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History of Process Work
An off-shoot of Jungian analytic
psychotherapy, Process Work was originally developed by Jungian
author and analyst Arnold Mindell as a therapeutic modality. Over
the last thirty years of application and research, Process Work
is now more commonly described as an awareness practice,
as its methods are applied in a wide range of situations, as a
form of inner work or self-therapy, as a facilitation method for
group work, conflict situations, and large public forums, as a
therapy method for individuals, couples, and families, and as
a method for working with comatose and remote states of consciousness.
Process Work methods have been also been applied to other mental
health issues such as addictions, depression, anxiety and panic
disorders, working with chronic symptoms, death and dying, grieving
and loss.
The Process Work Institute continues
the tradition of Process Work training and research begun in 1982
with the founding of the Research Society for Process-oriented
Psychology in Zurich, Switzerland by Arnold Mindell and his associates.
In 1989, the Process Work Center of Portland, later renamed the
Process Work Institute, was incorporated in Oregon as a center
for training and research in Process Work. It received authorization
from the State of Oregon to offer a Master of Arts degree in Process
Work, in January, 1992. A second Master of Arts degree program
in Conflict Facilitation and Organizational Change began in 2004.
The Institute currently serves
as a center for personal and professional growth, offering several
degree and non degree programs and courses in a wide variety of
Process Work applications.
See Also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_Work
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