The One Minute Question: What is Narrative Therapy?

Erik Sween proposes seven "one minute" explanations that seek to elucidate the purpose, foundations, and the basic theoretical assumptions and constructs that underly narrative therapy.


Boulder Society Now Accepting Program Proposals

The Boulder Friends of Jung is currently soliciting program proposals for our Fall 2008 through 2009 lecture/workshop series. Our programs are held the third week of the month, with lectures on Friday evening, workshops on Saturday, and run from February through May and September through November. Please note that we are a newly created non-profit organization with very limited funds, and regrettably not all proposals received can be accepted. If you are interested in coming to Boulder, Colorado and meeting a commuity of energized people dedicated to the psychology of C.G. Jung, please contact Nancy Ortenberg at 303.449.2011 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Heartbreak Hotel

Should we sing the blues or try to beat them? In a paper delivered at the 2006 Conference of the Association of Core Process Psychotherapists, Steven Silverton draws on Korean Zen, Heideggerian philosophy, and Elvis Presley to explore key differences between cognitive-behavioral and core process models of depression and anxiety.

Dancing Around The Bomb: On Wolfgang Giegerich's "The Nuclear Bomb and the Fate of God"

In this essay, Dolores Brien reflects on Wolfgang Giegerich's original, unsettling, and provocative exploration of the psychological implications of the nuclear bomb.


In The Beginning: Jung and Freud on Introversion

In this essay originally published in Psychological Perspectives, Stonehill College professor of philosophy Richard M. Capobianco tracks the evolution of Jung's early effort to explore the creative aspects of introversion in contrast to Freud's view, which emphasized its pathological aspects.