Jungian Analysis with Joseph R. Lee

Jungian Analysis with Joseph R. Lee Joseph R. Lee, is a Jungian Analyst and co-creator of This Jungian Life podcast. Jungian analysis is based on the ideas of C. G. Jung.

It is a depth psychotherapeutic approach to understanding ourselves, others and the complex issues encountered in ones’ life. Areas of exploration can include:

• Relationships
• Work
• Stress
• Trauma
• Grief & Loss
• Addiction
• Abuse
• Psychosomatic physical symptoms
• Creativity
• Self-knowledge
• Dreams
• Life goals
• Spirituality

The focus of Jungian psychotherapy is on the individuals’ ne

eds and potentials in the context of deeper meaning. Attention is given the symbolic language and archetypal meaning of inner and outer experiences. Jungian psychotherapy facilitates the individuation process, which is one’s natural movement toward wholeness. A session typically occurs as a one to one meeting. The issues and concerns brought to the session by the client are explored. Dream interpretation is often used to gain insight into the client’s situation. Imaginal work and expressive arts are also available resources. Jungian psychotherapy respects the inner wisdom of the client and facilitates the development of inner resources and creative potentials that will move the client toward wholeness. Emphasis is on feeling safe throughout the process. Sessions are generally 60 or 90 minutes in length and occur once or twice per week. Ultimately, the therapeutic process can help you to experience life in a more related and authentic way. You can read more about Jung’s psychology at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analytical_psychology.

Myths are central to Jungian psychology. These scholars offer various theories about their origins. It’s worth a listen.
10/03/2025

Myths are central to Jungian psychology. These scholars offer various theories about their origins. It’s worth a listen.

Podcast Episode · The Ancients · 10/02/2025 · 47m

07/23/2025
07/23/2025
01/10/2025

🌗This week, a masterclass in dream interpretation with psychoanalyst JOSEPH LEE of This Jungian Life

We discuss how building a regular dreamwork practice can help you start a dialogue between your surface and your depths.

AND, Joseph analyses a recent dream of mine involving an encounter in a science lab.

Listen here:
https://themeaningfullife.podbean.com/e/joseph-lee-podcast/

Jungian Analysis with Joseph R. Lee

What a super interesting article on Jackson Pollock’s work with a Jungian analyst. (Thanks for passing this along, Alisa...
06/12/2024

What a super interesting article on Jackson Pollock’s work with a Jungian analyst. (Thanks for passing this along, Alisa)

WHILE JACKSON POLLOCK’S INTEREST in high art was paramount, the theories of Carl Gustav Jung were also important as a means of realizing an expression that was both individual and…

04/16/2024

Go into the arts. I'm not kidding. The arts are not a way to make a living. They are a very human way of making life more bearable. Practicing an art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow, for heaven's sake. Sing in the shower. Dance to the radio. Tell stories. Write a poem to a friend, even a lousy poem. Do it as well as you possibly can. You will get an enormous reward. You will have created something. ~Kurt Vonnegut, A Man Without a Country.

12/02/2023

🎉Thank you all so much for listening this year!

We're thrilled to have made it into the top ten on the charts, AND to be the number one podcast for nearly ten thousand of you out there.

Donald Kalsched – Can running our minds like a democracy save us?WATCH or LISTEN: https://thisjungianlife.com/donald-kal...
10/05/2023

Donald Kalsched – Can running our minds like a democracy save us?

WATCH or LISTEN: https://thisjungianlife.com/donald-kalsched-saving-democracy/

Don Kalsched is a Jungian Analyst, an expert on treating trauma, author of two books, The Inner World of Trauma and Trauma and the Soul.

Jung discovered our inner world is populated by various imaginal figures representing powerful psychological forces. If we treat our minds as democratic spaces, it can safeguard us from internal and external authoritarian influences.

Prepare to discover the parallels between a balanced mind and a healthy society, whether viewing internal conflicts through a democratic lens is healing, which insights foster harmony, why democratic philosophy is transformative, how to build resilience against absolutism and extremism, how trauma and power-seeking are related, and even more…

Try new stuff:
Learn to interpret dreams: https://thisjungianlife.com/join-dream-school/
Support us on Patreon (keep us free of corporate influence): https://www.patreon.com/ThisJungianLife
Share your dream with us: https://thisjungianlife.com/share-your-dream/
Suggest a podcast topic: https://thisjungianlife.com/podcast-form-topics/
Get some TJL merch: https://www.zazzle.com/store/thisjungianlife/products
Meet Lisa: https://www.jungcentralohio.org/event/the-power-of-dreamwork-friday-night-lecture-and-saturday-workshop-presented-by-lisa-marchiano/
Learn more about Don Kalsched: https://www.donaldkalsched.com/

Talk to Us:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisjungianlifepodcast
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThisJungianLife
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Q8IG87DsnQ
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThisJungianLife/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thisjungianlife/

WATCH or LISTEN: https://thisjungianlife.com/donald-kalsched-saving-democracy/

Donald Kalsched, author of Trauma and the Soul, tells us why establishing an inner democracy of the soul makes us resilient to authoritarianism.

Why Do We Push People Away? understanding our defensesWATCH OR LISTEN HERE: https://thisjungianlife.com/defenses/Defense...
09/28/2023

Why Do We Push People Away? understanding our defenses

WATCH OR LISTEN HERE: https://thisjungianlife.com/defenses/

Defense mechanisms function as unconscious psychological strategies we deploy to navigate reality and sustain a consistent self-image. They act as a shield, guarding against feelings of anxiety, shame, and vulnerability. They are feeling states that prompt us to avoid contact and trick us into thinking they protect us against emotional harm.

Ancient philosophers recognized the human tendency to evade uncomfortable truths. In Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, he vividly depicts individuals shackled in a cave, seeing only shadows and illusions. Upon being freed and confronted with the light (truth), some retreat to the familiar darkness, unable to bear the illumination of reality. Aristotle wrote about akrasia, which meant a weakness of will that drives one to act against their better judgment, in essence, rejecting reality as unbearable. The stoic philosopher Epictetus noted that people have fantasies of controlling external events and directing them inward to choose how they respond instead.

Defenses are affective states that can interfere with our clear, reality-based functioning. They may be complex reactions that muddy our perception of reality, effectively shielding us from feelings or knowledge we find intolerable. They can take the form of denial, regression, rationalization, and even altruism. These are not merely intellectual barriers; they are emotional walls that can keep us from connecting with our own experiences and the people around us.

The most common inner conflicts arise from thwarting our instincts. These foundational systems generate intense feelings to guide us. Jung identified multiple instincts: creativity, reflection, activity, sexuality, and hunger. He added the religious instinct to describe how humans naturally generate symbolic systems to link their waking state to the deep unconscious. Freud detailed the multiple symptoms that arise from repressed sexuality, from phobias to hysterical blindness. Jung agreed but understood that thwarting any one of our natural responses would rob us of vitality and distort our adaptation to reality.

Cultural expectations, individual trauma, religious demands, and family patterns can convince our waking personality that any one of our instincts is dangerous. When we are overwhelmed by these inner conflicts, we will likely deploy primal defenses like dissociation or acting out. If we can find a more adaptive stance, we will likely intellectualize the conflict or even find it humorous. The goal is not to banish all defenses; we need to manage our exposure to the intensity of life but to discover self-management strategies that allow us to remain effective even under stress.

Identifying the defenses we commonly use can help us consider what we are evading and make space for more useful responses. Here are the most common ones:

Avoidance is easy to notice because we intentionally steer clear of specific people or situations. This deliberate act helps us prevent confrontational or uncomfortable scenarios, thus mitigating emotional distress. Used sparingly, it may have little effect. When it dominates our personality, we find ourselves constantly muttering, “I just can’t take it,” as our options shrink until we are boxed into a life that cannot sustain us.

Projection is another defense where we attribute our unacceptable feelings, thoughts, or impulses to others. It helps us maintain the fantasy that we are all good. But that price we pay is increased distancing from genuine connection and understanding of ourselves and others.

Denial can be downright dangerous. Complete rejection of a provoking stimulus might convince us to ignore treating a serious medical issue despite clear signs and symptoms. Softer expressions might look like minimalizing a possible danger but not rejecting it’s presence.

Rationalization is rife in our era of unreliable reporting and bizarre explanations from social media. We can find ourselves constructing or agreeing with ideas that follow a construction of logic but offer untrue explanations for behaviors, thoughts, feelings, or events. This defense allows us to obscure underlying emotional conflicts by providing seemingly plausible reasons for avoiding engagement.

Fairytales often depict refusals to accept reality or engage in relationships. The Grimm’s tale, The Sea-Hare, describes a haughty princess in a magical tower who decreed that any suitor must successfully hide from her to win her hand in marriage. She killed them when they were spied on. One suiter hides in her hair in the form of a Sea-hare (a kind of marine slug), making it impossible to catch him as she furiously scanned from her windows. We are shown an exaggerated hostile defense against relatedness, but in modern culture, we find common examples of earnest young men cut down to size for simply presenting their interest. Isolation, loneliness, and lack of support take a terrible toll on the rejecting person, but the defensive hostility justifies its presence as necessary for pseudo-independence.

With subtle insight, we may discover that all our defenses begin by denying we are affected by inner or outer objects. We reject the gift of human vulnerability by refusing to acknowledge evidence of its presence. Yet, it is the key to all relationships and accurate evaluation of the wider world. We need to make contact with life to craft a successful response that satisfies our instincts and needs. Accurately identifying that we are being affected, finding language to capture our experience, and then reflecting on it is the path forward.

We need to experience life fully and honor our instinctive responses. It is our responsibility to satisfy our needs with an aesthetic that delights our body and soul. The two-million-year-old human inside us will sigh with relief, and we will find we are dynamic in ways we did not think were possible.

HERE'S THE DREAM WE ANALYZE:

It's nighttime, and I'm playing with my children outside, somewhere like the bottom porch of a two-story building. Suddenly, I notice men, possibly soldiers, carrying dead bodies next to us up the stairs. I don't know what to do. My children haven't noticed, so I let them continue playing. The next thing I know, one of the soldiers is carrying my son up the stairs over his shoulders, and my husband is carrying a dead body into our house on the adjacent side of the street. The man tosses my son onto a pile of dead bodies on the second-floor porch. I thankfully make it just in time to catch him as he slips off the pile of corpses. Looking up at the room of men on the second floor (the soldier who took my son is in the middle, looking at me with 3 or 4 other soldiers around him), I yell and try to insult them with something like, "What have you blown your brains out? How stupid can you be?!"

UNLOCK THE SECRETS OF YOUR DREAMS: Dream School provides a gently paced program with live interactive webinars, an uplifting online community, thought-provoking audio modules, and guided journaling to deepen your experience. Lisa, Deb, and Joe crafted the program with you in mind and companion you through the process. “Step-by-step, we’ll teach you how to interpret your dreams.” Join the revolution of consciousness! Join Dream School and Transform Your Sleep into the Greatest Adventure of Your Life: https://thisjungianlife.com/join-dream-school/

MEET LISA IN COLUMBUS OHIO on October 13 & 14, 2023
The Power of Dreamwork – Friday Night Lecture (October 13 from 7 to 8:30 PM) and Saturday Workshop (October 14 from 9:30 AM to Noon)
https://www.jungcentralohio.org/event/the-power-of-dreamwork-friday-night-lecture-and-saturday-workshop-presented-by-lisa-marchiano/

PLEASE GIVE US A HAND: Hey folks, we need your help. Please become our patron and keep This Jungian Life podcast up and running: https://www.patreon.com/ThisJungianLife

ARE YOU INTERESTED IN A SERIOUS STUDY OF JUNG? Enroll in the Philadelphia Jungian Seminar 2023 Fall Semester and start your journey: https://www.cgjungphiladelphia.org/seminar.shtml

SHARE YOUR DREAM WITH US: Submit your dream for a possible podcast interpretation: https://thisjungianlife.com/share-your-dream/

SUGGEST A FUTURE PODCAST TOPIC: Share your suggestions: https://thisjungianlife.com/podcast-form-topics/

YES, WE HAVE MERCH! https://www.zazzle.com/store/thisjungianlife/products

WATCH or LISTEN HERE: https://thisjungianlife.com/defenses/

We all know defensive people, but when it's us, it can be confusing. We need some defensive strategies to cope, but when they take over, they leave us isolated.

SELKIE FOLKLORE: Should we force soul to serve us?WATCH or LISTEN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3DyuT_TA7EThe Selkie...
09/21/2023

SELKIE FOLKLORE: Should we force soul to serve us?

WATCH or LISTEN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3DyuT_TA7E

The Selkie swims ashore at night, sheds her seal skin, hides it, and delights in her human form. In Celtic lore, she is the wild feminine soul, a creature of land and sea, innocent and beautiful, who cannot thrive in domesticity.

In folklore, the seal-folk are discovered by humans. Their natural, joyous spirit, grace, and affection invite contact. Humans are drawn to them, but if they touch, parting is unbearable. Many a young man, desperate to maintain the life-giving embrace of nature, steals a Selkie’s seal skin, locking her into a human form. Helpless, she is led into domesticity and motherhood. Isolated from the sea, in a role alien to her nature, the Selkie diminishes until her seal-skin is reclaimed. Called home to the sea, she leaves all behind and is restored to her authentic being.

Theft of a Selkie’s skin is a kind of archetypal initiation we all may face. Our naive spirits are all too often robbed or captured through lack of foresight. We lose touch with our wild spirit as we accept our assigned social roles, accommodate marital expectations, and forget what we once loved. Drained and disaffected, midlife may cast us into our inner wilderness to renew and restore our original being.

We lose our connection to life-giving instincts slowly. Attending the family alma mater, selecting a sensible career, and sacrificing our wildness to corporate culture can leave our souls withered. Deprived of the water of life, we may abandon everything once we find our true skin and smell the brine carried on the east wind.

In the ancient stories, seal-folk were male and female, and either might find themselves trapped through naïve curiosity. For young men and women, innocence is unrewarded in the adult world and often leads us into harsh agreements that force us to abandon our intuition and accept domestication. We turn from our inner world and stare only at the culture. Deep desire is replaced by snacking on what has been advertised. Our uncouth delight is curated into meticulous etiquette.

When we neglect our animal side, the unconscious howls at us. Injured animals surface in our dreams, along with roaring vague creatures that chase us and savage impulses prompting us to bite and claw. If we linger too long in alien domesticity, emptiness, exhaustion, and neglect may drive us to chew our way out of our current situation. But actions of last resort might be avoided by learning to listen to the wild one within.

Carving out time in nature, setting unyielding boundaries, and questioning societal expectations are vital to protecting our true nature. If we are sons and daughters of the open water, we need time off, solitude, and uninterrupted periods of self-reflection. Art, music, and poetry can call forward our animal nature, granting us deep relief.

Listen to your seal-song and answer it.

A COPY OF THE DREAM IS HERE: https://thisjungianlife.com/selkie/

MEET LISA IN COLUMBUS OHIO on October 13 & 14, 2023
The Power of Dreamwork – Friday Night Lecture (October 13 from 7 to 8:30 PM) and Saturday Workshop (October 14 from 9:30 AM to Noon)
https://www.jungcentralohio.org/event/the-power-of-dreamwork-friday-night-lecture-and-saturday-workshop-presented-by-lisa-marchiano/

UNLOCK THE SECRETS OF YOUR DREAMS: Dream School provides a gently paced program with live interactive webinars, an uplifting online community, thought-provoking audio modules, and guided journaling to deepen your experience. Lisa, Deb, and Joe crafted the program with you in mind and companion you through the process. “Step-by-step, we’ll teach you how to interpret your dreams.” Join the revolution of consciousness! Join Dream School and Transform Your Sleep into the Greatest Adventure of Your Life: https://thisjungianlife.com/join-dream-school/

PLEASE GIVE US A HAND: Hey folks, we need your help. Please become our patron and keep This Jungian Life podcast up and running: https://www.patreon.com/ThisJungianLife

ARE YOU INTERESTED IN A SERIOUS STUDY OF JUNG? Enroll in the Philadelphia Jungian Seminar 2023 Fall Semester and start your journey: https://www.cgjungphiladelphia.org/seminar.shtml

SHARE YOUR DREAM WITH US: Submit your dream for a possible podcast interpretation: https://thisjungianlife.com/share-your-dream/

SUGGEST A FUTURE PODCAST TOPIC: Share your suggestions: https://thisjungianlife.com/podcast-form-topics/

YES, WE HAVE MERCH! https://www.zazzle.com/store/thisjungianlife/products

WATCH or LISTEN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3DyuT_TA7E

The Selkie swims ashore at night, sheds her seal skin, hides it, and delights in her human form. In Celtic lore, she is the wild feminine soul, a creature of...

Thank you, New York Magazine, for featuring This Jungian Life podcast! We love this article and had lots of fun being in...
09/16/2023

Thank you, New York Magazine, for featuring This Jungian Life podcast! We love this article and had lots of fun being interviewed by the wonderful Lewis Cheslaw. We deeply appreciate our listeners and colleagues who shared their thoughts about the podcast.

The podcast’s psychoanalyst hosts are listening. So is everyone else, it seems.

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