Openings and Limitations
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Narrated by:
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Robert Bly
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By:
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Robert Bly
About this listen
In his numerous roles as groundbreaking poet, editor, translator, storyteller, and father of what he has called "the expressive men's movement", Bly remains one of the most hotly debated American artists of the past half century. What is it about Bly and his ideas that inspires such impassioned responses from readers and associates? The psychologist Robert Moore believes that "When the cultural and intellectual history of our time is written, Robert Bly will be recognized as the catalyst for a sweeping cultural revolution".
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A Home in the Dark Grass
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A poet, translator, and social theorist, Bly has published more than 30 collections of poetry, including The Light Around the Body (1967), which won a National Book Award, and most recently Stealing Sugar from the Castle: Selected Poems (2013). His honors include fellowships from Guggenheim and Rockefeller Foundations and the National Endowment for the Arts, as well as the Robert Frost Medal from the Poetry Society of America.
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Men and Women
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- Length: 1 hr and 52 mins
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This discussion between best-selling authors Deborah Tannen (You Just Don't Understand) and Robert Bly (Iron John) is presented as a sort of continuing education program. It is utterly delightful. The authors are both funny and serious. They care a great deal about the topic of women and men's conversational styles. The production is so well done that even questions from the audience are picked up by the microphones.
By: Robert Bly, and others
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The Naive Male
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- Length: 1 hr and 29 mins
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When a woman or a father attacks a naive male, he immediately opens himself up and takes the attack right into himself. "Oh, yes, that is true. I am really bad!" It does not occur to him that the attack may be something quite different. Maybe the woman or father is angry at something else and is displacing or projecting the anger onto the man. The naive male takes in the attack, feels the wound, and then bends over, psychologically.
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focus great story teller. hits home with amazing accuracy
- By Felix Blanchard on 06-01-24
By: Robert Bly
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Where Have All the Parents Gone
- A Talk on Sibling Society
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- Narrated by: Robert Bly
- Length: 2 hrs and 5 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Story
Robert Bly looks beyond the individual psyche to the problems of our public life, explaining why we as a culture are so adrift. What he finds is an infantilized society in which the battle between youth and age has been won by youth. Bly argues that in the collapse of the old patriarchal worldview, we are becoming a world of "siblings" who do not look up to heroes, leaders, or God, but only sideways at an army of siblings like ourselves. Through the psychological lessons embedded in ancient folk tales, Bly challenges us to move beyond our own adolescent envy and fantasy.
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Outstanding
- By T. Wayne on 12-12-22
By: Robert Bly
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An Evening with Marion Woodman and Robert Bly on the Sibling Society
- By: Marion Woodman, Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Marion Woodman
- Length: 1 hr and 55 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
-
Story
Where have all the grown-ups gone? In answering that question with the same freewheeling erudition and intuitive brilliance that made Iron John a national best seller, poet, storyteller, and translator Robert Bly tells us that we live in a "sibling society" in which adults have regressed into adolescence and adolescents refuse to grow up. We are proud to present a previously unreleased lecture featuring both Marion Woodman and Robert Bly on the subject of the sibling society!
By: Marion Woodman, and others
-
Men and the Wound
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Robert Bly
- Length: 1 hr and 26 mins
- Original Recording
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
In ordinary life, a mentor can guide a young man through various disciplines, helping to bring him out of boyhood into manhood; and that in turn is associated not with bodybuilding, but with building an emotional body capable of containing more than one sort of ecstasy.
By: Robert Bly
-
A Home in the Dark Grass
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Robert Bly
- Length: 1 hr and 18 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
A poet, translator, and social theorist, Bly has published more than 30 collections of poetry, including The Light Around the Body (1967), which won a National Book Award, and most recently Stealing Sugar from the Castle: Selected Poems (2013). His honors include fellowships from Guggenheim and Rockefeller Foundations and the National Endowment for the Arts, as well as the Robert Frost Medal from the Poetry Society of America.
By: Robert Bly
-
Men and Women
- Talking Together
- By: Robert Bly, Deborah Tannen
- Narrated by: Robert Bly, Deborah Tannen
- Length: 1 hr and 52 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
This discussion between best-selling authors Deborah Tannen (You Just Don't Understand) and Robert Bly (Iron John) is presented as a sort of continuing education program. It is utterly delightful. The authors are both funny and serious. They care a great deal about the topic of women and men's conversational styles. The production is so well done that even questions from the audience are picked up by the microphones.
By: Robert Bly, and others
-
The Naive Male
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Robert Bly
- Length: 1 hr and 29 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
When a woman or a father attacks a naive male, he immediately opens himself up and takes the attack right into himself. "Oh, yes, that is true. I am really bad!" It does not occur to him that the attack may be something quite different. Maybe the woman or father is angry at something else and is displacing or projecting the anger onto the man. The naive male takes in the attack, feels the wound, and then bends over, psychologically.
-
-
focus great story teller. hits home with amazing accuracy
- By Felix Blanchard on 06-01-24
By: Robert Bly
-
Where Have All the Parents Gone
- A Talk on Sibling Society
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Robert Bly
- Length: 2 hrs and 5 mins
- Original Recording
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Robert Bly looks beyond the individual psyche to the problems of our public life, explaining why we as a culture are so adrift. What he finds is an infantilized society in which the battle between youth and age has been won by youth. Bly argues that in the collapse of the old patriarchal worldview, we are becoming a world of "siblings" who do not look up to heroes, leaders, or God, but only sideways at an army of siblings like ourselves. Through the psychological lessons embedded in ancient folk tales, Bly challenges us to move beyond our own adolescent envy and fantasy.
-
-
Outstanding
- By T. Wayne on 12-12-22
By: Robert Bly
-
An Evening with Marion Woodman and Robert Bly on the Sibling Society
- By: Marion Woodman, Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Marion Woodman
- Length: 1 hr and 55 mins
- Original Recording
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Where have all the grown-ups gone? In answering that question with the same freewheeling erudition and intuitive brilliance that made Iron John a national best seller, poet, storyteller, and translator Robert Bly tells us that we live in a "sibling society" in which adults have regressed into adolescence and adolescents refuse to grow up. We are proud to present a previously unreleased lecture featuring both Marion Woodman and Robert Bly on the subject of the sibling society!
By: Marion Woodman, and others
-
W.B. Yeats and His Father
- The Development of Personality in Men
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Robert Bly
- Length: 7 hrs and 13 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
These broadcast quality archival recordings have been edited down into an amazing journey led by Robert Bly, one of America's greatest and entertaining thinkers. This audio explores the poetry of Yeats and goes deep into the author's biography to help bring to light the inspirations of Yeat's great works.
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A good experience, but not well-suited to audiobook format.
- By Aaron on 01-17-20
By: Robert Bly
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A Society of Siblings
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- Length: 54 mins
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Characterized by petty rivalries, self-indulgence and lack of responsibility, our actions fail to fulfill what Robert Bly describes as our true soul longing. With characteristic irreverence and storytelling from various cultures, Bly tells us what we should be doing about green-haired adolescents and idle elders, not to mention televisions and computers. His insightful focus illuminates the truths and possibilities of a culture caught in an adolescent phase of development.
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Rip off
- By Gunnar on 08-03-20
By: Robert Bly
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Into the Deep
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- Narrated by: Michael Toms
- Length: 52 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
An extraordinary visit with one of America's leading poets provides a unique exploration of the mystery of maleness. Bly uses fairy tales to illuminate the dark recesses of the psyche, and the result is a powerful intimation of the male experience and potential. From the soft, feminine male persona to the deeply buried wildman, Bly takes us on a journey through unmapped territory of the masculine. For men and women this is a conversation not to be missed.
By: Robert Bly
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The Human Shadow and What Stories Do We Need?
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Robert Bly
- Length: 4 hrs and 59 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Robert Bly - one of the most compelling mythologists and storytellers of our time - captures the imagination in two live recordings. In The Human Shadow, Bly takes us on a thought provoking and entertaining journey exploring our "shadow" through poetry, music, and storytelling. What Stories Do We Need? reminds us that the mythology we have inherited is often defective. Just as the church refused to accept the reality Galileo saw in his telescope, literalists have removed the dark soul images that nourished our ancestors from mythology.
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Bly is my greatest living hero
- By IW, Albuquerque on 04-05-16
By: Robert Bly
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The Power of Shame
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Michael Toms
- Length: 55 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
In this discussion, Bly talks of four sources of shame, including shame inherited from parents, grandparents, and ancestors, and shame over our bodily and creative instincts. It opens with a Russian fairy story on the Frog Princess and the shame we feel over our interior "Frog Bride." Bly and host Michael Toms discuss the new work in America on shame, most of it done during the last ten years.
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Difficult to understand
- By Shane on 06-08-12
By: Robert Bly
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William Blake and Beyond
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Michael Toms
- Length: 54 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
"As a man is, so he sees." These words of mystical poet and artist William Blake are just as relevant now as they were when they were written in 1802 - perhaps more so. Throughout his life, Blake undertook a voyage beyond rationality and materialism to an interior, visionary realm where "all things appear as they are - infinite." Yet all human beings, he believed, are capable of opening their eyes to a fuller experience of life.
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A romp through hippy land !
- By John Glemby on 10-22-10
By: Robert Bly
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The Masculine Road
- The Red, White, and Black
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Michael Toms
- Length: 54 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Bly describes the three necessary and sequential life phases symbolized by three colors - the "red, white and black," in the Grimm Brothers' fairy tale "Iron John." He casts a penetrating light on these male life stages, describing complications that arise, for example, when a boy skips the red and goes directly to the white. He also discusses how these stages, when fulfilled, affect men's relationships with women.
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Best discussion for Male Initiation
- By ARV on 02-21-23
By: Robert Bly
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Poems of Rumi
- By: Robert Bly, Coleman Barks
- Narrated by: Robert Bly, Coleman Barks
- Length: 2 hrs and 21 mins
- Abridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Jalaluddin Rumi is unquestionably one of the greatest spiritual poets of the world. This audio features Robert Bly and Coleman Barks each reading his own versons of Rumi. Brilliant musical accompaniment provides playfulness and ground to great spiritual expression.
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Unacceptable
- By Anonymous User on 02-19-19
By: Robert Bly, and others
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An Evening with Marion Woodman and Robert Bly on The Maiden King
- By: Marion Woodman, Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Marion Woodman
- Length: 1 hr and 39 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
A Course in Miracles says that this world and every aspect of it got started when the Son of God remembered not to laugh. What we failed to laugh at is the joke that is ourselves. Now, however, you can have a true experience of metaphysical mirth - you might even, yourself, achieve "full realization".
By: Marion Woodman, and others
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Male Naivete and Giving the Gold Away
- By: Robert Bly
- Narrated by: Michael Toms
- Length: 55 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Leaving naivete behind may open up the wilder regions of maleness, where men can wrestle with their demons and, in time, reach maturity and balance, according to Bly, poet and men's workshop facilitator. This is a fascinating dialogue which explores the mystery of maleness and includes Bly's storytelling mastery and poetry.
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Robert at his best.
- By Kenneth J Baum on 04-11-16
By: Robert Bly
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Marion Woodman & Robert Johnson in Conversation
- Jungian Psychology Through the Eyes of Two Masters
- By: Marion Woodman, Robert Johnson
- Narrated by: Marion Woodman, Robert Johnson
- Length: 13 hrs and 47 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
In these never-before-released "Woodman Johnson Discussions", you will get the complete edited program in eight different sections - 12 hours in total, edited audio. These two icons of Jungian theory share a revealing and insightful conversation on Jungian Analysis and each of their lives' work.Some of the points covered include: The Wounded Feeling Function in the Masculine and the Feminine; Legitimate and Illegitimate Feelings; and Masculine, Feminine, Patriarchy.
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Amazing for Jung and Dream analysis enthusiasts
- By Justin R. Smith on 05-31-22
By: Marion Woodman, and others
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The Dilemma of Depth Psychology in Relation to Social Change
- By: James Hillman
- Narrated by: James Hillman
- Length: 1 hr and 2 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Hillman refers to soul as “a perspective rather than a substance, a viewpoint toward things rather than a thing itself”. The value of seeing beneath, between, and beyond to achieve new perspectives for learning, integration, transformation, and growth was a personal challenge for Hillman, who claimed depth psychology can be summed up in one excerpt from Heraclitus: “You could not discover the limits of the soul (psyche), even if you traveled every road to do so; such is the depth…of its meaning."
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It’s worth the cost!
- By C. Gardner on 07-11-23
By: James Hillman