Joyous BodyClarissa Pinkola Estes aaxseeders: 1
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Joyous BodyClarissa Pinkola Estes aax (Size: 109.95 MB)
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- Joyous Body: Myths and Stories of the Wise Woman Archetype
“It is the nature of the saplings to quake in the winds; hesitant, learning to hold their own places. But, the older trees, with their years of testing and being tested, they are the ones who, whether in the long stern winds or misty gales, sway the most. Less a bouquet of tentative trembling first-time buds, now much more the leaf-perfumed hips of a hundred wide women dancing—these old ones, regardless of form, sway, by heart, to the music that thunders through them.” —Clarissa Pinkola Estés, PhD Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés invites you to join her and the Dangerous Old Woman “at the fireside” once again for the third volume of her masterwork on the archetype of the wise woman. This six-session on-demand online program features original stories, poems, and psychological commentary on the challenges, remedies, and ancient knowings of the holy female body, “that which is not a dumb servant but a divine fellow traveler and consort.” Session One Bones: Listening for the Creation Song The Ancient Bristlecone Pines Archetypal personification: La Anciana, The Midwife Exemplar On creating new life from old On the cycle of entropy, death, and vital return “The Scar Queen” prayer Session Two On the 10,000 Kinds of Beauty, on Ageless Beauty and True Self Love Tree Leitmotif: The Forest for the Trees Archetypal personification: Old Woman Truth, The Old Woman as “The Original” Storyteller’s Story: The Beauty-teria Story of “The Deer” Decoration of the body Women’s vicious competition Beatrice Woods’ story Story of the old woman in the ladies’ room “Blessings for Bodies” Session Three “Las Barbas Platas, The Great Silverbeards: Making Peace with the Body Tree Leitmotif: The Good Orcharder Archetypal personification: the consort Storyteller’s Story: “The Such-Lovely” Woman’s Tender Body The challenges of menses, perimenopause, and menopause Overcoming body shame “The Homely Girl” La panocha, the vulva The body as radiant being Session Four The Old Scar Washer, “Little Clay Pot” Tree Leitmotif: The Leaf Scar Archetypal personification: The wounded healer Storyteller’s Story: Taking the Father Home Again On remarkable life emerging from the midst of the wound On healing from the inside out On finding meaning in the midst of the trauma You did not die Mercy for the body Not the time of the breast alone Add-on and removable parts On the twists of fate that occur in life Session Five Tongue-cut Sparrow: How to Silence a Woman Tree Leitmotif: The Scarlet and Vermillion Tree Archetypal Personification: La Alma; The Soul as Pilot; The Visionary Storyteller’s Story: How the White-Throated Sparrow Came to the New World On regaining one’s true voice On the still small voice Story of Mary “Wings,” WWII cargo pilot Story of how a bird and the soul flies Women’s dreams Story reference to truth-telling, caught talking to the birds Memoria, Sabiduria, and other concepts that allow a woman to sing despite bad injuries and still fly free Session Six Táncoló Nagymamák, The Dancing Grandmothers Tree Leitmotif: The Fairy-Ring Tree Archetypal personification: Las Abuelitas, The Little Grandmothers Storyteller’s Story: The Child Dying to Dust On how when one is cruelly cut-down, one can grow back On the duty of the old to live on to test the young “Grandmother Snow in hospital wanting to go outside” Taking joy in teaching Written by: Clarissa Pinkola Estes Narrated by: Clarissa Pinkola Estes Length: 7 hrs and 54 mins Sounds True Page Sharing Widget |