• Learn how to connect with that aspect of yourself that has been silenced.

    In this one hour seminar, we’ll reframe rage as an inner compass rather than a problem to fix. You’ll learn how to read the signals beneath the intensity, uncover what your anger is pointing to, and begin to harness its energy for clarity, boundaries, and self-trust.

    You’ll walk away with:

    • A new perspective on rage as a guide, not a shameful outburst.

    • Practical ways to channel its force into healthy expression and decision-making.

    • Connection with other women navigating the same midlife shifts.

    Join us to discover how rage, when listened to, can become your gauge for power, renewal, and deeper self-alignment.

  • This one-day seminar invites therapists to deepen their clinical work by exploring rage through a Jungian framework. Rage is not simply an excess of anger but a symbolic force that can carry archetypal meaning, revealing shadow material, unmet developmental needs, and psychic energy available for transformation.

    Learning Objectives:

    • Understand rage as a psychological and archetypal phenomenon, distinguishing it from anger, aggression, and violence.

    • Explore rage in the context of the shadow, projection, and complexes.

    • Examine how rage emerges at life thresholds—particularly in women during midlife, perimenopause, and menopause—as initiatory moments rather than pathological breakdowns.

    • Identify symbolic imagery of rage in myths, fairy tales, and cultural archetypes (e.g., Lyssa, the Furies, Kali).

    • Gain clinical tools for holding, interpreting, and working with rage in the therapeutic relationship, including countertransference awareness.

    • Practice interventions to support clients in transforming rage into clarity, boundary-setting, and empowerment.

    Format:

    • Morning: Theoretical grounding in Jungian concepts of shadow, archetypes, and the collective unconscious; mythological and symbolic images of rage; discussion of rage across gendered and developmental stages.

    • Afternoon: Case presentations, experiential exercises (active imagination, guided reflection, group processing), and clinical application strategies.

    Audience:
    Licensed therapists, analysts, counselors, and clinicians seeking to deepen their practice through archetypal psychology and integrative approaches.

Rage often shows up in midlife—especially during perimenopause and menopause—leaving many women to wonder, What’s wrong with me? But rage isn’t a flaw. It’s a gauge. It tells us where our boundaries have been crossed, where we’ve been silenced, and where change is urgently needed.

Join us to find clarity in a time where our rage can be our guide.