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Jung in the World | What Soul Tells the Body: Marion Woodman’s Discovery with Tina Stromsted

Jungianthology Radio

CHAPTER

The Cross-Cultural Element

Tina: I want to be a student for the rest of my life, learning from other cultures. So as you can tell, there's a social activist side to me, which is also very important. Maryan always said, she was way out of her time. She said, we are one world. And so that's what we're doing in all of this work.

00:00
Speaker 1
Yeah. So I wonder as you continue this work that is inspired so much by Marian, you've put your mark on it, you've made it your own, you're headed to Buenos Aires, you're also giving workshops in Italy. And as you do this work, what's next for you in your becoming, Tina? Thank you for that question. Well I'm working on a book, so I'm very excited about that and it will really be about bringing the body through more and more in analytic work, but also in daily life, the sacred feminine and the sacred masculine. And continuing my commitment to my deep analytic work with people who are on their soul's journeys, I love the work and I feel honored to be able to do it. Continuing to spread the work through teaching in different parts of the world as you mentioned. So the cross-cultural element is very important to me. My father's from Norway, I have family in Switzerland and we're also teaching and having a chance to visit them. Every culture has its own way of moving, its own way of relating to dreaming, its own perspective on the body and on the masculine and feminine, its own iteration and artistic renderings of the soul and of the sacred. So I want to be a student for the rest of my life, learning from other cultures and from colleagues and students and clients and friends, beloveds, you know, in different parts of the world. Maryan always said, she was way out of her time. She said, we are one world. And with the internet, social media, all of that, we, I think, have a responsibility to be global citizens now, not just to live in the silo of making America great again or any of this. It's how do we all impact the world, ecologically, relationally, interculturally, you know, on every level, spiritually, how do we come together? Because we have to, you know. Young said the future of the planet hangs by a single thread. And that is human consciousness. And so that's our responsibility. And I feel like that's what we're doing in all of this work. So as you can tell, there's a social activist side to me, which is also very important.

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