Program Description: A monkey on an island near Japan begins washing her sweet potatoes in the ocean. In time, all the monkeys on the island are washing theirs; then, all the monkeys on all the other islands are doing the same. "Not logical," says Jean Shinoda Bolen, but "when each of us individually changes" there is a "critical number...after which the culture changes." With this story as an opening metaphor, celebrated Jungian analyst, psychiatrist, and author Jean Shinoda Bolen, M.D., champions women's circles as sanctuaries for transformation, a million of which could change the world. Circles are fertile ground for changing our hierarchical, patriarchal culture to one of communication, support, and growth. A circle may be a dialogue group, prayer or meditation group, support or project group, but whatever the agenda, its members can create "soul connections" for each other that become "agents of sociological change." Explore the potentials and possibilities of circles, their history, their structure, their ultimate purpose and significance when members uncover "reciprocal revelations" that lead to "sacred dimensions" of their voices and their souls. (Hosted by Justine Willis Toms) 1 hour
Bolen is a clinical professor at San Francisco's University of California Medical Center and the author of Goddesses In Everywoman (Harper, 1984), Crossing To Avalon (HarperSanFrancisco, 1994), Close To The Bone (Scribner, 1996), and The Millionth Circle (Conari Press, 1999).
Topics explored in this dialogue:
How and why women use conversation differently than men