Tag: metaphor
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Who Said Curiosity Killed the Cat?

Inspirational Quotes You’re only given a little spark of madness. You mustn’t lose it. Robin Williams When you’re curious, you find lots of interesting things to do. Walt Disney A Father’s Guide to Wisdom What beautiful words of wisdom from two brilliant individuals. The tragic ending of Robin Williams’s life rocked the world. It brought…
Dr. Thomas Maples
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Archetypal Themes of Early Adult Development: An Analysis of Siddhartha & the Consummation of Masculine Love

Dr. Tom explores the archetypes of Early Adult Masculine Development: Carl Jung’s theory is used to analyze Ego, Discipline, Identity, Love, & Hero’s Quest.
Dr. Thomas Maples
Adult Love, adult personality development, alchemy, archetype, ash-work, Carl Jung, child adult transitions, complex consciousness, consciousness, discipline, ego, ego developmet, Featured, Hermann Hesse, Hero’s Qwest, Individuation, initiation, Joseph Campbell, Love, Masculine Development, Masculine Psychology, Mercury, metaphor, Mythopoetic Men’s Movement, Objective / Subjective Split, Paradox, persona, responsibility, Robert Bly, Self, self-defense, Siddhartha, Siddhartha Gautama, simple consciousness -
Alchemical Hermeneutics & The Lifelong Journey to Realize Self

Alchemical Hermeneutics and the Lifelong Journey to Realize Self explores methods by which we can understand the depths and language of our developing soul
Dr. Thomas Maples
Alchemical Hermeneutics, Archetypes, Attachment Theory, case study, Case Study Method, Collective Unconscious, developmental psychology, Duality, Hermann Hesse, Individuation, Jungian Developmental Psychology, Masculine Development, Masculine Psychology, metaphor, Mythopoetic Men’s Movement, narcissistic split, Philosophical Hermeneutics, Psychological Containment, Psychology, Psychosexual Development, Psychosocial Development, Qualitative Research, Robert Bly, Self Realization, shadow, Siddhartha, Sigmund Freud, Splitting, unconscious -
Through the Looking Glass: Dreaming, Development, and Getting Back to Even

In this essay, I explore from a depth psychological perspective our growing growing inability to dream, its effects on childhood development, current social woes, and what parents can do to help their children heal during this age of division.
