“True generosity consists precisely in fighting to destroy the causes which nourish false charity”
Paulo Freire, 1970
“The unconscious is and will remain forever ineffable”
Norman O. Brown, 1966
“Wisdom cannot be purchased”
Akan Proverb
“Everything contradictory to the ruling tendencies of the conscious personality … is apt to be repressed”
Franz Alexander, 1932
“The greatest enemy of individual freedom is the individual himself”
Saul Alinsky, 1971
“The only true principle for mankind is justice”
Henri Frédéric Amiel, 1863
“You know very well that love is, above all, the gift of oneself!”
Jean Anouilh, 1949
“Men, their rights and nothing more; Women, their rights and nothing less!”
Susan B. Anthony, 1873
“He who has the truth is in the majority, even though he be one.”
Arabian Proverb
“Under conditions of tyranny it is far easier to act than to think”
Hannah Arendt, 1970
“The last taboo of mankind, avoiding forbidden and dangerous thoughts, must be removed … There are no illegitimate thoughts
Theodor Reik, 1963
“Within us, still within us, always within us, childhood is a state of mind”
Gaston Bachelard, 1960
“For to love is to escape from doubt, it is to live in the certainty of the heart”
Gaston Bachelard, 1938
“There’s a consensus out there that it’s okay to kill when your government decides whom to kill. If you kill inside the country you get in trouble. If you kill outside the country, right time, right season, latest enemy, you get a medal”
Joan Baez, 1966
“For those who stubbornly seek freedom, there can be no more urgent task than to come to understand the mechanisms and practices of indoctrination”
Noam Chomsky, 1984
“Intellectual slavery, of whatever nature it may be, will always have as a natural result both political and social slavery”
Mikhail Bakunin, 1868
“We take our shape, it is true, within and against the cage of reality bequeathed us at birth; and yet it is precisely through our dependence on this reality that we are most endlessly betrayed”
James Baldwin, 1955
“One can only face in others what one can face in oneself”
James Baldwin, 1991
“An understanding of the world is conditioned by the inner order and disorder of the one who understands”
Barnaby B. Barratt, 1984
“The capacity to combine commitment with skepticism is essential to democracy”
Mary Catherine Bateson, 1989
“Women’s chains have been forged by men, not by anatomy”
Estelle R. Ramey, 1972
“All oppression creates a state of war”
Simone de Beauvoir, 1949
“All human knowledge takes the form of interpretation”
Walter Benjamin, 1923
“The aim of psychoanalysis, still unfulfilled, and still only half‑conscious, is to return our bodies, to return ourselves to ourselves, and thus to overcome the human state of self‑alienation”
Norman O. Brown, 1959
“Action should culminate in wisdom”
Bhagavad Gita
“The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed”
Steve Biko, 1979
“To see the world in a grain of sand and heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hand and eternity in an hour”
William Blake, 1800‑1810
“The free man is he who does not fear to go to the end of this thought”
Leon Blum, c. 1948
“Politics are usually the executive expression of human immaturity”
Vera Mary Brittain, 1964
“To be radical is to grasp the matter by its roots”
Karl Marx, 1844
“Play is the exultation of the possible”
Martin Buber, 1957
“Power abdicates only under the stress of counter‑power”
Martin Buber, 1947
“Through meditation, we acquire and eventually acknowledge our connection to an inner power source that has the ability to transform our outer world”
Julia Cameron, 1992
“Psychoanalysis is equipped to study the mystery of the human heart”
Norman O. Brown, 1959
“What the world needs, of course, is a little more Eros and less strife; but the intellectual world needs it just as much”
Norman O. Brown, 1959
“You cannot create experience, you must undergo it”
Albert Camus 1962
“To know oneself, one should assert oneself”
Albert Camus, 1962
“Where is the Life we have lost in living? Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
T. S. Eliot, 1948
“Truth resides in every heart, and one has to search for it there, and to be guided by truth as one sees it. But no one has a right to coerce others to act according to his own view of truth”
Mohandas K. Gandhi
“Say not, ‘I have found the truth’, but rather ‘I have found a truth’”
Kahlil Gibran, 1923
“Nothing is more damaging to a new truth than an old error”
Johan Wolfgang von Goethe
“Truth is the god of the free man”
Maxim Gorky, 1903
“Love alone is capable of uniting living beings in such a way to complete and fulfill them, for it alone takes them and joins them by what is deepest in themselves”
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, 1959
“It is the responsibility of intellectuals to speak the truth and to expose the lies”
Noam Chomsky, 1966
“In order to be happy one must think of the happiness of another person”
Gaston Bachelard, 1938
“I tore myself away from the safe comfort of certainties through my love for truth; and truth rewarded me”
Simone de Beauvoir
“The price of hating other human beings is loving oneself less”
Eldridge Cleaver, 1968
“There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in”
Leonard Cohen, 1992
“The aim of the superior human is truth”
Confucius, 6th century b.c.e.
“When you know a thing, to hold that you know it; and when you do not know a thing, to allow that you do not know it; that is knowledge”
Confucius, 6th century b.c.e.
“To destroy is always the first step in any creation”
E. E. Cummings, 1955
“Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is in an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob, and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe”
Frederick Douglass, 1886
“I imagine, therefore I belong and am free”
Lawrence Durrell, 1957
“I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma that is made terrible by our own attempt to interpret it as though it had an underlying truth”
Umberto Eco, 1992
“The cosmic religious feeling is the strongest and noblest incitement to scientific research”
Albert Einstein, 1921
“The fact that human conscience remains partially infantile throughout life is the core of tragedy”
Erik H. Erikson, 1950
“He who conceals his disease cannot expect to be cured”
Ethiopian Proverb
“Culture has never the translucidity of custom; it abhors all simplification”
Frantz Fanon, 1961
“Our ideas of human nature, character, and action are a collection of contradictory half‑truths, held together by a thin veneer of beautiful but empty phraseology”
Moshe Feldenkrais, 1985
“Painters, mathematicians, composers, and everybody else who has ever done anything worthwhile, always had to learn to paint, think, and compose ‑‑‑ but not in the way they were taught. They had to learn and work until they knew themselves sufficiently to bring themselves to the state of spontaneity in which their deepest inner self to be brought up and out”
Moshe Feldenkrais, 1985
“It is not possible to be original except on a basis of tradition”
D. W. Winnicott, 1967
“The important thing I have learned over the years is the difference between taking one’s work seriously and taking one’s self seriously. The first is imperative and the second is disastrous”
Margot Fonteyn, 1975
“The poets and philosophers before me discovered the unconscious; what I discovered was the scientific method by which the unconscious can be studied”
Sigmund Freud, 1926
“Making the unconscious conscious transforms the mere idea of the universality of humans into the living experience of this universality; it is the experiential realization of humanism”
Erich Fromm, 1960
“Psychoanalysis can be defined as a system which is based on the assumption that we repress the awareness of the most significant experiences”
Erich Fromm, 1962
“Communism is the positive abolition of private property, of human self‑alienation, and thus the real appropriation of human nature through and for humans”
Karl Marx, 1844
“The Freudian theory is one of the most important foundation stones for an edifice to be built by future generations, the dwelling of a freer and wiser humanity”
Thomas Mann, 1939
“There is no free society without silence, without the internal and external space of solitude in which individual freedom can develop”
Herbert Marcuse, 1968
“Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate; our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure”
Nelson R. Mandela, 1991
“It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us”
Nelson R. Mandela, 1991
“Mankind is composed of two sorts of men ‑‑‑ those who love and create, and those who hate and destroy.
Jose Marti, 1893
“Other animals simply adapt to their environment. Our intelligence seems to have outpaced our sense of place in the universe, and the result is that we’re enormously dangerous”
Peter Matthiessen, 1990
“Only when we confront death, in some form or other, only when we realize that life is fragile, do we create beauty. It is parallel to the fact that only when we confront death do we authentically love”
Rollo May, 1885
“The capacity to love presupposes self‑awareness … love also presupposes freedom”
Rollo May, 1953
“The beginning of love is to let those we love be perfectly themselves, and not to twist them to fit our image. Otherwise we love only the reflection of ourselves we find in them”
Thomas Merton
“Every culture invests a lot of energy in maintaining the fiction that its cultural myth is, in fact, reality”
Terence McKenna, 1993
“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has”
Margaret Mead, 1982
“The collision of art with a social system is always a collision of freedom against repression, a combat of truth and lies, the struggle of life against decadent mechanism”
Mihajlo Mihajlov, 1970
“Art is always and everywhere the secret confession and, at the same time, the immortal movement of its time”
Karl Marx, 1859
“Nothing is unthinkable, nothing impossible to the balanced person, provided it arises out of the needs of life and is dedicated to life’s further developments”
Lewis Mumford, 1951
“Capitalist production begets, with inexorability of a law of nature, its own negation”
Karl Marx, 1867
“The forces of a capitalist society, if left unchecked, tend to make the rich richer and the poor poorer and thus increase the gap between them”
Jawaharlal Nehru, 1948
“Darkness within darkness, the gateway to all understanding”
Lao‑Tse, 6th century b.c.e.
“The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently”
Friedrich Nietzsche, 1881
“To understand yourself is the beginning of wisdom”
Jiddhu Krishnamurti, 1969
“We are unknown, we knowers, ourselves to ourselves; this has good reason. We have never searched for ourselves ‑‑‑ how should it then come to pass, that we should ever find ourselves?”
Friedrich Nietzsche, 1887
“One’s belief in truth begins with doubt of all truths one has believed hitherto”
Friedrich Nietzsche, 1878
“Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one’s courage”
Anais Nin, 1967
“Who dares nothing, need hope for nothing”
Frierich von Schiller, 1804
“There are very few human beings who receive truth, complete and staggering, by instant illumination. Most of them acquire it fragment by fragment, on a small scale, by successive developments, cellularly, like a laborious mosaic”
Anais Nin, 1943
“Understanding does not cure evil, but it is a definite help, inasmuch as one can hope with a comprehensible darkness”
Carl Gustav Jung, 1958
“Dreams are like a microscope through which we look at the hidden occurrences in our soul”
Erich Fromm, 1992
“A dream which has not been interpreted is like a letter that has not been opened”
Talmud
“Whatever fearful and terrifying visions thou mayest see, recognize them to be thine own thought‑forms”
Tibetan Book of the Dead
“Dreams, like symptoms, have no single explanation: they are overdetermined and contain many levels of meaning. No one every exhaustively analyzes a dream”
Irving D. Yalom, 1989
“There can be revolution only where there is a conscience”
Graffiti from the French student revolt, 1968
“No real social change has ever come about without a revolution”
Emma Goldman, 1910
“A successful revolution establishes a new community. A missed revolution makes irrelevant the community that persists. And a compromised revolution tends to shatter the community that was, without an adequate substitute”
Paul Goodman, 1960
“Revolution is the festival of the oppressed”
Germaine Greer, 1971
“In one sense, the opposite of fear is courage, but in the dynamic sense, the opposite of fer is love, whether this be love of persons or love of justice”
Alan S. Paton, 1967
“The social value of love is incontestable … it is one of the greatest educators of mankind”
Theodor Reik, 1957
“For one human being to love another: that is perhaps the most difficult of all our tasks, the ultimate, the last test and proof, the work for which all other work is but a preparation”
Rainer Maria Rilke, 1934
“What is life without the radiance of love?”
Friedrich von Schiller
“Inquiry is human; blind obedience brutal. Truth never loses by one but often suffers by the other.
William Penn, 1693
“With each release of pretense, we gain conviction about who we are. There is no other way to truly find ourselves”
Karen Goldman, 1993
“The delights of self‑discovery are always available”
Gail Sheehy, 1976
“Our knowledge is a little island in a great ocean of non‑knowledge”
Isaac Bashevis Singer, 1978
“What is most beautiful in virile men is something feminine; what is most beautiful in feminine women is something masculine”
Susan Sontag, 1966
“Our religion, laws, customs, are all founded on the belief that woman was made for man”
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, 1860
“Power can be taken, but not given. The process of the taking is empowerment in itself”
Gloria Steinem, 1983
“All persons originally are bisexual in their predisposition. There is no exception to this rule.
Wilhelm Stekel, 1922
“People living deeply have no fear of death”
Anais Nin, 1935
The DBH Degree. Doctoral Candidates admitted to this degree program will typically be actively committed as clinical practitioners of some mode of bodymind therapy, bodywork or (psycho)somatic healing. Applicants will usually already have completed a systematic course of training in one of the current schools of “body psychotherapy” or somatic psychology. For example, before coming to the Parkmore Institute for this doctorate, the Student will typically hold a certificate in some modality such as Eugene Gendlin’s Focusing, Peter Levine’s Somatic Experiencing, Ron Kurtz’s Hakomi, Alexander Loewen’s Bioenergetics, or similar. Based on the expertise acquired in the course of such training, Doctoral Candidates will then at least one Qualifying Tutorial or Seminar with one of the Institute’s Faculty. The purpose of this learning experience would be to ensure that the Student has knowledge of a broad range of bodymind theories and practices, rather than being narrowly focused on the particular modality in which s/he has trained. Following this Qualifying experience of learning, the Student ‑‑‑ together with the guidance and mentoring of a member of the Institute’s Faculty ‑‑‑ completes a Doctoral Project. This might be an article or book published in a reputable outlet, a series of publishable case reports, or a publishable piece of research.
An example of the sort of Student who should come to the Parkmore Institute: Ms. A is a licensed therapist, who received a Master’s in Counseling from an accredited university and who subsequently completed a four‑year training with a well known school of body psychotherapy. She comes to the Institute to undertake a seminar that would acquaint her with the history of psychotherapeutic methods as well as the full range of such bodymind practices across cultures. Her doctoral project will consist of a clinical report and critical evaluation of a series of treatments she has undertaken with trauma survivors. She chose the Parkmore Institute because she wants to learn more, because she wants learning that is directly relevant to her clinical practice, because she does not want to have to leave her clinical practice and her home to fulfill residency requirements, because she knows the Institute’s Faculty are “the real thing,” and because ‑‑‑ let’s be forthright ‑‑‑ she knows she deserves the dignity of the title, “Doctor.”
If you are interested in applying for this program, please contact director@parkmoreinstitute.org
The Parkmore Institute has virtual offices in Wilmington Delaware, USA. However, it is currently expanding and welcomes applications from prospective Doctoral Candidates, as well as potential Faculty and Fellows, from all parts of the world.