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DPS 903: Fieldwork, Practice & Case Present III
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Throughout the third year of coursework students will participate in at least 60 hours of fieldwork or therapeutic practice that will further their own learning goals and provide an opportunity to integrate the theories, ideas, and experiences they have gained in the first two years. Fieldwork will involve entering into a particular community setting with the intention of studying some aspect of community experience that relates to the learning goals of this program. Practice will involve actually practicing therapeutically with clients or patients in a mode in which the student is qualified. Students must formally propose their work in fieldwork or practice and have it approved by the facaulty prior to beginning the first class in this sequence (unless the work being proposed is part of work the student already has underway). Students submit a log of completed fieldwork or practice hours and make formal case presentations during the on campus portion of this course. Pass/No Pass
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DPS 903 - Fieldwork, Practice & Case Present III
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DPS 920: Depth Psychology & the Sacred
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
When Jung said that all psychological problems are essentially religious problems, he was calling attention to the spiritual function of the psyche. In this course we examine the psyche's capacity for sacred experience as it finds expression in religion, ritual, and encounters with the numinosum. Students will examine non-medical approaches for managing pain and symptoms due to mourning, heartbreak and the loss of meaning in life that comes from an impoverished sense of the sacred.
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DPS 920 - Depth Psychology & the Sacred
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DPS 921: Mythopoetic Imagination
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
The humanities have traditionally been the source of our most innovative ideas about the meaning of life, the beauty of the sensate world, the depth of the soul, and the birth of new values. The intention of this course is to develop an aesthetic approach that reconnects the arts with the art of healing.
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DPS 921 - Mythopoetic Imagination
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DPS 932A: Dissertation Development IIA
0.67 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Students master the elements of a research concept paper and its relationship to the proposal and final draft of a dissertation. This course will result in the writing of a complete and approved concept paper. Pass/No Pass
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DPS 932A - Dissertation Development IIA
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DPS 932B: Dissertation Development IIB
0.67 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Students master the elements of a research concept paper and its relationship to the proposal and final draft of a dissertation. This course will result in the writing of a complete and approved concept paper. Pass/No Pass
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DPS 932B - Dissertation Development IIB
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DPS 932C: Dissertation Development IIC
0.66 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Students master the elements of a research concept paper and its relationship to the proposal and final draft of a dissertation. This course will result in the writing of a complete and approved concept paper. Pass/No Pass
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DPS 932C - Dissertation Development IIC
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DPS 950: The Body in Literature:Sickness & Health
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Stories from literature and from worldwide oral traditions abound with metaphorical and literal references to the symptomatic and wounded body as a rich context for suffering and remedy. The body becomes a narrative in its own right and, as such, leads us along through its experiences. Students in the course will read various works of myth and literature and learn how to critically interpret them from the perspective of somatic depth psychology. In addition they will critically reflect on the cultural role of these works in forming ideas about the body.
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DPS 950 - The Body in Literature:Sickness & Health
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DPS 951: Chronic and Terminal Illness and Dying
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
The culturally dominant allopathic medical approaches for treating chronic and terminal illnesses are increasingly criticized as being efficient, cost prohibitive, and failing to contribute to the overall well-being of the patient. Students will review the alternatives to traditional practices, reviewing new practices for the training of nurses, doctors, and support personnel working in hospices and hospitals for the chronically ill.
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DPS 951 - Chronic and Terminal Illness and Dying
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DPS 952: Non-Western & Indigenous Healing
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
This course will focus on the theories and techniques of several different healing pratices including shamanic practices from a variety of cultural contexts: curanderos, plant medicine healers, diviners, spirit healers, and others. As with similar reviews of western healing traditions, students will also examine these practices for clear connections to, and enrichments for, depth somatic psychology.
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DPS 952 - Non-Western & Indigenous Healing
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DPS 953: Eros, Isolation, and Relationship
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
The loss of a love relationship has been known to cause "stress cardiomyopathy", also called "apical ballooning syndrome." This describes what happens when the brain, following an emotional trauma, releases chemicals into the bloodstream that cause rapid and severe heart muscle weakness (cardiomyopathy). These symptoms are very similar to those of patients having a heart attack. Since heartbreak often provokes that reaction, it is also known as the "broken heart syndrome." In this course students examine the ways that the dynamics of love and relationship may produce or prevent symptoms and contribute to healing. Students will learn to use a depth psychological approach which goes beyond the symptom, treating the pain of betrayal and abandonment, for example, as a push from nature to evolve into a new form of loving and relating. Instead of "treating" the heartbreak, the client is offered an initiation into the darker aspects of the Lover's archetype.
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DPS 953 - Eros, Isolation, and Relationship
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