<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Writing Toward Wholeness encourages readers to embark on their own journey through writing toward selfhood, toward wholeness. In focusing on insights and excerpts from C.G. Jung's writings and from contemporary writers, author Susan Tiberghien brings together psychology, spirituality, and the arts, offering a way to wholeness.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>From its first pages, <em><strong>Writing Toward Wholeness</strong></em> encourages readers to embark on their own journey through writing toward selfhood, toward wholeness. At every step, it reinforces the lessons C.G. Jung learned and shared with millions of people. In focusing on insights and excerpts from Jung's writings, and from contemporary writers, the author brings together psychology, spirituality, and the arts, offering a way to wholeness.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>-In <em><strong>Writing Toward Wholeness</strong></em> Tiberghien gives the reader access to Jung's inner thoughts as he dialogued with his Soul in his journals. She encourages us to do likewise by developing a relationship with our Soul by following the image it presents to us. In so doing, journaling becomes a spiritual practice. Calling upon the writings of such spiritual elders as Hildegaard of Bingen, Etty Hillesum, Thomas Merton and Annie Dillard, Tiberghien shows us how to write toward wholeness as we engage this "silent place of the spirit." A deeply nurturing and inspiring book. --Maureen Murdock, Ph.D., author of <em>The Heroine's Journey: Women's Quest for Wholeness </em></p><p>-In <em><strong>Writing Toward Wholeness</strong></em>, Susan Tiberghien distills a lifetime of prayerful attention. Using Carl Jung's journey, above all in the <em>Red Book</em>, she traces possibilities each of us has for a rounder, more conscious existence. A gifted teacher, she shows how creative energies are within our grasp and how writing practice can be part of spiritual growth. --Wallis Wilde-Menozzi, poet and author of <em>Mother Tongue</em></p><p>-The most interesting conversation we ever have may prove to be with our own depths. Rather than narcissistic self-absorption, through this dialogue something within responds, speaks back to us, and out of that unfolding conversation we begin to discover, engage, and assimilate unknown parts of ourselves. As a template for this summons toward greater wholeness, Susan Tiberghien's <em><strong>Writing Toward Wholeness</strong></em> provides examples of how other thoughtful people deepened their journey, as well as a host of questions and exercises which stir and stimulate our own con versation with the soul. --James Hollis, Ph.D., Jungian analyst in Washington D.C. and author of numerous books</p><p>-In <em><strong>Writing Toward Wholeness</strong></em> Susan Tiberghien profoundly calls us to experience what Thomas Merton called the "hidden whole- ness," the "hidden ground of love," within our deepest selves. This volume invites us to take up our pen and to journal, guiding us, chapter by chapter, as we create our own path to our true self. --Paul M. Pearson, Ph.D., Director, Thomas Merton Center</p><p>-<em><strong>Writing towards Wholeness</strong></em> invites to an encounter with self. Susan Tiberghien is not just showing the reader a way towards at-one-ness in the light of creation; she is creating such a path by her writing. Those seeking their own path towards wholeness can open these pages and will find sparks of inspiration from ancient and modern texts as well as from Susan's international teaching experience which has led countless participants of her workshops to become successful authors. Susan loves and creates and lives through writing. Like Carl Gustav Jung and Thomas Merton, this author has found wholeness and so will the reader inspired by her writing. It is the "path of a lifetime." --Kristina Schellinski, Jungian Analyst, Geneva, Switzerland</p><p>-In this reflective work on the virtues of writing, Susan Tiberghien encourages the reader with excerpts from Jung, the world of Zen and her own considerable life experience. The Writing toward Wholeness journey is richly accompanied by images from Jung's Red Book and other inspired sources, along with helpful exercises. In the course of recording our dreams, visions and imaginations, we both anticipate and honor our destiny. --Robert Hinshaw, Ph.D., Faculty, C.G. Jung Institute of Zurich, Publisher, Daimon Verlag</p><br>
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