0 All Booked All Booked All Booked 1637 Introduction to Spiritual Psychology with Jane Kopp, Ph.D. https://www.newthoughtvermont.com/event/introduction-to-spiritual-psychology-with-jane-kopp-ph-d/?event_date=2020-07-10&reg=1 https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr 2020-07-10

Introduction to Spiritual Psychology with Jane Kopp, Ph.D.


Register July 10, 2020 1:30 pm July 10, 2020 3:00 pm America/New_York Introduction to Spiritual Psychology with Jane Kopp, Ph.D.

Four 90-minute interactive presentations. Dates and Times: Friday, July 10, 17, 24, and 31: 1:30PM – 3PM Eastern Time (via video conference). Registration for Jane’s seminar is set at $80.00. This amount is intended to make it affordable to as many individuals as possible. Please request scholarship assistance if needed. We encourage additional donations to cover actual expenses in providing this experience, to offer scholarship assistance as needed, and to defray the ongoing operational expenses for New Thought Vermont programming. https://www.newthoughtvermont.com/donate/ If you prefer to write a check, please make it out to New Thought Vermont (a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization) and mail it to New Thought Vermont, PO Box 185, Weston, VT 05161 (EIN: 201301789) Did you ever dream in your sleep at night of opening a door into a beautiful room in your house you had forgotten or never knew was there? Common to all major faith traditions as well as to a variety of esoteric lineages and to most indigenous religions are teachings about a source of meaning, intuitive wisdom, and grace-filled days that lies beyond “ego” or ordinary “mind,” and which either has been lost to that mind or is yet to be discovered by it. Various “virtues” can be cultivated to affect the ease with which that dimension can be accessed, and various practices (e.g., concentration, meditation, contemplation, prayer, etc.) can train ordinary consciousness to open to it. Presenter/Facilitator: Jane Kopp, Ph.D., M.A., University of California (Berkeley); M.A., B.A. Cambridge University (UK); B.A., Brown University. Jane Kopp has been since 1998 the Director of the Brooks Center for Spirituality, a not-for-profit organization in Denver, Colorado, dedicated to the study and teaching of spiritual psychology. She is also the founder of Advaita Vedanta Denver and a former board member of the C.G. Jung Society of Colorado. Along with her late husband, she led for a number of years a Denver center in the American New Thought tradition that was inspired in part by Eastern religions and philosophies. In an earlier career in academe, she taught at several colleges and universities nationwide and was a dean of the graduate school and Title VI administrator at the University of New Mexico, where she was a tenured member of the faculty. She presently teaches classes in spiritual psychology in Denver through the Brooks Center for Spirituality. As a motto for her life’s work, spiritual psychology, Jane Kopp says, “I have always kept in my heart something the American writer William Carlos Williams said about one of his own vocations, poetry: You won’t get ‘the news’ from it, yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there. What he said about his other vocation, medicine, also speaks to me and for me about spiritual psychology: The news I get from some people’s eyes is not trivial. It is profound.”

Online

Four 90-minute interactive presentations.

Dates and Times: Friday, July 10, 17, 24, and 31: 1:30PM – 3PM Eastern Time (via video conference).

Registration for Jane’s seminar is set at $80.00. This amount is intended to make it affordable to as many individuals as possible. Please request scholarship assistance if needed. We encourage additional donations to cover actual expenses in providing this experience, to offer scholarship assistance as needed, and to defray the ongoing operational expenses for New Thought Vermont programming.

https://www.newthoughtvermont.com/donate/

If you prefer to write a check, please make it out to New Thought Vermont (a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization) and mail it to

New Thought Vermont, PO Box 185, Weston, VT 05161 (EIN: 201301789)

Did you ever dream in your sleep at night of opening a door into a beautiful room in your house you had forgotten or never knew was there? Common to all major faith traditions as well as to a variety of esoteric lineages and to most indigenous religions are teachings about a source of meaning, intuitive wisdom, and grace-filled days that lies beyond “ego” or ordinary “mind,” and which either has been lost to that mind or is yet to be discovered by it. Various “virtues” can be cultivated to affect the ease with which that dimension can be accessed, and various practices (e.g., concentration, meditation, contemplation, prayer, etc.) can train ordinary consciousness to open to it.

Presenter/Facilitator:

Jane Kopp, Ph.D., M.A., University of California (Berkeley); M.A., B.A. Cambridge University (UK); B.A., Brown University. Jane Kopp has been since 1998 the Director of the Brooks Center for Spirituality, a not-for-profit organization in Denver, Colorado, dedicated to the study and teaching of spiritual psychology. She is also the founder of Advaita Vedanta Denver and a former board member of the C.G. Jung Society of Colorado. Along with her late husband, she led for a number of years a Denver center in the American New Thought tradition that was inspired in part by Eastern religions and philosophies. In an earlier career in academe, she taught at several colleges and universities nationwide and was a dean of the graduate school and Title VI administrator at the University of New Mexico, where she was a tenured member of the faculty. She presently teaches classes in spiritual psychology in Denver through the Brooks Center for Spirituality.

As a motto for her life’s work, spiritual psychology, Jane Kopp says, “I have always kept in my heart something the American writer William Carlos Williams said about one of his own vocations, poetry: You won’t get ‘the news’ from it, yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there. What he said about his other vocation, medicine, also speaks to me and for me about spiritual psychology: The news I get from some people’s eyes is not trivial. It is profound.”