Denise Grobbelaar:

Ecopsychology

Jungian Analyst, Psychotherapist & Clinical Psychologist.

Category: Ecopsychology

Deep Connection: Humans, Well-being and Nature

Author: Denise Grobbelaar

Date Published: 2023-11-02 18:31:51

In the modern world, where urban and technological landscapes often overshadow the natural world, there is an ever-increasing disconnect between humanity and the environment that sustains us. The consequences of this detachment are far-reaching, impacting on the very essence of our well-being. Jung saw our relationship with nature as essential to the development of consciousness and wholeness (Sabini 2001). Jung stated that in the “civilization process, we have increasingly divided our consciousness from the deeper instinctive strata of the human psyche” (Jung, 1964, 36).

Categories: Consciousness, Earth & Nature, Ecopsychology, Indigenous Worldviews

Nature as the sacred “other”

Author: Denise Grobbelaar

Date Published: 2020-10-28 20:35:13

The process of ‘othering’ has allowed humans to treat Nature as a mere object instead of a living organism with its own organizing intelligence. Carl Jung recognized that ‘We are Nature’ - that the natural world is important for the development of consciousness and wholeness...

Categories: Earth & Nature, Ecopsychology, Indigenous Worldviews, The Other

Pachamama: Great Earth Mother

Author: Denise Grobbelaar

Date Published: 2020-04-22 06:47:20

Pachamama is the Great Earth Mother. As supreme and eternal goddess she represents both the living earth (physical planet) and the Universal Feminine Energy - the cosmic matrix of all life...

Categories: Earth & Nature, Ecopsychology, Gods & Goddesses, Indigenous Worldviews

This land is me: A continuance between humans and nature

Author: Denise Grobbelaar

Date Published: 2020-04-15 01:39:56

This embedded ecological awareness of origin-in-the-sentient-land (earth as mother) and the connection to other life forms as sentient beings and kin is a custodial ethic - a template for how to live in accord with nature based on reverence, responsibility, reciprocity and respect.

Categories: Earth & Nature, Ecopsychology, Indigenous Worldviews

Nature: The archetypal mother

Author: Denise Grobbelaar

Date Published: 2020-04-01 06:19:16

In the early 1970’s James Lovelock proposed the ‘Gaia’ hypothesis. He argued that earth is a dynamic self-regulating system where all life is interrelated, interacting through complex feedback loops. Life on earth is “a network of inseparable patterns of relationships”. Jung saw our relationship with nature as fundamental to the development of consciousness and wholeness.

Categories: Earth & Nature, Ecopsychology