March 2024
Time and Timelessness
Working with the I Ching & Jungian Psychotherapy
with Jungian Analyst Jayson Wong
In this course, we will explore the “qualitative” aspect of time and the need to relate to this aspect in our daily life, with particular reference to the practice of psychotherapy.
An invaluable way to read time and to discern its requirement is by consulting the I Ching. In this course, we will look at selected passages from the I Ching in relation to time and timeliness. We will also discuss the attitude required when approaching the I Ching.
Furthermore, we will look at the I Ching and individual hexagrams in conjunction with the Jungian concepts of “synchronicity”, “enantiodromia”, “interplay of opposites”, and the “transcendent function”.
The course is discussion based, and consists of two parts, each 2.5 hours in length. Participants will be given selected passages for contemplation and discussion. These passages seek to serve as “bait” to elicit our responses coming from within.
“When it is time to stop, then stop.
When it is time to advance, then advance.
Thus movement and rest do not miss the right time,
And their course becomes bright and clear.”
- I Ching
Saturdays
March 16 & 23, 2024
10am-12:30pm Pacific
/ 1-3:30 Eastern
• Instructor requests that all attendees participate with video on.
+ Live-Only Class - Unlike our other course offerings videos of sessions will not be available.
*
Thank you
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with Jungian Analyst
Jayson Wong
Jayson Wong received a B.A. in philosophy and a M.A. in religious studies, with a major in Buddhism. He taught for five years as instructor at Nalanda College of Buddhist Studies in Toronto. Presently, Jayson has a private practice as a registered psychotherapist and Jungian analyst in Barrie and in Toronto, Canada. He is member of the International Association for Analytical Psychology (IAAP), the College of Registered Psychotherapists of Ontario (CRPO), and the Canadian Association for Psychodynamic Therapy (CAPT).
Mandala image: Buiddhist Cosmos Lingdum Monastery Sikkim by Prof Ranga Sai