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Linda Leonard

    Linda Leonard
    Córki i ojcowie w analizie jungowskiej
    Call to Create
    On the Way to the Wedding
    Meeting the Madwoman
    Witness to the Fire
    The Wounded Woman
    • 2009

      Linda Schierse Leonard, renowned Jungian analyst, teacher, and best-selling author, demonstrates the many parallels among the cycles, moods, and landscapes of nature and the phases of the creative process"parallels that can foster inspiration, renewal, and hope. Many artists face profound challenges in the course of their creative work, and many more people do not think of themselves as creative at all, though their everyday discoveries, work, and personal lives can be deeply creative acts. Leonard shows how nature and creativity are healing and even necessary tools, and how we can use our energies to move through dark times so we can be ready to receive and actualize creativity. By understanding how to cultivate our inner helpers"characters and archetypal patterns that rise up within us as we go about imagining a better life"we can appreciate and develop creativity in all our endeavors.

      Call to Create
    • 2001

      On the Way to the Wedding

      Transforming the Love Relationship

      • 274 pages
      • 10 hours of reading
      4.1(104)Add rating

      The author delves into the profound desire for a meaningful union, emphasizing the sacred journey of love and self-discovery. By weaving together dreams, personal narratives, and cultural myths, she reveals the inner barriers to love and creativity faced by individuals. Through a blend of personal experiences and insights drawn from various forms of storytelling, the book offers a rich exploration of the complexities of human relationships and the quest for deeper connections.

      On the Way to the Wedding
    • 2001

      Witness to the Fire

      • 416 pages
      • 15 hours of reading
      4.3(110)Add rating

      In Witness to the Fire, Linda Schierse Leonard, Ph.D., explores the dark and fiery journey of transformation from the bondage of addiction to the freedom of recovery through creativity. A Jungian analyst, Leonard studies the relationship of creativity and addiction in the lives of writers such as Fyodor Dostoevsky, Eugene O'Neill, Jean Rhys, and Jack London, as well as the experiences of ordinary men and women. Leonard holds out the hope that anyone bound by addiction can reclaim the power that fuels dependency for a life of joy and creativity.

      Witness to the Fire
    • 1994

      Meeting the Madwoman

      • 256 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      4.3(162)Add rating

      The Madwoman is a powerful psychological and emotional energy that lives in us all—both men and women—and speaks to us all, inhabiting our dreams, our lives, our collective cultural memory. Ignored or suppressed, she becomes a force of self-destruction; acknowledged and understood, she becomes a source of creativity and power. In this remarkable and revolutionary book, Linda Schierse Leonard explores how we can overcome the inner turmoil of contemporary life—unexpressed rage, the buildup of guilt and anxiety—by harnessing this primal expression of our natural instincts. From Medea to Ophelia to Thelma and Louise, the paradox and patterns of “madness” are as old as time. But the chain can be broken; the Madwoman within each of us can and must be freed, openly expressed, and transformed into a source of constructive, creative energy. Leonard draws upon an extraordinary range of sources—ancient myths and fairy tales, films and literature, contemporary and historical women’s lives—to design a model of empowerment for women today. With its fresh perspectives and bold insights, Meeting the Madwoman is a provocative work of profound cultural significance, one whose ideas are sure to resonate for years to come. Praise for Meeting the Madwoman “A book loaded with practical insights that’s also fun to read . . . With refreshing originality, Leonard reverses some traditional perceptions.”—New Woman “A vigorous exploration . . . Throughout, Leonard writes passionately, seeing the Madwoman as an empowering symbol and the discovery process as a spiritual exercise—a kind of purification and ultimate triumph of the feminine spirit.”—Kirkus Reviews

      Meeting the Madwoman
    • 1983

      The Wounded Woman

      • 206 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      An invaluable key to self-understanding, The Wounded Woman shows that by understanding the father-daughter wound, it is possible to achieve a fruitful, caring relationship between men and women, between fathers and daughters, a relationship that honors both the mutuality and the uniqueness of the sexes.

      The Wounded Woman