POPULARITY
Warum lachen wir eigentlich? Sigmund Freud ging dieser Frage nach und entdeckte dabei: Humor ist tief mit unserem Unbewussten verbunden. In seinem Werk "Der Witz und seine Beziehung zum Unbewussten" zeigt er, wie Witze uns erlauben, soziale Tabus zu umgehen und verdrängte Gedanken auszudrücken. In dieser Folge tauchen wir in Freuds psychoanalytische Theorie ein und erkunden die Dynamik zwischen Ich, Es und Über-Ich beim Lachen. Wir erfahren, warum Humor als ausgeklügelter Abwehrmechanismus funktioniert und wie er uns hilft, mit unseren inneren Konflikten umzugehen – ohne uns dessen überhaupt bewusst zu sein. Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? **[Hier findest du alle Informationen & Rabatte](https://linktr.ee/philosophietogopodcast)**
Jacob och Wille gästas av journalisten Christian Dahlström för att diskutera hans senaste bok, Den enda rättan läran - Så förblindande psykoanalysen det svenska rättsväsendet. Du får höra lite om vad psykoanalysen innebär och hur Freud agerade för att få till den stora rörelse som psykoanalysen har blivit trots att det i princip alltid bara varit baserad på Freuds egna tankar. Vi får också höra om hur den fick fäste inom psykiatrin i Sverige och kort om de negativa konsekvenser som det fick på både vård och rättsväsenden. På Tyngre Träningssnacks instagram kan du hitta bilder relaterat till detta och tidigare avsnitt. Hålltider (00:00:00) Introsnack om Willes nya hund (00:04:01) Veckans gäst, Christian Dahlström om psykoanalysen i Sverige (00:04:35) Om Christians bakgrund om journalist med fokus på psykiatrin (00:12:20) Christians senaste bok, Den enda rätta läran (00:14:00) De "galna" historierna som fick Chrstian att börja skriva på boken (00:17:53) Förstod människor att många åsikter från folk med titlar bottnade i Freuds tankar? (00:21:19) Charles Darwin vs Sigmund Freud - vetenskapligt vs pseudovetenskapligt tankesätt (00:26:09) Freuds bakgrund och vägen till att bli en guru inom psykiatrin på 1800-talet (00:34:54) Påhitt kring bortglömda minnen som fick fäste i Sverige och västvärlden på 90-talet (00:39:40) Varför trodde Freud att det var på de saker som han påstod? (00:42:50) Många av Freuds patienthistorier har visat sig vara påhittade eller snedvridna (00:48:13) Freud drar otroliga slutsatser från enskilda, ofta mindre, saker i barns liv (00:50:50) Margit Norells historia och hur hon spritt psykoanalysen i Sverige (00:59:31) Media och politiken som gav psykoanalysen plats i rättsalar mm (01:09:39) Hur kom man undan med att inte publicera några studier på sina metoder? (01:16:11) I Sverige blev psykoanalysen en viktig sak inom psykiatrin som alla skulle kunna (01:18:59) Hur har det varit att gräva i en så här känslig fråga är människor farit illa?
Propaganda, Öffentlichkeitsarbeit und Werbung: Edward Bernays erkennt früh, wie nah diese drei einander sind. Ist er über seinen Tod am 9.3.1995 hinaus der Ahnherr der Fake News? Von Christoph Vormweg.
Om hur Freuds läror - och lärjungar - påverkade den svenska psykiatrin.
Behovet av psykologiska analyser av makthavare tycks outsinligt. Ulf Karl Olov Nilsson funderar i ljuset av en bortglömd psykobiografi. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. ESSÄ: Detta är en text där skribenten reflekterar över ett ämne eller ett verk. Åsikter som uttrycks är skribentens egna.Hur mycket kan egentligen en enskild individ påverka världens gång? Ja, kan en enda människa agera ut sina inre konflikter på världsscenen, kan jordens öde vila i två ynka nyckfulla händer?Frågan kan tyckas aktuell, ja rent av akut, med tanke på de märkliga personligheter som befinner sig i absoluta maktpositioner. En akut fråga kanske, men knappast ny.I mars 1920 började många tro att amerikanske presidenten Woodrow Wilson förlorat förståndet. Wilson hade varit en centralgestalt för fredsförhandlingarna efter första världskriget och lanserat de 14 punkter för fred i den så kallade Wilsondoktrinen. Men nu hade han börjat uppföra sig irrationellt; han höll missriktade bibliskt salvelsefulla tal i kongressen och verkade vilja undergräva den amerikanska uppslutningen kring det Versaille-fördrag som han tidigare slagits så hårt för; ja, han spelade sina kort så uselt att han tycktes önska ett misslyckande. Vad hade hänt? De flesta hänförde presidentens märkligheter till hans hjärnblödning hösten 1919. Wilson hade svävat mellan liv och död i veckor och under isoleringen odlade han ett yvigt skägg, förmodligen för att dölja en delvis vänstersidig förlamning.En man som arbetat nära Wilson under fredsförhandlingarna var stjärndiplomaten och senare USA:s förste ambassadör i Sovjetunionen, William Bullit. Han med många andra kom att hysa enorm besvikelse och ren aversion mot USA:s 28:e president. Några år in på 20-talet drabbades Bullit av en personlig kris och sökte upp en viss professor i Wien, närmare bestämt Sigmund Freud. Efter några månader på Freuds divan började de båda männen samtala på mer vänskaplig grund. Det visade det sig att de var rörande överens i sin frustration över Wilson. Freud skrev i ett brev: “om någon enskild individ kan hållas ansvarig för misären i denna del av världen så är det nog ändå han [Wilson]”. När Bullit berättade om sina planer att skriva en psykologisk biografi över den tidigare presidenten var Freud oväntat och obegripligt nog med på noterna.Eller kanske var det inte så obegripligt. Som statsvetaren Patrick Weils visar i sin bok “The Madman in the Whitehouse” så var Bullit var ingen vanlig klient; han hade suttit i förhandlingar med Lenin och Stalin, Churchill, de Gaulle, Chiang Kai-shek och Göring. Bullit är förlagan till en av karaktärerna, närmare bestämt djävulsfiguren, i Michael Bulgakovs ”Mästaren och Margarita”. Freud var smickrad, dessutom befann hans psykoanalytiska bokförlag sig på ruinens brant och en psykobiografi över en president kunde säkert komma till undsättning, inte minst när Bullits första och enda roman hade varit en veritabel kioskvältare, tryckt i häpnadsväckande 23 upplagor.Något år senare, när Wilson avlidit, gav Freud Bullit i uppdrag att forska i Wilsons bakgrund och intervjua vänner och personer som arbetat med honom. Efter några år började ett manus ta form där båda männen stod som upphovsmän. Men utgivningen kom att dröja; Bullit var rädd att en kritisk biografi av demokraten Wilson skulle förstöra hans vidare karriärmöjligheter inom partiet. Och åren gick, Freud avled 1939, andra världskriget bröt ut; och så började Wilsons eftermäle påtagligt resa sig ur askan med nya biografier, pjäser och en påkostad spelfilm om hans liv 1944.Bullit satt på det enda exemplaret av manuset vars status blev alltmer oklart. Psykoanalytiker som Ernest Jones reste till USA och läste texten men var måttligt imponerad. Anna Freud fick läsa och ogillade skarpt. Manuset var fullt av psykoanalytiska klichéer, tyckte man, och saknade Freuds förfining. Ve och fasa, hade verkligen Freud själv författat denna parodi på freudianskt mumbo-jumbo!Men Bullit menade att de båda männen visst hade skrivit manuset tillsammans; Freud skrev själv utkastet till förordet, Bullit resterande delar. ”Vi kämpade ibland om varenda rad”, menade Bullit, även om han själv mestadels hållit i pennan. Men sedan hade Freud gjort ändringar, och Bullit hade sedan själv, långt efter Freuds död, ändrat i ändringarna.Men 1966 var det – äntligen eller kanske snarare tyvärr – dags för publicering; president Wilsons änka hade precis dött och Bullit själv låg för döden och fick aldrig läsa de nedslående recensionerna. Biografin uppehåller sig mycket vid vad Bullit och Freud menar är presidentens faderskomplex. Fadern var präst och Wilson hade sett sig som guds son, menade författarna; hans politiska karriär var ett slags messiansk dröm. Boken visar också upp flagranta exempel på vad psykoanalytikern och framgångsrike psykobiografikern Erik Homburger Erikson kallade ”originology”, alltså att låta pyttesmå detaljer i studieföremålets barndom förklara betydelsefulla historiska händelser.Men ännu värre, var inte Freuds och Bullits projekt problematiskt redan till sin utgångspunkt: att skriva en psykobiografi över någon som man djupt ogillar.Risken är ju – vilket boken om Wilson dessvärre är ett exempel på – att en persons lidande framhålls som klandervärt, och att man olyckligt tolkar en människas neuroser eller vanföreställningar som vore de moraliska brister. Idag argumenterar psykologiska och psykiatriska institutioner, exempelvis American Psychiatric Association, för att yrkeskårens kodex bör vara att en psykolog eller psykiater aldrig ska sätta en diagnos på en levande offentlig person man aldrig träffat. Ändå görs övertramp dagligen och samtidens behov av psykologiska studier, inte minst förklenande, över politiska ledare tycks outsinligt.Nå, historien är givetvis inte endast en produkt av idéer, ideologi och materiella förutsättningar utan också enskilda individers val och handlingar. I tider av maktkoncentration, personfixering och tilltagande demokratiskt underskott finns det kanske ett större behov än någonsin att förstå makthavares drivkrafter och omedvetna konflikter. Ja, det är kanske en fråga för framtida psykobiografier: hur ska demokrati kunna försvaras när medborgarna själva väljer ledare som vill undergräva demokratin?Ulf Karl Olov NIlssonförfattare, psykoanalytiker och översättareLitteraturPatrick Weil: The madman in the White house – Sigmund Freud, ambassador Bullitt, and the lost psychobiography of Woodrow Wilson. Harvard University Press, 2023.
Att fastna i oro och ältande är trist och energikrävande. Samtidigt kan oro fungera som en varningsklocka i livet och hjälpa en att identifiera saker som skulle kunna gå fel. Men hur kan man veta om oron hjälper eller stjälper en och hur kan man stävja sin oro när den går överstyr? Det svarar Erik Andersson och Tove Wahlund på som båda är psykologer och forskar på Avdelningen för psykologi vid Karolinska Institutet och de har tillsammans skrivit Orosboken. Dessutom pratar Emma och Clara om Freuds take på tvångstankar, om nyhetsknarkande verkligen är lämpligt vid oroliga tider och hur viktig dialekten är när man ska hitta sin hjärn-PT.Klipp och musik:Bobby McFerrin - Don't Worry Be HappyTV4 Play, Kristersson-jag förstår att många är oroliga just nuTV4 Nyhetsmorgon, Oro och kriser i världen – så påverkas ekonominTV4 Nyheter, Magdalena Andersson, klart många känner en oroCamilla Puskaric Schön - KroppsscanningVår tenta i oro hittar du på instagram, @akursen_poddmail: akursenpodd@gmail.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Per Magnus Johansson, psykoanalytiker, idéhistoriker och författare, reder ut psykoanalysens förhållande till antiken. Hur förband sig Sigmund Freud till antiken och den kunskapstradition som bars upp av den grekiska dramatiken och filosofin? Freud använde sig av Sofokles text om Kung Oidipus när han formulerade teorin om Oidipuskomplexet. Han tolkade myten utifrån den psykoanalytiska teorin och praktiken. Hur skall man förstå denna transformation? Och hur är det rimligt att tolka Freuds läsning idag? Inspelat onsdagen den 4 december kl. 18Arrangerat av Göteborgs Förening för Filosofi och Psykoanalys Plats: Göteborgs stadsbibliotek
Send us a textWelcome to our review of PR Pitches and mergers & acquisitions in the UK PR scene with Andrew Bloch. Here we discuss the biggest pitch wins and mergers & acquisitions that the PR sector has seen in November 2024.Andrew is the lead consultant - PR, Social, Content and Influencer at the new business consultancy firm AAR and a partner at PCB Partners, where he advises on buying and selling marketing services agencies.Andrew launched Andrew Bloch & Associates in 2020.If you haven't heard already I'm pleased to say we've now launched our PR Masterclass: The Intersection of Data, Planning and Measurement event. Attend this PR Masterclass to hear from experts on the latest techniques, tools and case studies about the use of data in modern communications.The other big news in public relations is that the PRmoment Awards 2025 are open.All the categories, the updated entry form and the 2025 entry pack can be viewed on the awards microsite.Also, thanks so much to the PRmoment Podcast sponsors the PRCA.3 mins Andrew on the current state of the PR market. How does the golden quarter compare to previous years.“Measurement is more critical than it ever has been.”PITCHES DFS appoint Red Consultancy and PR First. Teneo continues to work on financial comms.“Everyone loves a retail client.”Simply Business appoint Golin. Danone appoint Freuds.“This is a whopper… a fame making brief.”“The best agencies have had very good years organically (growth.)” Pret A Manger appoint Frank. Headland continues looks after corporate pr Levis appoint Burson – corp reputation brief across the EU. Stanley 1913 appoint The Romans – pr and influencer for drinkware brand (best known for Stanley cups – the quencher) UK, France, Germany, Netherlands. Product launches, brand partnerships. Apply creative with local relevance. PG Tips appoint The Romans – retained pr and social- engaging tea lovers across UK. PG Tips now part of Liptons (formerly Unilever) Rebrand – new blends, packaging etc. previously a project client. Digital and social now a third of all biz for Romans. Cayman Islands Tourism Dept appoint Allison. Essity appoint PR Agency One. B2B comms brief to raise the profile of the group and reinforce position as industry and category leader across brands. Fed Olsen Cruises appoint The Academy – consumer pr. Targeting new and existing passengers. Previously in-house.Tui (First Choice/Marella Cruises) appoint Ogilvy for a long term comms strategy and earned first activation. First Choice merged with TUI in 2007. Nest, the UK Government backed pension scheme, appoint H+K (now part of Burson) – Corporate reputational support services. Also work with Blurred to help promote purpose PR strategy.Uni of Warwick appoint Shook This month's round up of M&A activity:“This has been a boom month for the PR M&A sector.” Croud sell majority stake to ECI (PE) – Croud is a full service marketing company. Croud is estimated to be worth £180M+. Fee income of £23.5M.“Croud is one to watch for sure.” Coolr sell minority share to Growth Capital Partners (GCP.) Founded in 2017 by Adam Clyne. 120 full time employees (FTEs.) This acquisition will help deepen service offering and scale quicker including i
Det första surrealistiska manifestet skrevs 1924, men rörelsen överlevde sig själv och återfinns inom konst och reklam. Men även inom politiken, där den dock bytt sida, konstaterar Thomas Steinfeld. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. ESSÄ: Detta är en text där skribenten reflekterar över ett ämne eller ett verk. Åsikter som uttrycks är skribentens egna.Den 23 januari 2016 stod Donald Trump, vid denna tid en av flera kandidater till posten som Förenta Staternas president, framför en jublande folkmassa i Sioux City, Iowa, och utropade: “Jag skulle kunna stå i mitten av Femte avenyn och skjuta någon, och jag skulle inte förlora några väljare, okej?” Det var ett utrop som ekade av kulturhistoria, även om han själv inte visste om det: ”Den enklaste surrealistiska handlingen“, hade den franske författaren André Breton hävdat år 1929, ”skulle bestå i att gå ut i gatan, med pistol i hand, och blint skjuta in i folksamlingen, så snabbt du kan trycka på avtryckaren.”Surrealismen bestod bara några år som en någorlunda enhetlig konstnärlig rörelse, från det första manifestet som publicerades den 15 oktober 1924 till det andra manifestet från år 1929. Därefter splittrades gruppen. De ena ville göra revolution, på gatorna, de andra ville leta efter nya sätt att uttrycka sig inom konsten. André Breton, rörelsens ledare, uppförde sig som en nyckfull envåldshärskare, och så fortsatte var och en på egen hand. Under den korta tid de höll ihop hann surrealisterna dock göra så mycket av sig väsen, att deras gärningar ger ett eko än idag.En målning av en mjuk klocka, som verkar rinna iväg som ett halvstekt ägg, en bild av en pipa med en text, som berättar att pipan inte är någon pipa, ett fotografi av en kvinnas nakna rygg, med violinens f-hål målade på kroppen: Det är sådana verk som man kommer ihåg, när man tänker på surrealismen. Och så minns man en film från år 1928, skapad av regissören Luis Buñuel tillsammans med konstnären Salvador Dalì, där en rakkniv skär genom ett öga. Och så tänker man kanske på Bretons självbiografiska bok om ”l'amour fou” samt på en rad andra mer eller mindre galna kärlekshistorier. Så är det, men så är det också inte: Ingen rörelse inom konsten, någonsin, har haft en verkan som surrealismen, fram till idag.Surrealismen hade ett program, men knappast en teori. Den viktigaste idén hade man lånat från Sigmund Freud och psykoanalysen: att den egentliga sanningen om tillvaron finns i det omedvetna, i en dimmig sfär där drifter, smärtor och begär, drömmar och erfarenheter blandas med varandra, och att man borde uppdaga denna undervärld, i alla dess fantastiska beståndsdelar. Sigmund Freud själv var inte särskilt imponerad av surrealisternas som efterföljare: ”Hittills hade jag varit benägen att betrakta surrealisterna, som uppenbarligen valt mig till beskyddare, som absoluta narrar“, skrev han efter han i juli 1938 hade tagit emot Salvador Dalì i London. Han fortsatte: ”Numera lutar jag mot en annan värdering. […] allvarliga psykologiska problem”. Läser man rörelsens manifest, förstår man Freuds förbehåll. Surrealisterna hade inte för avsikt att förstå någonting. De var aktivister, de ville ”flytta gränserna för den så kallade verkligheten”, så som de uttryckte det.Surrealismen överlevde själva rörelsen, inte bara som en bildskatt eller som en samling exemplariska konstnärsliv - utan framför allt som en teknik som används för alla sorters estetiska yttranden. René Magrittes målning av en man med ett grönt äpple framför ansiktet blev en populär affisch, så som flera andra surrealistiska bildverk. Frida Kahlos smärtfyllda liv upphöjdes till ett exemplariskt människooffer inför konstens altare, och i Venedig iscensatte sig Peggy Guggenheim, sittandes i en gondol bakom stjärnförmiga glasögon, som de galna geniernas drottning. Men visst kunde gränserna för den så kallade verkligheten flyttas även utan medverkan av en livslevande surrealist: Frank Zappa missade visserligen ett personligt möte med Salvador Dalì. Surrealismen blev ändå en av musikerns främsta inspirationskällor. På samma sätt är det med regissören David Lynch: Det avklippta örat i början av filmen ”Blue Velvet” från år 1986 är en replik på Luis Buñuel sönderskurna ögonglob. Och står den stora, filosoferande spindeln, som den svenske regissören Johan Renck låter uppträda i filmen ”Spaceman” från 2024, inte i en tradition som leder tillbaka till Dalìs målning ”Spider in the Evening” från år 1940?Surrealismens största effekter går dock förbi obemärkta. Folk har vant sig vid att bilder, toner, till och med meningar följer på varandra, utan att de verkar stå i ett sammanhang, och att de växlar i allt snabbare takt, och att det enda som håller ihop dem är strävan efter någonting oerhört, sensationellt, efter en chock. ”Brainstorming” heter det förmodligen första försöket att överföra surrealismen till en social teknik. Den lär visserligen ha uppfunnits av en amerikansk reklamman under det sena trettiotalet. Men till grund ligger surrealisternas ”écriture automatique”, det automatiska skrivandet som skulle ske utan inblandning av ett kritiskt jag. I stället skulle det associeras fritt, utan mål eller uppsikt, medan verksamheten drevs av sökandet efter någonting alldeles nytt och överraskande. Denna teknik spriddes så småningom till brukskonsten, först till reklamen och till modet, sedan till musikvideon och därifrån åt alla möjliga håll. ”När du får oväntat besök” låter det numera, varthän man ser eller hör.Medan surrealismen sjunkit in i vardagen, eller bättre sagt: medan surrealismen blev vardagen, begravdes minnet av att rörelsen hade börjat som ett politiskt företag. Och inte bara det: som det sista revolutionära projekt som föddes inom borgerligheten. Ett dussin välbärgade män från Paris skulle göra revolt, inte bara i konsten, utan också i det verkliga livet. De vägrade utopin, förkastade kompromisser, avskydde återhållsamhet, avböjde priser och stipendier. De vill inte ens ha ett yrke. I stället vördade de våldet som en form av praktisk poesi. Den moderna världen, menade de, består av dåliga kompromisser, som bara blir värre. Man måste kapa åt sig denna värld, för att visa att verkligheten kan förändras. Konsekvent nog fick de i egen person uppleva historien i all sin brutalitet, de fick gå i exil, hamnade i fängelset, blev åtalade för högförräderi, och till sist skingrades deras dödsbon över hela klotet.Konsthistorien, denna knappt dolda form av likplundring, som Breton betecknade den, hann trots allt ifatt dem. Surrealismen i sin ursprungliga betydelse finns dock kvar. Men den har bytt politisk sida. ”Everything is wrong”, kunde man höra Donald Trump säga, ”allting är fel.” Surrealisterna kunde inte sagt det bättre.Thomas Steinfeldförfattare, kulturhistoriker och översättare
Vidste du godt, at det kan tage 3 til 15 gange længere tid for en kvinde at opnå orgasme, sammenlignet med manden? At kvindens klitoris kan være 50 gange så følsomt som mandens pikhoved & det var Freuds skyld, at vi alt for længe har troet, at kvinder kan få en såkaldt “skedeorgasme”?Den her samtale bør alle lytte til. Hvertfald alle der er involveret i en kvindes sexliv. Min gæst er Ditte Winkel, som er sexolog, parterapeut, tv- & radio & podcastvært bl.a. i podcasten ‘Tænd for mig' med Josefine Stork. Ditte har også en sexbrevkasse ved Alt for Damerne.Du kan bl.a. høre om:Det kvindelige kønsorgan & hvorfor den individuelle, anatomiske placering af klitoris påvirker orgasmeHvad der sker i din hjerne ved orgasmeHvad en orgasme er & hvorfor alle orgasmer er klitorisorgasmerFreuds misinformation om kvinder & orgasme & hvordan det stadig i dag påvirkerOrgasmekløftenForskelle mellem kvinder & mænd når det gælder orgasmeDe to forskellige former for sexlyst & hvordan de påvirker et parforhold Sexlegetøj Hvad du kan gøre hvis du har svært ved at opnå orgasmeFysiologiske & mentale ting der påvirker muligheden for at opnå orgasmeOg så svarer Ditte også på:Hvordan du kan få din orgasme til at vare i længere tidHvordan man kan aflære sin skam omkring alt ved det her emneHvordan vi får lagt et godt fundament i vores børn & deres seksualitet Det er i en 30 minutter lang ekstra optagelse, som du finder i Klub ENHED via min hjemmeside noellelise.comHvis du var glad for samtalen her, så husk endelig at skriv en anmeldelse, giv nogle stjerner, like Instagram opslag, del den med en ven - ja send gerne lidt energi tilbage til ENHED rummet. Det sætter jeg & ENHED stor pris på.Tak fordi du lytter med, Stort kram, NoellEpisoder du med fordel kan lytte til:#23 Lyst, begær & sansning med Amanda Lagoni#28 Cyklus, menstruation & alternativ prævention m.m. med Augusta Søndergaard #104 Bliv klogere på klitoris, vulva, yoni; Kvindens underliv & forbindelsen til dit hjerte & bryst med Stephanie von d'Ahe Grau#83 Seksuelle fantasier med Amanda Lagoni#96 Hvorfor det seksuelle rum ofte er baseret på forestillinger & ikke ens egen nydelse: Tantra, porno, nydelse & seksualitet med Fie SommerSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/enhed-med-noell-elise. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Det her er del 2 af samtalen med Ditte Winkel. Det anbefales at du går tilbage i dit podcast feed & lytter til del 1, inden du lytter med her.Vidste du godt, at det kan tage 3 til 15 gange længere tid for en kvinde at opnå orgasme, sammenlignet med manden? At kvindens klitoris kan være 50 gange så følsomt som mandens pikhoved & det var Freuds skyld, at vi alt for længe har troet, at kvinder kan få en såkaldt “skedeorgasme”?Den her samtale bør alle lytte til. Hvertfald alle der er involveret i en kvindes sexliv. Min gæst er Ditte Winkel, som er sexolog, parterapeut, tv- & radio & podcastvært bl.a. i podcasten ‘Tænd for mig' med Josefine Stork. Ditte har også en sexbrevkasse ved Alt for Damerne.Du kan bl.a. høre om:Det kvindelige kønsorgan & hvorfor den individuelle, anatomiske placering af klitoris påvirker orgasmeHvad der sker i din hjerne ved orgasmeHvad en orgasme er & hvorfor alle orgasmer er klitorisorgasmerFreuds misinformation om kvinder & orgasme & hvordan det stadig i dag påvirkerOrgasmekløftenForskelle mellem kvinder & mænd når det gælder orgasmeDe to forskellige former for sexlyst & hvordan de påvirker et parforhold Sexlegetøj Hvad du kan gøre hvis du har svært ved at opnå orgasmeFysiologiske & mentale ting der påvirker muligheden for at opnå orgasmeOg så svarer Ditte også på:Hvordan du kan få din orgasme til at vare i længere tidHvordan man kan aflære sin skam omkring alt ved det her emneHvordan vi får lagt et godt fundament i vores børn & deres seksualitet Det er i en 30 minutter lang ekstra optagelse, som du finder i Klub ENHED via min hjemmeside noellelise.comHvis du var glad for samtalen her, så husk endelig at skriv en anmeldelse, giv nogle stjerner, like Instagram opslag, del den med en ven - ja send gerne lidt energi tilbage til ENHED rummet. Det sætter jeg & ENHED stor pris på.Tak fordi du lytter med, Stort kram, NoellEpisoder du med fordel kan lytte til:#23 Lyst, begær & sansning med Amanda Lagoni#28 Cyklus, menstruation & alternativ prævention m.m. med Augusta Søndergaard #104 Bliv klogere på klitoris, vulva, yoni; Kvindens underliv & forbindelsen til dit hjerte & bryst med Stephanie von d'Ahe Grau#83 Seksuelle fantasier med Amanda Lagoni#96 Hvorfor det seksuelle rum ofte er baseret på forestillinger & ikke ens egen nydelse: Tantra, porno, nydelse & seksualitet med Fie SommerSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/enhed-med-noell-elise. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Skrattet är en lättnad i mörkret. Men enligt psykologen och författaren Jenny Jägerfeld kan humorn också vara omstörtande när den visar vilka strukturer vi sitter fast i. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. ESSÄ: Detta är en text där skribenten reflekterar över ett ämne eller ett verk. Åsikter som uttrycks är skribentens egna. Ursprungligen publicerad 14/3 2017.Jag skämtade bara! Det måste vara en av de vanligaste fraserna i språket. Men kan ett skämt verkligen bara vara ett skämt? Är det inte alltid något mer?Sigmund Freud samlade på skämt i hela sitt liv. I sin essä om humor berättar han om den dödsdömda mannen som på morgonen, precis innan sin avrättning vandrar ut på galgbacken, ser galgen framför sig, ser sitt öde och därefter tittar upp mot himlen där solen lyser och säger: "Veckan börjar fint i alla fall!" Galghumor i sin mest ursprungliga form.Freud förklarar att det som händer i skämtet är att den dödsdömda mannen ser på sig själv utifrån och tycker att han är skrattretande, rentav löjlig, att situationen är absurd. När man gör det, ser sig själv utifrån på det sättet och kan skratta åt sig själv så är det befriande och upplyftande, menar Freud. Det intressanta är att Freud tänker sig att det är överjaget som ligger bakom skämtandet.Freud ansåg att humor var den allra största av försvarsmekanismer.Överjaget behöver alltså inte bara vara en internaliserad uppläxande röst som säger åt dig att jobba hårdare, frosta av frysen, sopa upp gruset i hallen, utan kan också uppmana dig att skratta åt situationen eftersom den är så absurd. Skrattet blir ett försvar mot smärtan, ett sätt för överjaget att ta hand om jaget. Freud ansåg att humor var den allra största av försvarsmekanismer. Jag är böjd att hålla med.För en tid sedan var jag på en begravning, det var en mycket nära väns man som hade gått bort, bara trettionio år gammal. Det var vidrigt, fullständigt avskyvärt. Jag grät, en skakande fulgråt som aldrig tycktes ta slut. När deras son lade en blomma på kistan med sin lilla knubbiga hand kändes det bokstavligen som om jag skulle gå sönder. Och då var min sorg bara en skugga av min väns.När ceremonin var över var det dags att gå bort till församlingslokalen för kaffe. Jag kramade om min vän hårt och vi grät i varandras armar, sminket rann gråsvart över kinderna. Vi bytte några ord om hur fint det var att så många kommit dit, för att minnas och hedra hennes man. "Ja", sa min vän, "till och med pappa". Jag visste sedan länge hur ogärna hennes pappa lämnade sin lilla by på västkusten, hur intensivt han ogillade dryga huvudstadsbor. "Tänk", sa hon. "... tänk att det skulle krävas att min man dog, för att pappa skulle komma upp till Stockholm". Så skrattade vi båda så högt att folk vände sig om.Jag kan egentligen inte komma på så många platser eller tillfällen där det känns mindre lämpligt att skratta än just på en begravning, i en kyrka. Men ändå gjorde vi precis just det. Och i den korta stund då skrattet skakade våra kroppar, då var sorgen tillfälligt satt på paus. Precis i den stunden var den inte lika rakbladsvass. I just det ögonblicket behövde min vän inte tänka på hur hennes liv skulle gestalta sig, ensam med sonen, ensam med ansvaret och alla beslut, ensam med sorgen och minnena.Om man får en sådan där paus ibland, om man tillfälligt blir befriad och upplyft så orkar man mer, då blir det lättare att överleva. Andra försvarsmekanismer gör att vi förnekar, tränger under, projicerar ut saker på någon annan. Humorn gör inget sådant. Får oss bara att vila en liten stund, ger oss en liten paus från sorg, ångest eller fruktan. Lindrar bättre än psykofarmaka.Men humor är inte bara en försvarsmekanism, något som kan lindra psykisk smärta. Humor kan också vara ett sätt att få syn på oss själva eller omvärlden från ett annat håll. Ett oväntat skämt kan riva ett litet hål i den väv som utgör vår vanliga syn på världen och plötsligt göra oss medvetna om vårt eget skeva eller ologiska synsätt.Samhället och vårt liv som sociala människor är konstruerat kring en mängd riter. Riter i bemärkelsen symboliska handlingar som får mening av ett antal socialt legitimerade symboler. Överenskommelser om hur världen bör fungera, hur saker ska gå till. Som till exempel en begravning. Vi har en präst, en ceremoni, en kista som vi ligger blommor ovanpå, vi bär svarta kläder, vi dricker kyrkkaffe efteråt. Ett bröllop har andra riter, ett barnkalas sina. Vi har till och med riter, scheman, rutiner eller vad vi nu ska kalla det, för hur det brukar gå till när man handlar mat.Filosofen Simon Critchley menar att skämt är anti-riter. Skämten pekar på, synliggör riterna, och plötsligt kan vi se dem, se strukturen bakom. Ett skämt kan också peka på när något eller någon bryter mönstret, bryter rutinen och inte uppträder som förväntat. Critchley tänker att skämtet är ett slags antropologiskt inverterad spegel av samhället. Om vi kan förstå vad man skrattar åt i en särskild kultur, i ett särskilt samhälle, i en särskild grupp, då kan vi förstå hur det samhället, kulturen, gruppen fungerar, menar han. Det är därför humor är så svårt att översätta. Och det är därför humor är det absolut sista man greppar när man lär sig ett nytt, främmande språk, när man kommer till ett nytt land.En riktig komiker, menar Critchley, är en modig människa, en sådan som vågar se vad publiken skyggar undan ifrån. Som vågar se och säga vad som skrämmer eller sårar dem, eller kanske vad de innerst inne längtar efter. Ett sådant skämt kan frigöra oss, göra att vi får syn på oss själva och omvärlden.Trots att humor ofta är lokal och specifik för det enskilda samhället, landet eller gruppen man befinner sig i så, så började det i och med sociala medier uppstå en viss typ av global humor. Jag tänker framför allt på de otaliga Trump-skämt som formligen översvämmade nätet. Bilder med korta texter som "Orange is the new black" eller "Who wore it better" där Trumps frisyr jämförs med de ljusgula, små hårliknande testarna som kommer från toppen av en majskolv.Eller alla oräkneliga skämt rörande den klassiska bild där Trump, omgiven av åtta, nio män, skriver på ordern om att stoppa federalt stöd till organisationer om de så bara informerar om abort. I någon av skämtbilderna så får man istället för att se Trump hålla upp abortordern se honom rita från siffra till siffra i en målarbok gjord för barn. På någon annan skämtbild håller han i en teckning av en katt som ser ut att vara gjord av en tvååring.Ett tag funderade jag på om de där skämten egentligen är så bra. Om de inte bara är meningslösa cynismer som visserligen ger oss ett tillfälligt andrum, en temporär respit, men inte förändrar någonting alls i grunden. Att vi bara fortsätter gå mot galgen efter vår korta oneliner, som i Freuds skämt: "Veckan började ju i alla fall fint!"För då är vi är inte fångar längre. Då kan vi organisera oss.Men sedan insåg jag att det där lilla andrummet, den där respiten kanske är nödvändig just för att orka göra något. Vi ser på världen, vi ser vad som händer och måste i en liten stund få känna att det är så sjukt att det är skrattretande, att det är så otroligt dumt och vidrigt att man bara måste skratta. Precis som på den där begravningen, där vi skrattade till en stund för att orka. För att få en liten paus i den ångestfyllda, depressiva stämningen. Det är befriande och upplyftande som Freud sa.För humorn är inte bara en ypperlig försvarsmekanism som skyddar oss mot psykisk smärta. Den får oss också att se världen i annat ljus, se strukturen vi är intvingade i, riterna. Och genom det kan vi plötsligt agera på ett annat vis. För då är vi är inte fångar längre. Då kan vi organisera oss. Och då är skämtet något mycket, mycket större, än bara ett skämt.Jenny Jägerfeldpsykolog och författare
Christina Kim, a former Freuds exec and now corporate PR manager at travel technology firm Yanolja, joins Maja Pawinska Sims on the PRovoke Media podcast to talk about how a blend of speed, quality, and trust has helped Korean brands rise on the global stage. As a Korean who now lives and works in New York, Kim shares how this cultural identity has shaped not just her career in PR but also the global success of Korean brands such as Samsung, Hyundai, LG and K-beauty products.
Hoffinger, Isa www.deutschlandfunk.de, Sonntagsspaziergang
„Die zunehmende Entfremdung zwischen Ost und West hat ihre Wurzeln auch in der unterschiedlichen psychohistorischen Prägung.“Wir sprechen heute über den Osten und das Unbewusste. Oder, um es anders zu sagen: Wie der Osten die Psychoanalyse verbannte.Ausgehend von Freuds Entdeckung des Unbewussten vollzog sich in den USA und dann in Westeuropa im 20. Jahrhundert ein »psychological turn«, der in einer Neupositionierung von Individuum und Gesellschaft mündete.Und der Osten? Nach einem anfänglich starken Interesse an Tiefenpsychologie und Analyse wurden unter Stalin alle individualpsychologischen Ansätze verbannt und durch die rein biologistische Theorie von Iwan Pawlow ersetzt. Über die gesellschaftlichen Auswirkungen, die das Fehlen der Auseinandersetzung mit sich selbst haben kann, spricht Alev Doğan in diesem Achten Tag mit dem Historiker Andreas Petersen. ID:{3Kfmq32ZSqFEjheF7dNWsN}
Send us a Text Message.This Episode was first made available on Patreon on the 8th of June 2023.For similar material and an early release ad-free version of the regular podcast follow me at at;patreon.com/JeremyMcCandlessDreams and Divinity: Freud and Biblical RevelationsSigmund Freud's “The interpretation of Dreams “ (Published1899)A critical analysis of Freuds theory of dream interpretation from a Christian Perspective:Welcome to the podcast "Dreams and Divinity: Freud and Biblical Revelations." In this bonus this episode, I will explore Sigmund Freud's renowned work "The Interpretation of Dreams" from a Christian perspective and compare it to the examples of revelatory dreams as seen in the Bible.This episode draws together my thoughts and musing prior to attending a History of Psychology discussion group I attended on 6th June 2023.Part 1 - Biography.Part 2 - Book and Theory Review (The Interpretation of Dreams - 1899)Part 3 - Freud's Theory of Dream Interpretation in Comparison and Contrast to the Examples of Revelatory Dreams seen in the Bible:Part 4 - Biblical Dreams and their Interpretation.Support the Show.Jeremy McCandless is creating podcasts and devotional resources | PatreonHelp us continue making great content for listeners everywhere.https://thebibleproject.buzzsprout.com
Freuds "Traumdeutung" ist nicht nur ein zentrales Werk der frühen Pyschoanalyse sondern auch heute noch eine echte moralische Provokation. Über seine zentrale These, dass jeder Traum eine Wunscherfüllung ist, kommt Freud zu einer Theorie des Unbewusste, in das unsere moralisch verwerflichen Wünsche verdrängt sind. Erst wenn im Schlaf die "Zensur" unseres Denkens geschwächt ist, dringen sie im Traum in verschlüsselter Form wieder in das Bewusstsein.
Emma Eckstein war einst Patientin bei Sigmund Freud. Ein ärztlicher Kunstfehler, an dem Freud beteiligt war, hatte ihr Gesicht entstellt. Der Psychoanalyse blieb sie verbunden. Sie behandelte selbst Patientinnen und engagierte sich für Frauenrechte. Billig, Susanne www.deutschlandfunk.de, Kalenderblatt
Albert Camus (1913-1960) var forfatter og filosof med hovedinteresse for menneskets eksistensielle vilkår under ”total frihet”. I Sisyfos-myten (denne utg.1992) tegner Camus sitt bilde av vår eksistens og den absurde opplevelsen når livets store fortellinger frarøves sin gyldighet. Myten omhandler Sisyfos som dytter en stein opp på toppen av et fjell hvorpå den alltid ruller ned igjen. Camus forklarer at myten er tragisk fordi Sisyfos er skremmende klar over sitt forehavendes totale meningsløshet. Tidligere hvilte mennesket i troen på ideologier som rotfestet deres aktiviteter i en meningsfull kontekst. I følge Camus kan vi kanskje si at livslede er mangel på mytologi. Moderne tid har belyst, avklart, avslørt, demystifisert, desillusjonert, konstatert og demytologisert den menneskelige situasjon. I vitenskapens navn er mennesket og verden plukket fra hverandre. Psykoanalyse og sosiologi har lagt frem dystre rapporter som lodder den uutgrunnelige, ubevisste dybde i vår mangel på kontroll over egen situasjon.Pessoa er en portugisisk forfatter i samme ånd. Han er smertelig klar over konsekvensene for mennesket som tar kalkulasjon og kvantifisering som konstituenter for rasjonalitet og realitet. ”Dekadence er det totale afkald på ubevidsthed; for ubevidsthed er selve livsgrundlaget. Hvis hjertet begyndte at tænke, ville det holde op med at slå” (1997a, pp. 17). Pessoa poengterer at vi ikke kan tro med vår fornuft. Det moderne menneskets ridderferd mot sannhet med fornuften som hærfører, vil møte en verden som slår tilbake med paradokser av umenneskelig størrelsesorden. Her oppstår visse psykiske klimaendringer, og Freuds hysteriske pasienter avløses av pasienter som lider av apati, relasjonsfattigdom, depersonalisering, ensomhet, demoralisering, tomhet og eksistensiell angst (Kirsner 2003, pp. 12-13). Individualisme og frihet er satt i høysetet, men for mange betyr det at selve fundamentet for en trygg eksistens vakler. De kollektive fortellingene om livets strabaser, som man tidligere brukte som ”dannelseshistorier” og ”livsveileder”, har mistet sin betydningsfulle posisjon, og dermed står individet i større grad alene med friheten til å velge selv (!)Problemet mitt rent personlig er at jeg er redd for å dø, og derfor skulle jeg ønske at jeg klarte å tro på et liv etter døden, en høyere mening og en gudommelig plan bak livets tjas og mas. Hvis jeg virkelig trodde at det fantes et liv etter døden, så hadde det dempet min dødsangst ganske mye. Så lenge jeg ikke tror på det, må jeg håndtere mine tanker om døden på en annen måte. Fra psykologien harjeg lært at vanskelige tanker og følelser er noe vi bør tåle og forstå, istedenfor å unngå dem. Min første innskytelse i forhold til døden, er å tenke på noe annet, men jeg tror ikke det løser problemet, snarere tvert imot. Jeg tror vi må konfrontere våre eksistensielle grunnvikår, memento mori, selv om det kan være en smertefull og vanskelig prosess. Derfor vil SinnSyn av og til bevege seg ut på dypt eksistensielt vann for å lodde dybden, og du er herved invitert til et dypdykk i døden, friheten og det meningsløse. Vi fødes, strever en stund og så dør vi på lik linje med alt annet som er levende. Det er det. Her dukker det opp en ny eksistensiell «trussel», nemlig den gnagende følelsen av meningsløshet. For Camus var den materielle verden i utgangspunktet blottet for mening, og den erkjennelsen kan altså være tung å bære, men hvis vi klarer å bære den, kan den faktisk fungere som en paradoksal form for livskraft. Det skal vi se på litt senere i dagens episode. Få tilgang til ALT ekstramateriale som medlem på SinnSyns Mentale Helsestudio via SinnSyn-appen her: https://www.webpsykologen.no/et-mentalt-helsestudio-i-lomma/ eller som Patreon-Medlem her: https://www.patreon.com/sinnsyn. For reklamefri pod og bonus-episoder kan du bli SinnSyn Pluss abonnent her https://plus.acast.com/s/sinnsyn. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sigmund Freud är en av 1900-talets mest inflytelserika tänkare. Hans teorier har också mött kritik. Vad är det som gör att hans idéer fortsätter att inspirera psykologin, forskningen och kulturen? Programmet sändes första gången i februari 2023. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Sigmund Freud föddes i Freiberg 1856 och flyttade som barn till Wien där han kom att tillbringa större delen av sitt liv. 1939 dog han i London dit han som jude flytt nazismen.Han blev ett världsnamn redan under sin levnad som psykoanalysens grundare. Hans teorier om det omedvetna, om bortträngda tankar och inre konflikter som genom fria associationer kunde spåras i drömmar har omfamnats och kritiserats genom åren. Freuds relevans idagHur mycket av Freuds tankegods präglar hur vi ser på människans psyke, barndomens betydelse och samhällets påverkan på människan? Hur kan vi använda Freud för att analysera vår samtid? Vad är relevant och vad är förlegat i hans teorier?Medverkande: Cecilia Sjöholm, professor i estetik vid Södertörns högskola, Johan Eriksson , filosof och psykoanalytiker och Helena Granström, författare, fysiker och matematiker. Programledare: Cecilia Strömberg WallinProducent: Marie Liljedahl
Poeten och psykoanalytikern Ulf Karl Olov Nilsson har läst en serie böcker om Sigmund Freuds semestervanor. En verksamhet som liknar den psykoanalytiska praktiken. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. ESSÄ: Detta är en text där skribenten reflekterar över ett ämne eller ett verk. Åsikter som uttrycks är skribentens egna. Denna essä sändes första gången i augusti 2016.Brittiska konstnären och författaren Sharon Kivland har tagit sig an ett angenämt konstnärligt uppdrag: hon upprepar Sigmund Freuds semesterresor. Under femtontalet år har hon tagit in på samma hotell, försökt äta samma mat på samma eller åtminstone liknande restauranger, skrivit vykort från samma platser och försökt efterlikna små scener som Freud beskrivit. På sin tågresa till Herzegovina hoppas hon exempelvis intensivt kunna inleda en konversation med en okänd belevad medresenär, gärna en advokat, att diskutera freskerna i Orvieto med och turkiska seders förhållande till död och sexualitet. Precis som Freud själv gör i det berömda inledningsavsnittet i sin bok om felhandlingar, Vardagslivets psykopatologi.Bildmaterialet är svartvitt, suddigt, avsiktligt amatöristiskt och nästan fritt från människor.Freud gjorde semesterresor varje år fram till första världskriget, ofta först med familjen till alperna och sedan i september till Italien med sin yngre bror Alexander, en expert på reserutter och tidtabeller. Och när jag säger expert menar jag det verkligen, Alexander Freud höll föreläsningar om tåg och tariffer på Export-Akademien i Wien och skrev veckovisa rapporter om saken i tidningen Allgemeiner Verkers-Anzeiger. Sharon Kivland i sin tur reser med sin syster och de första åren hänger hennes son med, innan han så småningom menar sig ha fått andra intressen än väderförhållanden och val av bakverk på Sigmund Freuds Italienresor. En bra grej med sonens närvaro är att Kivland sanningsenligt kan underteckna sina vykort med S. F., som förutom att vara Freuds initialer också är de för Sharon och Francis, sonens namn.Kivlands semestrande har resulterat i en serie om åtta nätta och stramt formgivna volymer, ”Freud on holiday”, illustrerade med tidstypiska vykort, tidtabeller och egna foton på gator och torg, båtar, tågstationer. Bildmaterialet är svartvitt, suddigt, avsiktligt amatöristiskt och nästan fritt från människor.Kivland presenterar inte Freuds resor kronologiskt utan i förhållande till psykoanalytiska frågor och teman i sitt eget och Freuds liv: i en bok undersöker hon vandringens och flanerandets förhållande till fri association och bor på det förmodligen mest kända Freudhotellet, Hotel du Lac, vid sjön Lavarone i norra Italien. I nästa bok erfar hon med Sigmund och Alexander Freud en känsla av melankoli i Trieste men tar sig som dem med båt till Aten och inte bara närläser utan liksom upplever artikeln ”En minnesstörning på Akropolis”. Freud själv darrade av nervositet och förväntan när han närmade sig Akropolis och när han till sist kom dit utbrast han i ett slags turistens credo: ”Så allt det här existerar verkligen, precis som vi lärde oss i skolan.”Frågan inställer sig således: Vad är det jag faktiskt mest av allt vill göra?I boken ”Freuds dreams of Rome” beskriver hon Freuds sammanlagt fyra återgivna drömmar om Rom och hans resor dit, framför allt den sista från 1923, då han nyligen diagnosticerats med käkcancer. Hans läkare Felix Deutsch ville att Freud skulle få en fin resa och höll inne med sjukdomsbeskedet. Någon som kände till saken var dock hans reskamrat, Anna Freud. Ingen lätt börda för en dotter att bära, får man förmoda. Kivlands Rom-budget tillåter dock inte, som Freuds, tre veckor på fashionabla Hotel Eden, det hade kostat henne 11 tusen Euro, alltså 104 tusen svenska kronor, för ett ordinärt dubbelrum, utan får nöja sig med tre dagar. Vi får hålla tummarna för mer stipendiepengar till henne nästa år.Att frågan om semester har att göra med begäret och livets mening är uppenbart. Det är ju på semestern det finns tid att göra vad man vill. Frågan inställer sig således: Vad är det jag faktiskt mest av allt vill göra? Det är ingen lätt sak, utan en fråga som regelmässigt ger upphov till mer obehag än lust.Men Freud var på bra humör på semestrarna, han var uppe tidigt, tog en espresso, tände en Trabucco-cigarr och satte på sig äppelknyckarbyxorna, ivrig att komma iväg på vandringar, museibesök, shopping. Som bortblåst var hans vanligtvis lite lynniga och nedstämda allvar. Freud gillade att bada, men inte att fiska. Freud gillade att lukta på den vaniljdoftande Brunkullan, Jämtlands landskapsblomma. Men mest tyckte han om att plocka champinjoner. I de alpina sensommarskogarna hände det att han tävlade med sina barn om att hitta den mest välväxta svampen. När han fick syn på ett präktigt exemplar slängde han sin hatt på den, så att ingen annan skulle hinna före. Den stora skandalen i Freuds liv var dess frånvaro av skandaler.För Kivland liksom för Freud innebär dock själva resandet ett visst mått av ångest: Ska tåget komma i rätt tid? Kommer hotellet att vara bra? Hur ska den främmande miljön inverka på matsmältning, sömn, avföring? Kivland är särskilt nervös inför tågresor, speciellt efter att en gång ha missat ett flyg till Kanada till följd av ett försenat tåg. Och Freud fick 1890 eller 1891, han mindes inte riktigt, en ångestattack på tågstationen i Berchtesgaden och var efter detta alltid orolig för att missa tåget och anlände till stationen i absurt god tid. Avresan är, som han skriver i Drömtydning, en av de vanligaste och mest träffande symbolerna för döden."Allt sköljdes ned med ett vitt vin från Ischia, för två och halv lire flaskan.”Kivlands fyra avslutande volymer utgörs av appendix i form av tunna häften med rubrikerna ”Freuds dining”, ”Freuds weather”, ”Freuds hotels”, ”Freuds shopping”. Det är en inventering ur biografier, texter och inte minst dagböcker:Neapel, 31 augusti 1902: ”Middagen var utsökt. Först en soppa med pasta. Sedan fisk, grillat kalvkött med en sötsur sås, en sallad med gröna bönor, tre sorters ost och sedan frukt, bland annat druvor, den egentliga anledningen till mitt besök här. Allt sköljdes ned med ett vitt vin från Ischia, för två och halv lire flaskan.”Shoppingen då? Jo, Freud shoppade entusiastiskt och köpte omsorgsfullt valda presenter till hustrun och gåvor till bekanta, smycken, porslin, kläder. Och till sig själv: rökdon, favoritcigarrerna Don Pedros, böcker och en fin liten låda för sina slipsar. Men framför allt antikviteter som han lät skicka hem till Wien.Semester är en motsägelsefull sak; det är tiden för frihet, vila, avslappning, tupplurar i solstolen, flanerande, vitt vin på hotellbalkongen – varför inte en Sachertorte? Men också upplevelser, intensitet, nya smaker. Det är då vi tar som mest fotografier, det är undantagstillståndet som blir vårt livs minnesbild.Kivlands böcker har som utgångspunkt den på samma gång något ironiskt, men ändå så sanslöst omsorgsfullt, genomförda analogin mellan semestrandet och det psykoanalytiska arbetet. Också på stilens nivå har dessa tunna böcker en alldeles egen tonträff; sommarslö och lika uppmärksam som en tankspridd detektiv försöker hon finna något hon inte ens vet vad det är: det är det perfekta psykoanalytiska utgångsläget!Men semestrandets struktur handlar inte bara om att åka iväg utan också om att komma tillbaka till sitt arbetsjag. Det är det som skiljer semester från arbetslöshet eller pensionärstillvaro. Hemkomstens efterverkan på resan. Semestern är det vuxna livets tittutlek. Fort/Da. Jag var borta, men nu är jag tillbaka.Ulf Karl Olov Nilsson, författare och psykoanalytiker
Vi avslutar vårterminen genom att titta närmare på en av de mest grundläggande hörnstenarna inom skräckfilmen: demonisk besatthet. Tomas uttrycker sina tvivel inför att en ämbetsman ur den protestantiska svenska kyrkan skulle kunna bidra med något annat vid en demonutdrivning än att bli uppäten, och Lars tycker att den svidande aggressiva retoriken i rättssalen i The Exorcism of Emily Rose är otäckare än nästan allt annat som tas upp i avsnittet. Vi pratar också om: Exorcisten, Mats Strandberg, Hemmet, The Last Exorcism, The Taking of Deborah Logan, The Possession, Véronica, The Devil on Trial, The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It, Hereditary, Linda Blair, Amityville II: The Possession, Scott Derrickson, Sinister, Anneliese Michael, Juryn: A Time to Kill, Suspiria, Tom Wilkinson, Grady Hendrix, My Best Friend's Exorcism, Jennifer Carpenter, Mike Flanagan, brottet mot reciprocitetsprincipen, Edvard Munch, Laura Linney och Freuds återigen användbara begrepp das Unheimliche. Bakom Patreon-vägg fortsätter samtalet lika länge till, i det att vi fokuserar diskussionen till ett äldre och ett nyare exempel i den vid det här laget ganska välfyllda kategorin skräckfilm om andevärldens invasion av den mänskliga kroppen. Besök för all del gärna www.patreon.com/vargtimmenpodcast för mer information om hur du kan lyssna på det. Nostalgi, löst tyckande och akademisk analys.
Was braucht man für die Psychoanalyse? Auf jeden Fall einen Diwan. Keiner wusste das wohl besser als Sigmund Freud. Daher musste das Möbel natürlich mit, als er vor den Nationalsozialisten floh, mit dem Orient-Express über Paris nach London, wo es noch heute das Sigmund-Freud-Museum ziert.
Introduction: David Rothauser, MA, MS, PCC, PsyA is an executive coach, coach supervisor, educator and psychoanalyst who has worked in leadership & human development for over 20 years. David brings together expertise in these areas to offer a unique forum for growth and development. David trained in executive coaching at Columbia University, psychodynamic group leadership at the Centre for Group Studies, psychoanalysis at the Centre for Modern Psychoanalytic Studies and Coaching Supervision at Oxford Brookes University. David offers individual and group supervision for coaches and is currently the Chair of Coaching Supervision for the Association of Coaching, US region. On a personal note David lives outside of Philadelphia with his wife and two children. Podcast episode Summary: Supervision is explored through the prism of a live case that I brought to David as my Supervisor. David shares his approach and illuminates what can often remain mysterious & behind closed doors. We both opine on the value of Supervision and how it can bring relief and clarity from a place of being stuck as well as significant personal development. Questions asked & points made throughout the Episode: o Who are you? And could you share a bit about how you got to where you are today? David reminded us of his professional identities and when encouraged to go further went on to say that he is a husband, a father of toddlers which means it makes up a big part of his learning journey today. David went onto say that he is a patient in his own therapy, in individual and group therapy & a supervisee with multiple supervisors. o Supervision has been a vehicle for David, over his career to support his development. o The invisible parts of our practice means we do not get to see how we take care of our work. o What interests you or intrigues you about a psychoanalytic approach to team and individual coaching? David is a trained psychoanalyst and he used psychoanalysis for his own development for his work as a coach in the professional world. David started coaching in the educational sector. o David may not have encountered psychoanalysis if it wasn't for his sister who was training to be a therapist while David was training to become a school teacher early in his career. Looking across both domains David felt that the field of Psychoanalysis for postgraduate work felt richer and more compelling. David noticed his field was more behaviourally focused whereas his Sisters field was more about people working hard to make meaning. That field was focused on what makes people tick and how can work get done more effectively. David began to dabble and have experiences with psychoanalysis. He continued & pursued his interest, studied more and at this point is a graduate of two psychoanalytic institutes and has his own psychoanalytic practice. He does not think of his coaching perse as Psychoanalytic. o David is interested in being effective. This work has helped David explore cases where he was stuck, where the reasonable and rationale approaches of other disciplines have not been of help. Psychoanalytic training & supervision provides a space where we can access more parts of self & engage creatively when the counter transference is puzzling, when for example emotions are difficult and we don't know what to do and where we are stuck. This realm has been a major orientation for David, where the emotional and relational fields are enhanced with a psychodynamic lens. o What do your clients appreciate about your approach and do they even know? What is common about David's Supervision sessions is that there is a feeling of relief and an opening up for new creative possibilities. o David takes an understanding based approach and in a lot of ways David draws on different disciplines, education, sociology, philosophy and psychoanalysis. When we are stuck we don't understand what is happening. It calls for more meaning making. o At this point I re-introduced a case I had brought to David for Supervision. My case is a small team about whom I was stuck. I was curious to see if David, for the sake of my podcast listeners, could help me decode the approach David took, the potency of supervision & how it served me and my client at the time. David wondered too. o David shared that there is something about this work where there is a mystique about it. There are many kinds of supervision some for example where there is direct observation of a coach coaching with their client. The supervisor will observe a person actually coaching whereas a psychodynamic approach happens behind closed doors. o We decided to try and David asked “how shall we try” Whilst I endeavoured to revisit the case David suggested that “we back up a little” to share how he thinks about the work o A unique contribution of coaching & team coaching is offering an opportunity to the client to see themselves in new ways, to access their own creativity so that they can make new choices about what they want to do and how they want to be with others. No matter the discipline or theoretical orientation CBT, positive psychology, a PhD in coaching psychology or whatever the way we relate has a profound impact on the quality & outcomes of the work o One area of work that can always be expanded and deepened is the work we do on ourselves. It is a lifelong process to know yourself and to use yourself. The difficulties we experience with clients like fear, hopelessness, anxiety, shame and not having access to our minds is natural o Many of us in the helping professions are drawn to this work, either consciously or unconsciously because of the roles we picked up from our family of origin. That was when we were first introduced to our emotional lives. There were things we learnt about our feelings that were going to be acceptable and those we learnt to avoid. Our interpersonal tendencies around openness and avoidance were learnt in our early families. o Often the feelings that pose challenges for our clients are feelings that we have learnt to avoid or step around. As a supervisor they are the clients David hears about from his supervisees & the ones he brings to his own supervisor. o I shared my experience of working with my client and the feelings that were evoked in me especially the ones, fear of rejection, that I find intolerable. This is the value of talking. o Psychoanalysis is the talking cure and coaching is a kind of talking cure too and supervision is too. o In supervision with David, we dreamed up my case together. In our collaborative dialogue I was able to speak what might have been unspeakable for the client, to say more and more and more about what was happening. David pays attention to his supervisees and their subjective experience. He works to help supervisees make meaning and understand what is inside of them. David is happy to work & to talk about what to do but he leans more in terms of helping clients reach understanding. o Many of us come to supervision to wonder what to do and the question becomes to what end? o Looking for ways “to do” can sometimes be about avoiding the work of understanding and meaning and sometimes not. Brainstorming things to do or interventions to offer can provide avenues to see a way forward. Using our imaginations for example in a session like “what do I really want to say to this client in a world with no consequences” “what would I tell these people?” Some of those kinds of imagination exercises can be freeing. o The unconscious is not a civilised place. It can be unruly. This is how we can get stuck with our cases when some of our more unruly parts get activated & our more professional parts are hard at work to make sure those parts do not get air time. That is why it is important in a supervision space to create a playful open space for any words to be expressed. o How to deal with resistance on teams? Resistance is a word that can bring up a lot of resistance. The view of resistance that is helpful is that resistances are defences. They are needed to protect. There is no such thing as a relation without some form of protection. Peoples reluctances tell us something, they communicate something to us to us non-verbally. We will get a feeling that something is afoot or that this is a no go topic. Sometimes resistances show up not just in the non-verbal field but in the behavioural field, coming late to sessions, cancelling sessions etc.. these are all forms of behavioural resistances. o Freuds ideas about resistance, the original psychoanalytical conception, or resistance to free association was what he was interested in. He gave instructions to patients to say everything which was of course an impossible task. It was Freuds observation that something would interfere with the patient saying everything and he called that interference the resistance. Each person resisted the task of “saying everything” in a unique way. Freuds idea was that it was the transference or the patients expectations of the authority figure that made up the fuel for the resistance. o Freud had a particular method of intervention and there are many others ways of working with resistance today that are supportive, relieving and safety making for clients to find new ways to get the self-protection they need. o What are some of those ways of working with Resistance? A coaching client brought a case to David where the client of the supervisee was not doing the work, the reflection work, the work in between sessions and the coach was left with the feeling that they were doing all of the work. The coach had an uneasy feeling that something was not right. It did not feel to the coach that the client had any real skin in the game. David and his client imagined how to join the clients resistance. Just be like the client, not in a tongue in cheek sarcastic way but simply meeting the client where they are. If you have an ambivalent client it is not going to be helpful to be eager with them o The coaches mindset – a supervisee who already had the idea that there was resistance with her client enabled David and his client to work on the idea that the client was trying to protect themselves in the coaching process and they were then able to be curious about how and why that was the case. Resistance is important it is serving a protective function is a very different conversation than what can happen in coaching where a diagnosis is made and a conclusion drawn, for example this client is un-coachable o Resistance is mysterious because they are hidden or non-verbal in so many cases. So one feature of resistance in this work is that we feel it and it lives in our body before we can put thought or words to it. o If as a coach you feel those feelings you may or may not chose to reveal them to your client but you can of course speak to them in supervision. It is case dependent. o Winnicott's idea about the use of an object is an important idea that David takes into his coaching. For any of us to make use of another is a developmental proposition. David needs to know how a client makes use of him. He wants to know how he is perceived and how what comes from him might be perceived and made use of. David needs to have an imagination about that, a sense that the client will give him and he treads carefully assessing the appetite or motivation a client has for the work. It tends not to go so well in a coaching or other helping profession to give something that the client is not asking for. It is a primary task in the coaching relationship to understand what is wanted. o Coaches can be busy “cooking up stuff” to feel useful and of value especially in the face of uncomfortable feelings. o The phenomenon of not knowing can be very hard for everyone, being in the mystery of how the client is making use of our work or the work with us can be unnerving especially as each of us has a relationship with not knowing. o We explored so many topics across this podcast and David bemused that we did not speak to the unconscious. He chose “to leave it out there” as something we could pick up on another conversation and podcast. o David ended the podcast by sharing information about his practice. He occasionally has spaces in supervision groups and individual supervision programs and he is available on LinkedIn and he is happy to talk. o Finally after being asked how he wanted to close the conversation David shared how he didn't want to close the conversation. He really enjoys talking with me about these topics and looks forward to more opportunities like this in the future. Resources shared across this podcast 1. https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidrothauser/ 2. Donald Winnicott English paediatrician and psychoanalyst
If there was a Mount Rushmore for psychology our Subject today would definitely make the cut. Today we talk about the mythopoetic, esoteric, and eccentric genius that would expound on Freuds theory and create a framework of thought, identifying a collective soul of humanity that would influence us all whether we realize it or not.This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try by going to betterhelp.com/NOTHING and get 10% off your first month.Support the showFollow The Unconventional Therapist's Guide to Nothing on social media:Instagram: @unconventionaltherapistsguidetonothingTwitter: @UTGN_PodcastIntro and Outro music by 13th Ward Social ClubFollow on Instagram at @13thwardsocialclub and visit https://www.13thwardsocialclub.com/
I discuss Freud with Garfieldbot, writer at "The Egg Report" on substack. He's writing a long series of articles reconsidering many of Freuds ideas, which he thinks are embedded in the framework of the modern individuals understanding of themselves, their relation to the world, and the primary mode of describing human interactions for all of the 20th century.Perhaps now its time for people like us to dispel these ideas, and you can do so without reading a now out of print book, The Ordeal of Civility, by John Murray Cuddihy. This book goes a long way to undermine the veneer of science and professionalism that Freud tried to cloak his rather petty ideas in. Today, we go into detail about some of Cuddihy's critiques of Freud. Follow me on substack and twitter, and please become a paid subscriber to my substack to help support me continue to bring this show to you, and gain access to content not otherwise available. Go to the Passage.Press website and pre order Xenosystems, buy Unqualified Reservations in Hardcover, buy Steve Sailer's Noticing, and subscribe to Man's World Magaine in FULL PRINT!
I discuss Freud with Garfieldbot, writer at "The Egg Report" on substack. He's writing a long series of articles reconsidering many of Freuds ideas, which he thinks are embedded in the framework of the modern individuals understanding of themselves, their relation to the world, and the primary mode of describing human interactions for all of the 20th century.Perhaps now its time for people like us to dispel these ideas, and you can do so without reading a now out of print book, The Ordeal of Civility, by John Murray Cuddihy. This book goes a long way to undermine the veneer of science and professionalism that Freud tried to cloak his rather petty ideas in. Today, we go into detail about some of Cuddihy's critiques of Freud. Follow me on substack and twitter, and please become a paid subscriber to my substack to help support me continue to bring this show to you, and gain access to content not otherwise available. Go to the Passage.Press website and pre order Xenosystems, buy Unqualified Reservations in Hardcover, buy Steve Sailer's Noticing, and subscribe to Man's World Magaine in FULL PRINT!
I discuss Freud with Garfieldbot, writer at "The Egg Report" on substack. He's writing a long series of articles reconsidering many of Freuds ideas, which he thinks are embedded in the framework of the modern individuals understanding of themselves, their relation to the world, and the primary mode of describing human interactions for all of the 20th century.Perhaps now its time for people like us to dispel these ideas, and you can do so without reading a now out of print book, The Ordeal of Civility, by John Murray Cuddihy. This book goes a long way to undermine the veneer of science and professionalism that Freud tried to cloak his rather petty ideas in. Today, we go into detail about some of Cuddihy's critiques of Freud. Follow me on substack and twitter, and please become a paid subscriber to my substack to help support me continue to bring this show to you, and gain access to content not otherwise available. Go to the Passage.Press website and pre order Xenosystems, buy Unqualified Reservations in Hardcover, buy Steve Sailer's Noticing, and subscribe to Man's World Magaine in FULL PRINT!
Sigmund Freud is the father of modern therapy, and the creator of psychoanalysis. His identification of the subconscious is as big a discovery as space, or the depths of the ocean. The exploration possibilities are endless. In todays episode we talk about Freuds contributions to the field as well as his controversial views. Support the showFollow The Unconventional Therapist's Guide to Nothing on social media:Instagram: @unconventionaltherapistsguidetonothingTwitter: @UTGN_PodcastIntro and Outro music by 13th Ward Social ClubFollow on Instagram at @13thwardsocialclub and visit https://www.13thwardsocialclub.com/
Anitha drömmer en dröm om grisar och ankor...som slutar på Freuds divan och i livstvivel! Jag blir baktalad i Good Luck Guys och inser att tillgången till ständigt nya liv (utan effort) och leken döda istället för att rädda, i kidsens tevespel, kommer skapa en Generation utan moral eller medkänsla.Familjer mot Soc och Frihetsrörelsen är det nya sekten? Pappa pappa dotter, som ofrivilligt triggar hat.Vi tappar det på stockholmsföräldrar som aldrig engagerar sig och tror att barn inte behöver peppande ögon bakom sidlinjen.Kan Anitha kontrollera sina demoner som diagnos-Barbro och vad säger flyttad skogräns på gymmet om vår labila framtid? Plus direktrapport från Gaza med svenska Rita. Det är Lillelördag och Anitha is on fire! Bli medlem i Lillelördag klubben och få ta del av specialpoddar och ofiltrerade analyser! https://plus.acast.com/s/lillelordag. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Forældreskabet kan være overvældende. Hvis du har det sådan, så er du ikke alene. Især i vores tid, har forældreskabet udviklet sig til en noget nær umulig opgave at løse, hvis vi skal leve op til de krav, der stilles fra alle sider. Jeg har det selv blandet med forældreskabet. Det er vigtigt og meningsfuldt for mig at gøre mig umage som mor. Jeg elsker fx. at lave god mad til børnene, involvere mig i forældrearbejdet på skolen, og jeg vil gerne være til stede i deres hverdag. På den anden side kan jeg på jævnlig basis se, at jeg bliver udmattet og frustreret, og jeg kommer til at stille urealistiske krav til mig selv. Så jeg har haft kæmpestor glæde af at reflektere over, hvor grænsen går med mine ambitioner og ønsker for mit forældreskab, og jeg håber, du derude føler, du kan tage noget med fra samtalen. Maria Ørskov Akselvolls diagnose af tidens forældreskabsideal: Det er umuligt at gøre det godt nok. Her kan du lytte til et interview med sociolog og forfatter Maria Ørskov Akselvoll. Hun har skrevet bogen Det Grænseløse Forældreskab (med bidrag af psykolog Marie Tolstrup), hvor hun studerer nutidens forældreskab med sociologiske briller. Bogen er tankevækkende og nuanceret, og jeg kan anbefale den til alle forældre, der gerne vil dykke ned i forskning og perspektiver på de samfundsstrukturer, vi er en del af. Lyt med herunder, hvor vi bl.a. kommer ind på: Hvorfor Maria skiftede spor fra psykologi til sociologi. Marias eget forældreskab, og hvad hun oplevede, da hun flyttede hjem til Danmark med en lille datter. Hvad forældredeterminisme er, og hvordan udbredelsen af Freuds idéer har haft en enorm betydning for, hvordan vi i Vesten ser forældrenes rolle i børns udvikling. Sociologiens tiltrængte blik på følelser, som noget der mærkes indeni, men som også dannes af samfundstrukturer, og hvad det betyder for forældreskabets idealer. Hvad Maria selv ville have gjort anderledes i sit forældreskab, når hun ser tilbage. Hvorfor det kan være svært at afgøre, hvad vi rent faktisk selv vil, og hvad det kræver at kunne begynde at sætte gode grænser. Og andet godt! Links til ting nævnt i episoden: Marias hjemmeside Maria Instagram Marias bog "Det Grænseløse Forældreskab" Hvis du kunne lide denne episode, så tjek også andre episoder ud af "Psykologen i Øret.". Her på siden finder du flere hundrede blogindlæg og podcastepisoder om følgende emner: Angst og traumer Arbejdsliv, fokus og kreativitet Depression Heling af krop og sind Kærlighed og kommunikaiton Lykke og velvære Meditation og øvelser Selvkritik og usikkerhed Sorg og krise Stress
Forældreskabet kan være overvældende. Hvis du har det sådan, så er du ikke alene. Især i vores tid, har forældreskabet udviklet sig til en noget nær umulig opgave at løse, hvis vi skal leve op til de krav, der stilles fra alle sider. Jeg har det selv blandet med forældreskabet. Det er vigtigt og meningsfuldt for mig at gøre mig umage som mor. Jeg elsker fx. at lave god mad til børnene, involvere mig i forældrearbejdet på skolen, og jeg vil gerne være til stede i deres hverdag. På den anden side kan jeg på jævnlig basis se, at jeg bliver udmattet og frustreret, og jeg kommer til at stille urealistiske krav til mig selv. Så jeg har haft kæmpestor glæde af at reflektere over, hvor grænsen går med mine ambitioner og ønsker for mit forældreskab, og jeg håber, du derude føler, du kan tage noget med fra samtalen. Maria Ørskov Akselvolls diagnose af tidens forældreskabsideal: Det er umuligt at gøre det godt nok. Her kan du lytte til et interview med sociolog og forfatter Maria Ørskov Akselvoll. Hun har skrevet bogen Det Grænseløse Forældreskab (med bidrag af psykolog Marie Tolstrup), hvor hun studerer nutidens forældreskab med sociologiske briller. Bogen er tankevækkende og nuanceret, og jeg kan anbefale den til alle forældre, der gerne vil dykke ned i forskning og perspektiver på de samfundsstrukturer, vi er en del af. Lyt med herunder, hvor vi bl.a. kommer ind på: Hvorfor Maria skiftede spor fra psykologi til sociologi. Marias eget forældreskab, og hvad hun oplevede, da hun flyttede hjem til Danmark med en lille datter. Hvad forældredeterminisme er, og hvordan udbredelsen af Freuds idéer har haft en enorm betydning for, hvordan vi i Vesten ser forældrenes rolle i børns udvikling. Sociologiens tiltrængte blik på følelser, som noget der mærkes indeni, men som også dannes af samfundstrukturer, og hvad det betyder for forældreskabets idealer. Hvad Maria selv ville have gjort anderledes i sit forældreskab, når hun ser tilbage. Hvorfor det kan være svært at afgøre, hvad vi rent faktisk selv vil, og hvad det kræver at kunne begynde at sætte gode grænser. Og andet godt! Links til ting nævnt i episoden: Marias hjemmeside Maria Instagram Marias bog "Det Grænseløse Forældreskab" Hvis du kunne lide denne episode, så tjek også andre episoder ud af "Psykologen i Øret.". Her på siden finder du flere hundrede blogindlæg og podcastepisoder om følgende emner: Angst og traumer Arbejdsliv, fokus og kreativitet Depression Heling af krop og sind Kærlighed og kommunikaiton Lykke og velvære Meditation og øvelser Selvkritik og usikkerhed Sorg og krise Stress
Erik Erikson hørte til i avdelingen blant såkalte Ego-psykologer. De utviklet sine ideer i kjølvannet av Freuds psykoanalyse. Erikson er kjent for sin utviklingsmodell som beskriver menneskets bevegelse fra vugge til grav. Erikson mente at hvert stadium i utviklingen inneholder en slags prototypisk krise eller utfordringen som mennesket må løse. Dersom konflikten blir løst på en god måte, styrker det menneskets ego, hvorpå det kommer over i neste fase og neste «utviklingskrise» med et godt utgangspunkt. Motsatt kan konflikter man løser på en uhensiktsmessig måte, eller faser hvor man mangler sosial støtte og nok omsorg, skrive seg inn i personligheten vår på en negativ måte og få gjenklang utover i livsløpet. Jeg synes at Eriksons beskrivelse av menneskets åtte faser, eller åtte aldere som han kalte det, er en fin og megetsigende modell over menneskets utvikling. Jeg synes også at modellen fungerer som et kart over typiske menneskelige utfordringer, og sånn sett kan kartet hjelpe oss å manøvrere i våre egne utfordringer. Selv om utviklingsfasene tilhører spesifikke aldre, fra barndom til alderdom, kan de samme konfliktene som hørte til på et tidligere trinn gjenta seg gang på gang i livet. Eriksons teorier kan hjelpe oss å utlede hoved-tematikken i disse konfliktene, og sånn sett fungerer det som et godt verktøy når vi skal se vårt eget sinn (sinnsyn).SinnSyns mentale treningsstudioVil du enda dypere i Eriksons teorier, kan du få med deg et videoforedrag i tre deler om denne tematikken på patreon.com/sinnsyn. På min Patreon-side finner du dessuten masse ekstramateriale: Videoforedrag, ekstra-episoder av SinnSyn, introduksjon til meditasjon og mindfulness, meditasjonsveiledning, lydbøker og et mentalt treningsprogram. Her inne kommer det nytt materiale hver måned, og det hele dreier seg om å lodde dybden i oss selv og trene «mentale muskler» på SinnSyns mentale helsestudio.Hvis du finner verdi her på SinnSyn, ønsker mental trening, vil ha mer SinnSyn hver måned, og har lyst til å støtte prosjektet, slik at jeg kan holde hjula i gang her på podcasten, er et abonnement på Patreon av stor betydning for dette prosjektet. Du kan selv velge beløp per måned, og beløpet vil altså gi deg et medlemskap på mitt såkalte mentale treningsstudio. Jeg vil også nevne at et slikt abonnement kan avsluttes når som helst med et par tastetrykk. Jeg vil også benytte anledningen til å takke alle dere som allerede er Patreon supportere. Det er lyttere som dere som sørger for at lysene er på her inne på SinnSyn uke etter uke, måned etter måned, år etter år. Det er kostnadskrevende og tidskrevende å drive denne podcasten, men jeg elsker å gjøre det, og med støtte fra Patreon-lyttere kan jeg prioritere SinnSyn hver uke! Tusen takk for det!Hvis du er privatperson, kan du altså tegne et abonnement via patreon.com/sinnsyn, men nå har jeg også etablert et bedriftsabonnement. Hvis du jobber i en bedrift, har lyst til å få mer SinnSyn å jobbe med hver måned, kan du nå tipse din sjef. Hvis sjefen er interessert i dette, kan vedkommende gå inn på webpsykologen.no og laste ned en brosjyre hvor jeg forklarer konseptet og presenterer tilbudet. Der er det også kontaktinformasjon. Få tilgang til ALT ekstramateriale som medlem på SinnSyns Mentale Helsestudio via SinnSyn-appen her: https://www.webpsykologen.no/et-mentalt-helsestudio-i-lomma/ eller som Patreon-Medlem her: https://www.patreon.com/sinnsyn. For reklamefri pod og bonus-episoder kan du bli SinnSyn Pluss abonnent her https://plus.acast.com/s/sinnsyn. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On the PRmoment Podcast today, Pangolin PR co-founders David Phillips and Will Cookson reflect on ten years of running their agency.Pangolin is a consumer PR shop in London with a fee incline of £1.75m. Clients include Pernod and Pepsi, and it employs 17 people.On the show today, we will reflect on their regrets, lessons and achievements as they look back on ten years of owning their own business.To deal with the elephant in the room straight away - some listeners out there might be pointing out that many firms have exceeded £1.76 m over ten years, but in a way, that's the whole point. Ultimately this is a story of success but only with a few wrong turns along the way, which makes it an interesting story.Before we start, if you haven't already, look at our new event PR Masterclass: The Agency Growth Forum. At this one event, 22 experts will give 11 Masterclasses on essential elements of managing a modern, profitable and successful PR firm. Finally, thanks so much to the PRmoment Podcast sponsors the PRCA.Here's a summary of what David, Will and Ben discussed on the show:2 mins David and Will talk about their “real naivety about setting up a business” when they started their firm.“I genuinely think we were the most naive co-founders back in the day…we were senior account directors when we set up the business.”4 mins Do they wish they'd given it a few more years in a big agency before starting on their own? “We've learnt everything on the job..it's meant it's been slower.”“We're not natural risk takers.”“We were both in our late 20s and didn't have massive commitments…if someone were to ask me to set up a business now, it would be a very different story.”9 mins Freuds has a mythical status amongst some consumer PR folks - is that a vital cog in your story?10 mins When Pangolin launched, it was called Caffeine. Will talks us through why they had to change the name?“There's a wider lesson there about what to do when it goes legal.”15 mins Will and David tell us how they bought a ticket to win the Pepsi account.“Dave slightly overcooked it on the cocktails the night before.”“It just shows that you have to take a risk at some point, and it might work out.”19 mins David talks us through why they nearly decided to say no to the Pernod Ricard account in their first year of business.“We had a look at the current clients on our roster, which included a birdseed brand and a few others, and thought let's do it and see where it takes us!... It's led to a 10-year relationship with Pernod Ricard.”24.30 mins 70% of Pangolin's work is project-based. David and Will talk us through why that is.28 mins 50% of Pangolin's work is UK-based, and 50% is global. Why is that? It's quite rare for a consumer PR shop of its size.30 mins What do global consumer PR campaigns look like at the moment? Are they a media brief or a social media brief?“Brands want a percentage share of conversation online.”“We've had the best year to date; revenue has grown by 25%.”“New business feels a bit slower, a bit stickier.”34 mins How big do David and Will want Pangolin to get?37 mins Do David and Will believe they have benefited from founding Pangolin together, or do they wish they'd been solo founders?“Dave and I talk about things A LOT!.... Sometimes we need to stop talking about stuff and just do it.”“When we were at Freuds, W
Jelle van Baardewijk in gesprek met universitair hoofddocent metafysica en wijsgerige antropologie Herman Westerink over Sigmund Freud en het Oedipous-complex. Dit is een ingekorte versie van een langer gesprek, zie de volledige versie hier: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K9QNXH2SUSg Het boek 'Verleiding, drift en herhaling, Freuds metafysica van het trauma' bestel je hier: https://www.boomfilosofie.nl/product/100-10538_Verleiding-drift-en-herhaling
«Det vi dikter opp kan ha større betydning enn det som er sant, og være sannere.» I Vigdis Hjorts nyeste nedtegnelser, Gjentagelsen, vekker en voksen kvinnes gamle dagboknotater til live traumene fra en mørk novembermåned som 16-åring. Denne episoden handler mye om erindring. Vi snakker om Kirkegaards og Freuds tanker om det å skue bakover, og ikke minst kirkens egen trospraksis, det kjærlige tilbakeblikket (Examen). Hvilke feller ligger foran den som ønsker å hente opp et minne og gjøre det til noe universelt? Veien til erindring er lett. Veien tilbake er vanskelig. Du kan ende opp som fange i tankens fengsel, sier Jo «ekskurs» Hegle Sjøflot, som sitter i studio sammen med Ingrid Ribe-Nyhus og Arne Christian Konradsen. Abonner på Areopagos' nyhetsbrev: https://areopagos.no/bli-med/abonner-nyhetsbrev Musikk: Doydank og Kjetil Jerve
Welcome back to Season 10 of The Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast, where we connect the science-based evidence behind social and emotional learning (that's finally being taught in our schools today) and emotional intelligence training (used in our modern workplaces) for improved well-being, achievement, productivity and results—using what I saw as the missing link (since we weren't taught this when we were growing up in school), the application of practical neuroscience. I'm Andrea Samadi, an author, and an educator with a passion for learning and launched this podcast 5 years ago with the goal of bringing ALL the leading experts together (in one place) to uncover the most current research that would back up how the brain learns best, taking us ALL to new, and often unimaginable heights. For today's episode #294, we are going back to the basics, with the Fundamentals of Understanding How Our Mind Works, that started for me with Bob Proctor's Youth Mentor Program, that I was the Executive Director with, until the program dissolved with the Sept 11th, 2001 tragedy. This weekend I reviewed ALL of these cassette tapes, and when I got to the last one, the tape broke. I didn't want to miss anything that might be important that I could share with you here, so I watched a YouTube video on “how to fix a broken cassette tape” and what do you know, it worked! Times really are different than the days we used to carry these cassette tapes around, with our Sony Walkmans, but what came through loud and clear to me, was that the messages and lessons we were teaching those teens were timeless, and it all began with an understanding of our mind, how it works, and how to use it. The program consisted of 6 SERIES: SERIES 1, The Fundamentals (you can see these tapes in the image in the show notes). SERIES 2 went into the importance of your attitude, SERIES 3, Your Self-Image, SERIES 4- How to Set and Achieve Goals, SERIES 5- The Laws of the Universe and how to use these laws for your health and relationships and SERIES 6 reviewed all lessons, with the goal that the teens would experience PRAXIS, or they integrated their beliefs with their behaviors. It was strange for me to hear some of these tapes that were recorded back in early 2001, using conference calls, but what was interesting to me, was hearing the teens explaining exactly HOW these timeless principles were helping them. Teens would call into a conference call line, from around the world, and meet with Bob Proctor monthly, to review these lessons, and how they were applying them. Nothing made him happier than to hear someone applying what he had dedicated his life teaching, and I know it surprised him that the teens seemed to pick these concepts up quickly. This makes sense to me now that we know how neuroplasticity works, as it's much easier for a young person to learn something new, because their brains are more plastic, and they also have less habits to overcome. I listened to one call, and there was a young guy named Greg who shared how he used visualization to go from the last place on his golf team to be the 3rd highest on his team. I wondered why he picked the 3rd highest, and not first on his team, but anyway, that was his goal, and he achieved it. We asked him “what exactly did you do when you were visualizing?” and he said “he put himself at the 5th hole on the golf course, then pictured himself hitting the club, feeling the wind on his face, and imagined where the ball would land.” His vision was clear and specific, and listening to him talking was something else. He was confidently telling the others how he achieved his goal. Greg had mastered TAPE 2 of the Fundamentals thinking in pictures, TAPE 3, using his conscious mind and his senses (to set his goal, he even showed us how he felt it), he used TAPE 4 when he threw his goal into his subconscious mind, and TAPE 6, Greg was able to review exactly what he had done, inspiring others on this call. No wonder these kids caught my attention. There's nothing like hearing how young people, from countries around the world, were helping each other to create exciting lives. If you look at the date on the cassette tape, it was just months before September 11th, 2001, and the program would dissolve before SERIES 4, 5 and 6 were even created, but I hope that sharing these ideas with you, will help someone, somewhere in the world, to implement these ideas in your own life. So for today's episode, #294, we will cover TAPE 5 and dive into “Going Beyond Our 5 Senses: Understanding and Using the 6 Faculties of Our Mind.” We will cover: ✔What are the 6 Faculties of the Mind, and How Do They Relate to Going Beyond Our 5 Senses? ✔Where Napoleon Hill talks about these 6 Faculties in his best-selling Think and Grow Rich Book. ✔Where neuroscience fits into our understanding of these Faculties, to help us to understand our inside world, and how physicist Albert Einstein used these faculties. ✔A starting point for all of us to DEVELOP and PRACTICE using our own 6 Faculties of the Mind, giving us an edge as we are working on our 2023 goals. If I were to ask you, can you name the higher faculties in your mind, I'm pretty sure that maybe on 2/100 could list them off. This is something else that blows my mind, as I clearly remember being taught all about our 5 senses in school, tasting salt and sugar, and writing about these senses, what we can see, hear, smell, taste and touch, that allow us to make sense of our outside world. But what about our inside world? If we can learn to understand, fully develop and then use our higher faculties, we will experience life at higher levels, than just living through the 5 senses alone, that we saw on our last episode #293[i] with David Eagleman's work, there's much more than our human eyes can see. Napoleon Hill talks about these higher faculties in chapter 5 of his best-selling book, Think and Grow Rich when he says: Just as we have 5 senses that help us to experience the outside world, we also have non-physical, creative faculties that help us to experience our inner world. When I first learned about these faculties, I got really excited. Look how Napoleon Hill describes our imagination. He says: When you start to use your imagination, like Greg did with his golf game, changing your results, and entire future, with this skill, I can't imagine that you wouldn't get as excited as I do, and wonder how you can use this “marvelous, inconceivably powerful force” in YOUR life. When I started to see that science could explain some of these ideas that might seem kind of spiritual in nature, or my friend Greg Link[ii], who worked with Dr. Stephen Covey would say “woo woo” it just helped me to have more confidence as I continue to develop and use these faculties. They started to become my superpower, and what's interesting that I was reminded of when I listened to those teens talking about how they used these faculties to improve their relationships, get better grades, or like Greg's story, where he used these ideas to improve his results in sports that helped get him into the College he wanted to attend, we ALL have the ability to use, and develop these faculties for outstanding results, or a razor's edge advantage in our own lives. Before diving into our 6 Higher Faculties (Our Reason, Intuition, Perception, Our Will, Memory and Imagination” let's see what science has to say about our higher faculties. What Does the Research Say About Our Higher Faculties? We know that many visionaries have used their intuition and dreams to create life-changing ideas, but Albert Einstein would say something profound about one of these faculties. He said “Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.” I know that Stanford Professor Dr. Andrew Huberman has covered what happens in the brain during visualization on his podcast on “How to Learn Skills Faster”[iii] and he talks about 3 components of learning any new skill: Sensory Perception: Where you are perceiving what you are doing using your 5 senses. Movement: That involves our CPGS (central pattern generators) located in our spinal cord and generates repetitive movements like walking, and running etc. When we are really good at something, this part of the brain controls our movement. Proprioception: That he says is like a 6th sense, or knowing where your limbs are in relation to our body. I'm always looking to see if the research could possibly support the results I've seen working over and over again over the years, and while Dr. Huberman goes deep into the way our brain works while acquiring a new skill, and what part of the brain is active when we become really good at a new skill, to me, he also explains that when learning a new skill, we can use our 5 senses, and our outside world, (called sensory perception) and that we can also look outside of ourselves, with what he called proprioception. He also explains what part of the brain becomes active with visualization, and I think the key is that with practice, we move from using our upper motor neurons in our brain to a whole new area he called the Central Pattern Generators, when the skill becomes highly developed. I thought about Greg talking about his golf swing that he practiced using visualization, until he had mastered the skill enough to take his results to new heights, going from last place to 3rd from the top. Over time, he began using a different part of his brain for playing golf. This practice he was doing, would change his future, and put him in the College of his choice. I wish I had kept in touch with all of the teens from this program, I only follow the original 12, but I would bet that Greg continued to use this skill for the rest of his life for improved results in College and into his career. Then I looked at another episode that Dr. Huberman did with Rick Ruben, an American record executive, on “How to Access Creativity”[iv] and I did cover some of Dr. Huberman's research on PART 4 of The Silva Method[v], but I thought it was fitting that Rick Rubin, while discussing the creative process with Dr. Huberman, says that It's important to “pay attention to physical sensations in your body in your creative pursuits.” And neuroscientist Antonio Damasio actually coined this term to be called “interoception.” So, I know I'm not too far off from what the research says as we cover the 6 Faculties of our Mind, and how to develop them for a razor's edge advantage. REASON: We talked about our ability to think, and reason on our last episode #293[vi] which is a skill that can help us to understand things on a deeper level. We have the incredible ability to THINK, and then we can decide if we like an idea, and accept it, or we can reject an idea. We use this ability to put our thoughts together, and create ideas. HOW TO DEVELOP THIS FACULTY: Have you ever participated in brainstorming sessions or Think Tanks with others? Mastermind sessions like this allows each person to use this faculty. You write down ideas on idea maps, and discuss the pros and cons of whatever ideas are thrown out. Meetings like this are highly creative, and new advancements in business often begin this way, when two or more minds get together, and the thinking/reasoning faculty is exercised. INTUITION: This faculty I could spend a year talking about. This is where we learn how to read the energy we feel around us. We can all do this—pick up the “vibe” of another person, just by feeling their energy. Remember Anotnio Damasio called this Interoception, or learning to listen to what we feel from within our body. With practice, we can learn to trust what we feel and become confident with using this tool. HOW TO DEVELOP THIS FACULTY: The best way I have seen is to ask for feedback when you think and feel something about someone. When you can see you are on the right track, you'll gain confidence with this skill, and keep learning to use it. PERCEPTION: David Eagleman talks about this faculty in his book, The Brain, and wow, can his work really bend your mind. Just search for the word “perception” in his book, and you'll see 26 times that he gives an example of how our brain tricks us in many different ways, and “our brains constantly pull information from the environment and use it to steer our behavior” (Page 86, The Brain) and reminds us of Freuds work that our mind works like an iceberg, “the majority of it is hidden from our awareness.” (Page 86, The Brain). With this in mind, when we perceive something, remember we are seeing it from our point of view, with our senses that we know are limited. HOW TO DEVELOP THIS FACULTY: Try seeing things from someone else's point of view, and see if this changes your perception of a situation. We did talk about this strategy in depth on a recent interview #289[vii] with Dr. Maiysha Clairborne who reminded us to look at situations from 3 points of view. Our own, from the other person's shoes, and then look at the entire situation as if you were looking at all points of view from above. This will help you to see that your point of view, isn't the only possible route, and will help to develop and improve empathy with this practice. YOUR WILL: This is another of my favorite faculties. This one gives you the ability to concentrate. While sitting down to write this episode, I've gotten up from my desk a few times, but I'm determined to finish writing this, so I can record and release this today. That's the will at work. You can also use the will to hold a thought on the screen of your mind, or choose thoughts of success, over thoughts of failure. If you have a highly evolved will, you'll lock into doing something, block out all distractions, and accomplish what you set out to do. HOW TO DEVELOP THIS FACULTY: Developing the will takes practice. Meditation can strengthen your will, but so can staring at a candle flame until you and the flame become one. I tried this activity in my late 20s, and remember it was a few hours of staring at this candle flame, before I was able to block out the distractions of the outside world, and the flame extended towards me. This faculty, like the others, takes time and practice, but once you've developed this faculty, you'll know you have the ability to sit, focus, and do anything. MEMORY: We've covered memory on many episodes, but my favorite was with Chris Farrow, who is a two-time Guiness World Record Holder for most decks of playing cards memorized, from EP #149.[viii] This is another faculty that requires practice, and most of us don't practice this skill. A highly developed memory can be valuable in all types of work, and most people who have a highly developed memory share they use certain strategies to remember things, usually by association, and even by ridiculous association, to really make memories stick. HOW TO DEVELOP THIS FACULTY: Chris Farrow had memory programs through his website www.FarrowMemory.com and when I was listening to those old youht mentoring tapes, Bob suggested a memory program through Nightingale Conant[ix]. Whatever method you use to improve your memory, it begins with a system or strategy. Names are sometimes difficult for me, especially on the hiking trails, when I meet someone I see often. I try to associate the person's name with someone I know already, who they might remind me of, to make their name stick. IMAGINATION: I've saved my favorite faculty to cover last. This faculty, when developed, gives you incredible creative power. Remember that Napoleon Hill said it to be “the most marvelous, miraculous, inconceivably powerful force the world has ever known” and Albert Einstein said imagination is “more important than knowledge.” This is where the power comes in, and honestly, if I hadn't have seen all the people, who over the years, used their imagination faculty to create what many would say to be impossible, and then go out and accomplish exactly what they had imagined, I'm not sure I'd believe it all myself. HOW TO DEVELOP THIS FACULTY: This is what the Think and Grow Rich[x] book study was all about, as well as learning to visualize with The Silva Method. The important thing to note here is that you must be careful what you wish for. Remember Greg, with the teens, he wished to be the 3rd best on his team, and that's exactly what he achieved. Why not go for the top, if I swear to you, I believe it to be possible? Here's how I did this recently. At the start of 2023, when setting my goals, I put them all in written form, and made sure they stretched me. Remember, if you listened to the interview with Brian Proctor, if your goal doesn't stretch you, there won't be any inspiration in it. The end of January, I was starting a new corporate position, going back to sales, and working for someone else, something I hadn't done in 10 years. Selling my own programs into schools, there was pressure, but if I didn't make a sale, I didn't have a sales manager asking me to explain my pipeline. It was a new experience, and I wrote down that I wanted to be a LEADER in sales, in my division. Then the work began. I would read that goal out loud every morning, and many mornings, it felt weird, especially when I saw I was LAST on my team. But like Greg proved, even someone who is last, can do things a certain way, and become FIRST. It took me 6 months, and a series of sales has now led me to be the leader of my division. I honestly didn't believe it to be possible until maybe the 4th or 5th month. It began when I took my imagination, and just started to dream. That was just one of the goals I wrote down at the start of the year. Be careful what you wish for, you just might get exactly what you dreamed of. There's no limits to our creative ability and I've just proved it. I always believed this to be possible, especially for others, but doing something yourself, gives you an incredible amount of belief. I hope whatever it is that YOU want, that you've imagined on the screen of your mind, that you GET IT, and then I hope that you'll show others the way forward. All great inventions are created in two places: the mind of the inventor, and then in the world, when they create their vision. REVIEW AND CONCLUSION: To review and conclude this lesson, I hope that you'll go back and review EPISODE 291[xi] on “Unleashing the Power of Our Subconscious Mind” then EPISODE #293 on “Our Conscious Mind and Five Senses” which will prepare you for this final episode on “Going Beyond Our 5 Senses: Understanding and Using the 6 Faculties of Our Mind.” Reminder, today we covered: ✔What are the 6 Faculties of the Mind, and How Do They Relate to Going Beyond Our 5 Senses? (The 5 senses help us to see the outside world, and our 6 Faculties help us to strengthen our inner world). ✔Where Napoleon Hill talks about these 6 Faculties in his best-selling Think and Grow Rich Book. ✔Where neuroscience fits into our understanding of these Faculties, to help us to understand our inside world, and how physicist Albert Einstein used these faculties (he said that imagination was more important than knowledge)! ✔A starting point for all of us to DEVELOP and PRACTICE using our own 6 Faculties of the Mind, giving us an edge as we are working on our 2023 goals. I hope you have found the past few episodes to be helpful for using your mind to think, and create the goals that you'd like for yourself (and others) in 2023 and beyond. I've included a link to worksheets that I created for students on these 6 faculties in he resource section of the show notes. These are old lessons, but like I said with the cassette tapes, the content is still applicable over 20 years later. Feel free to download these lessons and use them as you would like. Coming up next: We have Mike Bordick, who had a 14 year MLB career and is now looking at neuroscience and youth! Futurist and Behavioral Scientist Chris Marshall who will prepare us for the uncertainty of tomorrow. A fascinating interview with Dr. Wallace J Nichols on his book and movement Blue Mind: The Surprising Science That Shows How Being Near, In, or Under Water Can Make You Happier, Healthier, More Connected, and Better at What You Do. I'll see you next weekend! RESOURCES: Worksheets on the 6 Faculties of the Mind https://bit.ly/3rke3qB Think and Grow Rich Book Study with Andrea Samadi Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #190 PART 1 “Making 2022 Your Best Year Ever” https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/think-and-grow-rich-book-review-part-1-how-to-make-2022-your-best-year-ever/ Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #191 PART 2 on “Thinking Differently and Choosing Faith Over Fear” https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/think-and-grow-rich-book-review-part-2-how-to-make-2022-your-best-year-ever-by-thinking-differently-and-choosing-faith-over-fear/ Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #193 PART 3 on “Putting Our Goals on Autopilot with Autosuggestion and Our Imagination” https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/think-and-grow-rich-book-review-part-3-using-autosuggestion-and-your-imagination-to-put-your-goals-on-autopilot/ Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #194 PART 4 on “Perfecting the Skills of Organized Planning, Decision-Making, and Persistence” https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/think-and-grow-rich-book-review-part-4-on-perfecting-the-skills-of-organized-planning-decision-making-and-persistence/ Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #195 PART 5 [xxviii] on “The Power of the Mastermind, Taking the Mystery Out of Sex Transmutation, and Linking ALL Parts of the Mind” https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/think-and-grow-rich-book-review-part-5-on-the-power-of-the-mastermind-taking-the-mystery-out-of-sex-transmutation-and-linking-all-parts-of-our-mind/ Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #196 PART 6 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/the-neuroscience-behind-the-15-success-principles-of-napoleon-hill-s-classic-boo-think-and-grow-rich/ The Silva Mind Control Method Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #261 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/a-deep-dive-with-andrea-samadi-into-applying-the-silva-method-for-improved-intuition-creativity-and-focus-part-1/ REFERENCES: [i] Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #293 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/brain-fact-friday-on-our-conscious-mind-and-the-five-senses/ [ii]Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #207 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/co-founder-of-coveylink-greg-link-on-unleashing-greatness-with-neuroscience-sel-trust-and-the-7-habits/ (207) [iii] How to Learn Skills Faster EPISODE #22 Dr. Andrew Huberman https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJ0IBzCjEPk [iv] How to Access Your Creativity Dr. Andrew Huberman https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ycOBZZeVeAc [v]Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #261 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/the-neuroscience-behind-the-silva-method-improving-creativity-and-innovation-in-our-schools-sports-and-modern-workplaces/ (261) [vi] Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #293 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/brain-fact-friday-on-our-conscious-mind-and-the-five-senses/ [vii]Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #289 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/maiysha-clairborne-md-on-what-holds-us-back-getting-to-the-root-of-our-doubts-fears-and-beliefs/ [viii]Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #149 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/2-time-guinness-world-record-holder-dave-farrow-on-focus-fatigue-and-memory-hacks-for-students-and-the-workplace/ [ix] https://www.nightingale.com/quantum-memory-power.html[xi]Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast EPISODE #291 https://andreasamadi.podbean.com/e/brain-fact-friday-on-unleashing-the-power-of-our-subconscious-mind/ (291)
In this week's episode we share Dr Sam Shah's journey and career pivots covering: Motivation to become a clinician Consultant in Public health Pivoting his career to leadership and consulting roles Roles in pathway redesigns, policies and building business cases for hospitals Re-training in Law and becoming a public advocate Clinical Lead for 111 to Director of Digital Development at NHS England Transitioning into Digital Health Role at Numan as Chief Medical Strategy Officer Building a mindset for opportunities and change Difference between careers in the public sector, private companies and startups Breaking the ceiling of career progression Dr Sam Shah is the Chief Medical Strategy Officer at Numan, Visiting Lecturer at UCL Global Business School for Health, Public Health Consultant, Chief Clinical Digital Advisor at ORCHA, Senior Advisor at Freuds and Ex-Director of Digital Development. His interests lie in improving access to services, behaviour change + digital care delivery and supporting social mobility through education and training. ------------------------------------- Powered by Peerr Peerr is the home for knowledge creators to share, discuss and monetise their deep knowledge. ✍️ Publish articles or blogs, courses and coaching sessions
På nationaldagen fyller Sverige 500 år räknat från när Gustav Vasa valdes till kung. Vi bad fem litteratursjälar välja varsitt verk på svenska från varje sekel. Författaren Gabriella Håkansson plockar fram August Strindbergs "En dåres försvarstal". 1823-1923 är en omvälvande tid i det politiska Sverige: vi går från ståndsriksdag till kvinnlig rösträtt.Det är också industrialiseringens tid: järnvägen läggs över landet och den första telegrafkabeln dras mellan Europa och USA, dit över en miljon svenskar emigrerar.Samtidigt växer nya tankar fram: Sören Kirkegaard existentialistiska skrifter ser världens ljus, precis som det kommunistiska manifestet och Darwins evolutionsteori. Nietzsche skriver att Gud är död, Dostoijevski skriver Brott och Straff och Freuds delger sina teorier om det undermedvetna. Det är också under den här perioden August Strindberg lever och verkar.Författaren Gabriella Håkansson om en idag skrämmande aktuell roman: Strindbergs "En dåres försvarstal".Musiken i inslaget: Franz Berwalds Symfoni nr 3 i C durReporter: Jesper CederströmUppläsare: Nina Asarnoj
Det sies at 50.000 tanker flyr gjennom hodet vårt i løpet av en dag. De kognitive selvutviklings-teknikkene anbefaler at vi skal være litt mer bevisst innholdet i disse tankene. Vi har ikke kapasitet til å oppfatte alle tankene, men selv om vi ikke hører hva hjernen skravler om til enhver tid, vil det påvirke oss i handling og følelser. Derfor er det lurt å kaste et undersøkende blikk på hjernens tankevirksomhet, og kanskje vi oppdager at en del av tankene våre er svært kritiske eller pessimistiske. Kanskje mer nedslående enn det egentlig er grunn for. I så fall har vi oppdaget en mulig årsak til at vi ikke har den entusiasmen, drivkraften og vitaliteten vi kanskje kunne ønsket oss. Det neste spørsmålet er hvorfor vi tenker, mer eller mindre ubevisst, i slike baner.Her vil dybdepsykologien foreslå at tankene er driftet av ubevisst psykisk materiale. Tankene og følelsene vi er oppmerksomme på, er variantene som viser seg for vår bevissthet, mens årsaksforholdene som ligger til grunn for denne måten å tenke på, er ofte skjult for oss og stammer fra det ubevisste. Dermed er den mer psykoanalytiske delen av psykologen opptatt av å dykke ned i det ubevisste og avsløre dybden i vår motivasjon og måten vi tenker på. Her er det ofte tolkning av drømmer som representerer den såkalte kongevei til det ubevisste. Jeg skal til Freuds monumentale verk fra 1900: Drømmetydning, og vi skal se på hvordan drømmen kan fortelle deg viktige ting om deg selv, men på en kryptert måte.Tusenvis av ting påvirker alt vi tenker, føler og foretar oss uten at vi er klar over det. Hvis vi vil ha en dypere forståelse for alt som ligger i skyggen av vår motivasjon, våre tanker og følelser, kan en dypdykk i drømmenes fortettede uttrykksform kaste viktig lys over oss selv. Hør hele foredraget om denne tematikken på mitt «Mentale treningsstudio». På Patreon kan du altså abonnere på SinnSyns mentale treningsstudio, og som abonnent av SinnSyn får du tilgang til masse ekstra episoder av SinnSyn, bøkene mine som lydbøker, meditasjonsveiledning, masse videoforedrag, mentale øvelser og mye mer. Velkommen til et dypdykk i menneskets sjelsliv. Hvis du ønsker å høre mer om alt som gjemmer seg bak sceneteppet i psykens teater, og gå via veien via drømmetydning, kan du bla deg frem i patreon-episodene av SinnSyn og finne nummer #74 - Kryptert rapport fra det ubevisste. I tillegg finner du en øvelse basert på denne episoden som heter Øvelse 31 - Drømmetydning. Få tilgang til ALT ekstramateriale som medlem på SinnSyns Mentale Helsestudio via SinnSyn-appen her: https://www.webpsykologen.no/et-mentalt-helsestudio-i-lomma/ eller som Patreon-Medlem her: https://www.patreon.com/sinnsyn. For reklamefri pod og bonus-episoder kan du bli SinnSyn Pluss abonnent her https://plus.acast.com/s/sinnsyn. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today we have Andrew McGuinness the founder of Layered Reality, the company behind the smash hit immersive experiences - Jeff Wayne's: The War of the Worlds and the Gun Powder Plot to name a few. Prior to that, Andrew spent two years running Freuds (apologies for my bad pronunciation), the UK's leading PR business. The decade before that, he ran two businesses that he founded: Beattie McGuinness Bungay (BMB) and Seven Dials PR. Andrew was made CEO of TBWALondon at age 32 and has worked across Australia, New York, and Mumbai. Outside of the day job he has worked on two general election campaigns in the UK and chaired the Advertising Association.Support the show
Sigmund Freud är en av 1900-talets mest inflytelserika tänkare. Hans teorier har också mött kritik. Vad är det som gör att hans idéer fortsätter att inspirera psykologin, forskningen och kulturen? Sigmund Freud föddes i Freiberg 1856 och flyttade som barn till Wien där han kom att tillbringa större delen av sitt liv. 1939 dog han i London dit han som jude flytt nazismen.Han blev ett världsnamn redan under sin levnad som psykoanalysens grundare. Hans teorier om det omedvetna, om bortträngda tankar och inre konflikter som genom fria associationer kunde spåras i drömmar har omfamnats och kritiserats genom åren. Freuds relevans idagHur mycket av Freuds tankegods präglar hur vi ser på människans psyke, barndomens betydelse och samhällets påverkan på människan? Hur kan vi använda Freuds för att analysera vår samtid? Vad är relevant och vad är förlegat i hans teorier?Medverkande: Cecilia Sjöholm, professor i estetik vid Södertörns högskola, Johan Eriksson , filosof och psykoanalytiker och Helena Granström, författare, fysiker och matematiker. Programledare: Cecilia Strömberg WallinProducent: Marie Liljedahl
Prins Harry har fått en kortsiktig framgång i form av pengar och medkännande uppmärksamhet genom sin självbiografi. Men boken, som är författad av en freudianskt inspirerad spökskrivare, kan på sikt försämra hans psykiska hälsa, och öka risken för självdestruktivitet. Psykologen Billy Larsson skriver om psykoanalysens pseudovetenskapliga inflytande över kultursidorna och i litteraturen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This weeks episode is a little different. It's not about relationships or personal growth no. Divine spends a considerable about of time making fun of crypto bros and dissecting why tf Elon Musk acts the way he does. She discusses social media, specifically twitter and it's impending downfall that she is looking forward to. She compares and contrasts it to Freuds psychoanalytic theory and evaluates the morality or lack thereof that comes with having the world at your finger tips.She reminisces on her days working in media and unpacks the future of digital media and its correlating trends.MERCH IS HERE! https://www.vinephilo.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/vinephilo/https://twitter.com/vinephiloListen to the Podcast Anywhere! https://linktr.ee/Povyouremytherapist
Welcome to the PRmoment Podcast.On the show today we're talking to Madan Bahal, co-founder of India's largest PR firm. Madan and I are going to talk about how, as an independent firm, Adfactors has grown from being one of a pack of highly regarded PR agencies in India - to becoming the biggest PR firm in India, frankly by a long, long way.It's a story that any independent PR firm founder or CEO should hear because while it's become an inspirational story, it's also a story of hard work and risk but ultimately reward.Many of our listeners of this podcast are from the UK and the US and may be less familiar with the story of Adfactors. For context, it is, by miles, India's biggest PR firm. Adfactors has a fee income of about $50 million. Their nearest rival is less than half of that size and all the big US firms have a presence in India, including Edelman, BCW and Weber.So, to give it a UK equivalent, the largest independent British-owned firm in the UK is Freuds. It would be like Freud's being more than twice the size of Edelman in London.So Adfactors is a quite remarkable story and today its co-founder Madan Bahal is on the show to give his insight to independent PR firm owners everywhere on how to scale their business and take on and win against the group-owned firms.2022 marks 25 years since Adfactors PR was founded.Here is a summary of what Madan and PRmoment founder Ben Smith discussed:3 mins Madan, with 25 years of hindsight, reflects on how Adfactors has progressed and his recent induction into the Page Hall of Fame“History only has so much relevance… I always drive with my eyes on the road ahead.”“The scale of complexity we are seeing makes me feel worried… the scale of disruption and the scale of complexity we are seeing (means) that the world will expect public (deeper) relations counsel… I don't think public relations firms by and large are evolving quickly enough to be able to deal with the same level of complexity in terms of its counsel” 5.30 mins Madan talks us through how Adfactors went from an $18m firm in 2015 to a $50m+ firm in 2022.“How do you keep investing in remaining relevant over time? How do you invest in your leadership? Adfactors has remained true to the craft and value proposition of public relations … our value proposition is earned influence.”9 mins As the owner of arguable the world's most successful independent PR firm - what is Madan's advice for his independent agency peers?“Today independence is a strategic advantage - the network firms have lost their flexibility and adaptability. If someone buys a laptop in India the CFO has to do the clearance!”“The important thing is to run your business as if you are never going to sell it!”“Democratise power, responsibility and problem solving to the smallest possible level - so you are eliminated from the burden of carrying it all on your shoulders”12 mins Madan reveals when he was close to selling Adfactors.17.30 mins Madan talks us through his training priorities currently and what is Adfactor's training budget per head.“The paradigm of influence has changed”21 mins Madan talks about his partnership with his co-founder Rajesh Chaturvedi. They have worked together for 25 years. What makes a successful business partnership?“Professional services sectors tend to grow at twice the rate of GDP”29 mins Madan talks about PR's overservicing problem and his approach to solving this challenge.31 mins “Underspending is the best way of overspending…the market is the best teacher - when they (clients) realise the value of reputation.”
Rakhee Shah is a PR aficionado by day, Web3 cofounder by night, having started Gold Bangle Club in 2022 to bring more South Asian women into the Web3 space. Rakhee has a background in leading campaigns in social purpose and behavioural change such as cancer awareness and the rights of women in the workplace during maternity leave and post-baby. She has worked at various PR agencies ranging from Freuds to specialist agencies looking to reach ethnically diverse audiences, and while on maternity leave she discovered the world of Web3 and the possibilities it held for social purpose. With her Web3 hat on, she spends her evenings building Gold Bangle Club with her cofounders Hamisha Mehta and Nirali Patel, weaving together culturally rich artwork and storytelling with of course blockchain technology. We talked about life split between Web2 and Web3, and how to get more ethnically diverse communities into Web3. LINKS Rakhee Shah on Twitter: https://twitter.com/_RakheeShah Gold Bangle Club event on Zoom, Sept 20th: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/unlocking-web3-an-introduction-to-web3-for-women-by-women-tickets-406713349577 Rakhee's podcast Web3 Marketing with Becky + Rakhee: https://open.spotify.com/show/493BVvasONoGTUGxHNt0ss Gold Bangle Club on Twitter: https://twitter.com/GoldBangleclub Follow Women of Web3 for the latest job posts, learning resources and events: https://twitter.com/womenofweb3co Women of Web3 website: www.womenofweb3.co JOBS IN WEB3: Get your first job in web3 on the Women of Web3 jobs board, or apply to be in our Talent Collective: www.womenofweb3.co/jobs CREDITS: Host: Lauren Ingram Producer: Ollie Chamberlain
Kevin Tewis-AllenKevin started his award-winning career at 15 in the music industry, working for 80'S supergroup, Five Star at their Sunningdale mansion as their in-house photographer. At 19, Kevin created the iconic Winston the Churchill bulldog before shooting to fame as a record producer/DJ, selling over 20 million records, 13 no.1's and BBC Radio Producer of the decade 1990-2000 producing music for Beyonce, Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, Ne-Yo, Akon, Lionel Richie, Phil Collins and Usher.In 2008, Kevin swapped his music and live entertainment career for the corporate world. Kevin ran many notable profitable AIM, Series-A start-ups'9 X award winning creative agency, called Wonderful was the first strategist and entertainment director at UNILAD (Facebook's no.1 online publisher, now part of LadBible), clients included Group M, Omnicom, MediaCom, Freuds, Evian, Fifa, EA Games, Paddy Power, Poker Stars, Pride, The Diana Award, and the FA.Kevin was the most senior VP of UNIDAYS (London/NYC) helping global brands reposition their sales and marketing to Gen-Z audiences through more relevant and relatable content and campaigns. Clients included Samsung, NFL, MTV, Live Nation, Nike, Adidas, Vans, Missguided, BooHoo, Pretty little thing to name a few.In 2021 Kevin became Managing Director of Cherryduck, a leading video production company, postproduction house and TV studio's, creating branded content, live streaming, TV commercials and original short, medium and long form content. Kevin won best social media campaign for the Olympics and the no.1 Diversity award with GSK. Clients include The Olympics, Northface, Marks & Spencer, ASOS, New Look, TUI, Clinique, Disney and SKY.In 2022 Kevin has joined Ecoflix a non-for-profit platform, to create the world's first creative, video production media division, where all of the profits go to saving animals and the planet. – Kevin has been recognized as a top 10 CMO by Era Magazine for (2021) – Kevin is also a marketing advisor to 10 Downing Street (2013 on-going)– CMO of the Street Soccer Foundation (2018 on going)– NED at Alpha Talent Management (2021 on going)– Advisor for the Chartered Institute of Marketing (2012 on going)https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevintewis/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/kevin-tewis-allen-brilliance-business-mark-stephen-pooler
Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter | Daily Gardener Community Historical Events Compost Awareness Week 1742 Birth of Jean Senebier, a Swiss pastor and botanist. Where would we be without Senebier? We'd still be breathing, but we'd lack the knowledge that carbon dioxide is consumed by plants and, in turn, that plants produce oxygen as part of the process of photosynthesis. In a nutshell, Senebier's work is crucial because he had learned the function of leaves: capturing carbon for food. Before Senebier, the purpose of leaves and what they did for plants and people was unknown. It was Jean Senebier who said, Observation and experiment are two sisters who help each other. 1754 Birth of Joseph Joubert, French moralist and essayist. Remembered mainly for his Pensées ("Pon-see") or (Thoughts), which were published posthumously, he once wrote, All gardeners live in beautiful places because they make them so. 1856 Birth of Sigmund Freud (books about this person), Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis. Freud once offered this humorous insight: Common sense is a rare flower and does not grow in everyone's garden. Freud offered up a few dispassionate observations regarding the natural world. He once wrote, Beauty has no obvious use, nor is there any clear cultural necessity for it. Yet civilization could not do without it. And he also wrote, Flowers are restful to look at. They have neither emotions nor conflicts. Online there are many photos of Freud and his family in the garden of their home in London. The Freuds left their home in Austria to escape the Nazis with the help of Princess Marie Bonaparte (books about this person), known as Princess George of Greece and Denmark. In 1938, there was a photo of Sigmund with his daughter Anna and Martha in the garden of Marie Bonaparte's house in Paris after arriving on the Orient Express from Vienna. Anna looks happy, Martha looks at a flower, and Sigmund has a little snooze in his garden bed. The Freud home in London was much larger and nicer, and there was a large backyard with a garden. The property still boasts Freud's rose garden and is now the Freud Museum at 20 Maresfield Gardens in Hampstead, London NW3, England. In 2008, the French botanist and biologist Francis Hallé wrote, Everyone knows that going to the garden does not solve the problems of everyday life, yet it relativizes them and makes them more bearable. Sigmund Freud had this late regret: 'I lost my time; the only important thing in life is gardening.' 1925 On this day, at the age of 29, the great twentieth-century reformer of Japanese gardens, Mirei Shigemori (books about this person), changed his name from Kazuo ("Kah-zoh") to Mirei (“me-RAY”). The name change was a tribute to the 19th-century French painter of pastoral landscapes and daily life, Jean Francois Millet (books about this person), who once said, It is the treating of the commonplace with the feeling of the sublime that gives to art its true power. In 1932, Mirei founded the Kyoto Garden Society. Mirei practiced the art of tea - Chado ("Cha-doe") and the art of flower arranging - Ikebana ("ick-aye-bah-na"). Mirei once advised, People who try to do research on the garden have to very seriously study the way of tea. Mirei wrote eighty-one books, including the Illustrated Book on the History of the Japanese Garden in 26-volumes, released in 1938. Mother Nature played an important role in shaping Mirei's life when the Muroto Typhoon destroyed much of Kyoto in 1934. Many sacred temples, shrines, and gardens were wiped out in the life-altering storm. In response, Mirei took action. He used his own money and became one of the first designers to survey every garden in Japan - creating records for restoration if they were ever damaged or destroyed. The tour provided a valuable service to his country and was also a means for Mirei to learn garden design - with a particular focus on incorporating rocks and stone. As a garden designer, Mirei was entirely self-taught. Throughout his fifty-year career, Mirei designed over two hundred gardens, including the checkerboard North Garden/Moss Garden at Tofukuji ("Tofu-kah-gee") Temple, Kyoto (1939), the dry landscape at Zuiho-in ("zwee-ho een" (1961), and the garden at the oldest shrine in Kyoto City, the Matsuo Taisha ("maht-sue-oh Ty-sha"(1975). The shrine is dedicated to the gods of water in western Kyoto and was an important place for sake-brewing families to worship over the centuries. In 2020, the second edition of landscape architect Christian Tschumi's book, Mirei Shigemori - Rebel in the Garden, was released. In it, Christian breaks down the profound influences and meanings behind Mirei's most iconic gardens. Christian once wrote, Shigemori's body of work is a compelling manifesto for continuous cultural renewal. Grow That Garden Library™ Book Recommendation The Layered Garden by David Culp This book came out in 2012, and the subtitle is Design Lessons for Year-Round Beauty from Brandywine Cottage. Well, I'm a huge David Culp fan, and I feel like I'm telling you about this book just in time for summer because this book can help you set the stage for how you want your garden to look all year long. And since the summer lays entirely before us, this book is just in time for you. If you're planning a new garden or a garden redesign, you could do a lot worse than having David Culp be your guide. Laura Springer Ogden wrote a review that's right on the cover of the book, And it says, Garden-making in its finest form is a celebration of life and love - and David and this book epitomize this. I couldn't agree more. And by the way, you'll probably recognize the photographer's name for David's book as well - it's Rob Cardillo. Rob always does such a fantastic job photographing gardens, so this book's photos are top-notch. Now David kicks things off in this book with a quote from Francis Bacon, it's from Of Gardens (1625) - and it's one of my favorite garden quotes: There ought to be gardens for all the months in the year, in which severally things of beauty may be then in season. Of course, this sets the stage for what David is trying to teach us: how to have a garden that looks good all year long. Now I thought I would share this quick little sweet story that David shares at the beginning of his book. It gives all of us some great ideas - especially if you have young gardeners in your life. David wrote One fall, when I was about nine years old, my grandmother Thorpe gave me a bag of bulbs and said, "you go out and plant them." I felt more than a little trepidation. I had never planted anything without her supervision. But she reassured me. "You can do it. You won't go wrong." Her generosity could have been ruinous to her flower border. But I got the bulbs planted with no mishaps. The next spring, when they bloomed, I almost burst with pride. When she told all her friends, "David did that." And from that moment, I knew I was a gardener. And after all these years, it remains the core of how I define myself. I love that story for a couple of different reasons. Number one, it really does tee up what David is talking about here in The Layered Garden because as a gardener, if you dismiss specific categories of plants out of hand, like the flowers that you get with spring bulbs, then you'll likely miss one of the layers that can help make your garden beautiful all through the year. Now the other reason I like this story is for practical purposes. I hear all the time from new gardeners who are so anxious about planting bulbs, And now I'm going to say, "Hey, if David Culp - as a nine-year-old - can do it, you can too. And then last but not least, I hope this plants a tiny seed with all of us that if we are interacting with kids in the garden, we definitely need to introduce them to planting spring-flowering bulbs because the result in the spring is just so impressive and unique. It also instills that sense of pride that you can get when your garden work goes to plan, and you experience that first flush of color. It's so wonderful. Throughout David's book, he reinforces this concept of the layered garden, but I will give you just a little snippet of how he introduces it here. He goes into much more detail and offers many more tips - wonderful little nuggets and tiny ideas - for making this look work for you. Here's how he introduces the concept in his book. Garden layers are made up of a variety of plants- some with complimentary or contrasting colors, others with interesting shapes or textures. Layers are more than just perennials or annuals or bulbs or ground covers. They're more than just the ground layer of plants. That's the sole focus of many gardens. Beautiful combinations are certainly possible, even in the tiniest scale. Think of dwarf Solomon's Seal underplanted with moss - that makes a precious six-inch-high picture. But to get the most interest from any garden, all the layers need to be considered from the ground level to the middle level of shrubs and small trees up to the canopy trees. Growing plants on vertical surfaces, walls, fences, trellises, arbors, and other supports even climbing up trees, when we can be sure that they will do no harm, adds to the picture by bringing flowers and foliage to eye level and above. So there you go. An introduction to what David is talking about when he says The Layered Garden. You might be intuitively doing some layering already in your garden as you look for more ways to garden - looking for different plants - or finding and curating other ideas that you can put in your garden. But I think what David adds is his mastery because he knows how to make all of this work in a very cohesive way that's pleasing to the eye. David's book talks about how to do a layered garden and design it - which is probably the key for most of us because we often don't think about that. If we layer the garden, it can just happen organically. But then, sometimes, we can end up with a little bit of a confused look. Next, David talks about maintaining the layered garden, which is very important. Now there are two other aspects of this book that I want to share with you. So the first chapter talks about the layered garden, and it walks you all through that. But The second chapter introduces you to his garden at Brandywine Cottage. This is important because you get a garden tour here, and David shows you how he's put this layered garden technique to work right on his property. By the way, this is not David's first at-bat gardening; he's designed many gardens. So, all of his work is coming together, culminating at Brandywine. And then the last chapter, I think, is one of the most important chapters of the book. Here David shares his signature plants that he advises we consider incorporating into our gardens throughout the seasons. So, this is a great list. This is a list of plants from a garden designer - a garden lover - and someone who works in gardens every day. So right there, that's an invaluable part of this book. This book is 312 pages of layered gardening, the beauty of the garden at Brandywine, and then some of David's most treasured garden design secrets and favorite plants. You can get a copy of The Layered Garden by David Culp and support the show using the Amazon link in today's show notes for around $18. Botanic Spark 1682 On this day, Louis XIV (books about this person) of France moved his court to the Palace of Versailles. Originally, Versailles was built as a country house. Nine miles from Paris, Versailles was ideally situated near neighboring forests for hunting. Today Versailles is known for its opulence - the Hall of Mirrors, stunning art, and lush gardens. The massive gardens at Versailles are the most famous in the world. The garden is home to over 1,000 statues, and in the Facebook group for the show, I shared a stunning photo of the garden sculptures at Versailles surrounded by sandbags for protection during WWII. In 2006, Ian Thompson wrote a fantastic book called, The Sun King's Garden: Louis XIV, Andre le Notre and the Creation of the Gardens of Versailles. Ian believes that Louis XIV may also have been history's most passionate gardener. Louis, the absolute monarch, was known as the “Sun King,” specifically designed the central axis to be east-west to track the sun's path across the garden. Louis worked closely for forty years with the low-born gardener André Le Nôtre to devise the original design and geometrical layout. Temperament-wise, André and Louis could not have been more different. Louis was driven and merciless. André was funny, thoughtful, insightful, and easy-going. In 1979, Versailles, including the garden, was declared a World Heritage Site. And in 2014, Alain Baraton wrote Gardener of Versailles: My Life in the World's Grandest Garden. As the gardener-in-chief, Alain lives on the grounds at Versailles. Alain has worked in the gardens, orchards, and fields for four decades. This memoir reveals Alain's connection to the grandest garden in the world. And in case you're wondering, Alain believes fall is the best time to visit. Alain oversaw the recovery from the worst natural disaster ever to hit Versailles. On Christmas night through the 26th of December in 1999, a monster winter storm with winds of up to 105 mph struck the grounds of Versaille. Alain watched in horror as century trees let go of the earth in response. In a little over an hour, the storm felled 10,000 trees at Versailles, including two tulip trees planted by Marie-Antoinette in 1783 in Trianon and a Corsican pine planted for Napoleon in 1810. Alain said, It was like the apocalypse. In one hour, 200 years of trees were destroyed. But, miraculously, all of the statues survived unharmed. Although, there was one account that I read of a tree falling on one of the great statues. And as it hit the ground, the branches parted as if to spare that statue. It gave me chills just reading that. It was quite the story. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener And remember: For a happy, healthy life, garden every day.
On the Freuds, films, and psychoanalysis in the life of Marilyn Monroe.In this episode we are talking all about psychoanalysis. What is it, where it came from, and how it directly contributed to Marilyn Monroe's decline and unfortunate suicide. If you like our content please subscribe to our premium episodes! We begin with a discussion of Sigmund Freud and psychoanalysis, and its impact on the culture of the late 19th and early 20th century. Thanks to Adam Curtis for the wonderful documentaries, but in particular for this episode we mention The Century of the Self, a BBC documentary that is one of the few in mass media to examine the impact of the theories of Freud in modern culture. 1 We then cover the life of Marilyn Monroe from the time of her childhood in orphanages on through her adult fame in the post WW2 American Film industry. Marilyn is inseparable from the film business, because of her association with the "method acting" school, Actors Studio, founded by Lee Strasburg with funding in large part provided by Marilyn. Sadly Strasburg's method was fundamentally incompatible with Marilyn personally, since it teaches people to draw on their past experiences to summon emotion for the camera, but Marilyn's past was mostly traumatic and only led to her continued psychiatric decline. 2 We also discuss Marilyn's relationships with Joe DiMaggio and Arthur Miller, and the conspiracy theories surrounding her affairs with Bobby Kennedy and John F. Kennedy. DiMaggio seemed to be her only reliable friend at times and Miller an unfortunate marriage of professional considerations that didn't work out. The irony of Arthur Miller relegating his wife to a secondary role in a movie starring her, coming from the author of Death of a Salesman, cannot possibly be overstated. Last but not least we cover in detail Marilyn's mistreatment at the hands of her psychiatrists, all of which were proteges of the Freuds, Anna in particular. Sadly Marilyn was not the only notable celebrity to die in the care of a Freud, Tiffany and Co. heiress Mabbie Burlingham died due to sucide in the care of Anna Freud as well. In Marylin's case she was most mistreated by Drs Marianne Kris in New York, who convinced Marilyn to commit herself to the Payne Whitney Mental Hospital in Manhattan (incidentally also the site of MKUltra experiments) where she was sexually assaulted by a staff physician, and by Ralph Greenson her psychoanalyst in Los Angeles who employed the bizarre technique of "adoption therapy" in which he convinced Marilyn to live in his house and pretend to be one of his family. We also talk a bit about Freud's bizarre first trip to America after World War I. 3, 4 As a book recommendation for this episode, we recommend Gloria Steinem's "Marilyn: Norma Jeane" as the most relevant to the subject matter we are discussing. It is not only a deeper dive into the same stories but includes iconic photos of Marilyn taken by the late, great celebrity photographer George Barris, who took the last picture of Marilyn before she died. 5 1. Adam Curtis, The Century of the Self, BBC, 2002. ⇤2. Rachelle Bergstein, How Method Acting Led Hollywood's Biggest Stars to Behave Bizarrely, New York Post, January 2022. ⇤3. Sam Kashner, Marilyn and Her Monsters, Vanity Fair, November 2010. ⇤4. Daniel Akst, Freudian America, The Wall Street Journal Europe, August 2009. ⇤5. Gloria Steinem, Marilyn: Norma Jeane, Open Road Media, 2013. ⇤