(View entire post here)
During this past week I did thirty some radio interviews in connection with this book What Matters Most. Many of the hosts made the obvious point that it was the first full week of the new year and for many is a time for resolutions. And a few further observed that a book that raises questions about what matters most is also arriving at a timely moment when our national life seems also so vexed, so confused, and so disappointing.
Is it not noteworthy that periodically we reexamine our lives and vow to live them differently? While we may be deeply in pain at the moment, or dealing with some consequence which has washed up on our shores, even more, are we not at those moments already in contact, however fleetingly, with something within that wishes to live more fully in the world? What is it that has brings people into analysis? Is it only suffering, powerful as that may be, or is it also that we intuit something which wishes fuller expression than we have allowed until now? Jung wrote once that every therapist should ask, "what is this person's neurosis allowing him or her to avoid"? He also observed that, deep down, everyone who came to him "knew" what it was they needed to do with their life. I am inclined to concur even as we acknowledge that often we do not know what we already know. But something in us always knows, and is always wishing to break through our resistance into the world through the choices we make, the lives we construct.



(View entire post