lecture: Projector & screen.

Watch for Dr. Shackelford’s presentation of additional CEU trainings and presentations with an focus on trauma, PTSD, anxiety, panic and other behavioral feeling states that impact ones ability to live life fully and with trust:

  • The archetype of Creative Chaos: How to Recognize when this Archetype is Operating and Manifesting in Your body and Psyche

  • The Mythology of the Dark Feminine in the Fairytale: Recognizing with mythic tales how this Repressed Feminine Energy aids in Recovery and Regeneration from Trauma

  • The Image of the Chaotic Mandala: How To Use This Image as a Viewfinder into the Psyche when Working with Trauma

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