This Jungian Life Podcast Podcast Por Joseph Lee Deborah Stewart Lisa Marchiano arte de portada

This Jungian Life Podcast

This Jungian Life Podcast

De: Joseph Lee Deborah Stewart Lisa Marchiano
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Join us—Lisa, Deb, and Joseph—for sometimes irreverent but potentially life-changing conversations. Every Thursday, we explore culture, relationships, and depth psychology through the lens of Carl Jung. We devote a segment of each episode to analyzing a listener’s dream.Joseph Lee, Deborah Stewart, Lisa Marchiano Higiene y Vida Saludable Psicología Psicología y Salud Mental
Episodios
  • A Jungian Sense of Place: Bollingen and The Tower on the Marsh
    Apr 2 2026

    Carl Jung, Marie-Louise von Franz and Christiana Morgan all dedicated time, soul and imagination to a peculiarly Jungian form of architecture: the stone tower.


    This week host Deborah Stewart is joined by Dr. Martin Gledhill, an architect, author and Jungian scholar, and filmmaker Hilary Morgan, the granddaughter of Christiana Morgan, an eminent American psychologist who collaborated with Jung on some of his most important work.


    Deb, Martin and Hilary explore Jung’s Bollingen Tower and Christiana Morgan’s Tower on the Marsh, discussing the profound expressions of psyche through place. Both towers render psyche in art, carvings and stone. They are more than just physical places, they are architectural explorations of Self and soul. The two towers are what Martin calls “restless places”: dream-like in ambience, shaped through an ongoing, iterative process, and surrounded by differing, sometimes conflicting, accounts of their evolution.


    Follow Up


    Read Martin Gledhill’s book, The Bollingen Tower: Constructing a Jungian Sense of Place

    Watch (for free) The Tower of Dreams - a film by Hilary Morgan


    Connect With This Jungian Life

    Send a ⁠⁠dream⁠⁠ for us to analyze on the show.

    Check out our TJL ⁠⁠podcast merch⁠⁠.

    Follow This Jungian Life on ⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 10 m
  • The Age of Aquarius: A Jungian View of a Changing World
    Mar 26 2026

    Jung suggested in Aion that humanity is moving from the great symbolic Age of Pisces to the Age of Aquarius.


    Join Jungian analysts Lisa Marchiano, Deborah Stewart and Joseph Lee, as we ask what it means to live through the turbulence and vitality of this period of transition.


    Jung pioneered the idea that human consciousness unfolds in great symbolic ages. The shift from one to the next is not a smooth or pleasant experience. As Jung saw it, each new age emerges through a process of decline, breakdown, and renewal, a process that can bring with it frightening levels of destabilization.


    The Age of Pisces, shaped by Christianity, emphasized faith, morality, and the authority of external structures. But as this era wanes, Jung suggested we are coming under the influence of a new attitude, one that asks more of the individual psyche.


    This new Age of Aquarius asks us to hold the tension of opposites consciously, rather than splitting experience into simple categories of right and wrong, and to be open to a genuinely new attitude that can contain much greater complexity.


    We consider whether this emerging age calls us into a deeper interior life, one grounded not in external authority, but in an evolving relationship to the Self.


    Read the dream we analyze in full on our website.


    Connect With This Jungian Life

    Book your place at our ⁠⁠free seminar⁠⁠ on March 28, Your Personal Red Book: A Dream School Taster.

    Send a ⁠⁠dream⁠⁠ for us to analyze on the show.

    Check out our TJL ⁠⁠podcast merch⁠⁠.

    Follow This Jungian Life on ⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 30 m
  • Cassandra: A Jungian Interpretation
    Mar 19 2026

    In Greek mythology, Cassandra was a Trojan princess and priestess of Apollo who was given the gift of true prophecy, along with the curse that no one would ever believe her. She warned the Trojans not to bring the famous wooden horse inside their city walls, but her prophecy was ignored and the city fell.


    In this episode, we discuss the psychological meaning of the Cassandra story from a Jungian perspective, exploring the painful experience of recognizing a deep truth but finding that others cannot or will not hear it.


    We examine how the Cassandra archetype can intrude into a person’s life, compelling them to deliver uncomfortable truths to audiences who do not wish to hear. Understanding the archetypal pattern may help us discern the difference between those who won’t hear, and those who may be able to accept our message.


    The story of Cassandra can also be applied to our inner lives. We often ignore our own inner Cassandra, and her quiet warning that something glittering may hide danger. False promises, quick fixes, and seductive fantasies can lure us into welcoming the Trojan horse despite our better judgment.


    Finally, we ask how we might hold the Cassandra complex differently. Instead of identifying with the doomed prophet, we can recognize the archetype at work: “Cassandra is visiting.” By holding insight with humility, seeking listeners who can truly hear, and accepting the limits of our power to change fate, we might shape the anguish of Cassandra into a deeper wisdom.


    Read the dream we analyze and find this episode’s resource list on our website.


    Connect With This Jungian Life

    Book your place at our ⁠free seminar⁠ on March 28, Your Personal Red Book: A Dream School Taster.

    Send a ⁠dream⁠ for us to analyze on the show.

    Check out our TJL ⁠podcast merch⁠.

    Follow This Jungian Life on ⁠Instagram⁠.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 20 m
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I have listened to every episode of This Jungian Life and thoroughly enjoyed the range of topics and how the Jungian perspective has enlarged my understanding of myself and the world

enlightening

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It has helped both my faith and my learning, and I have recommended it to a few friends so far.

Very enlivening.

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Incredibly insightful, thought-provoking episodes. I learned so much.

Then I listened to some of their earlier episodes and found their episode on 'Gender Transformation." Wildly uninformed ignorant opinions on gender and trans identity. Transness is not about a man "becoming" a woman or a woman "becoming" a man. It's about people being who they always were. It's a sacred. revelatory, beautiful process, that often stigmatized, demonized, criminalized and misunderstood. Their ignorance, whether unintended or ideological, causes harm and I can't in good conscience listen to any more of this podcast. I guess others in Jungian forums have also noticed Lisa's apparent TERF ideology and the complacency of the others toward her abhorent misinformed views. So disappointing. Reminds me of First they Came by Niemoller.

Another pathologization of the human experience. Another scapgoat. Another dangerous ideology without apology or acknowledgement of harm.

Do better.

Insightful...until the transphobic episode

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