The Soul of Morenian Work

Connie Miller connie at souldrama.com
Fri Jan 4 08:38:38 CST 2008


 Replying These are valuable contributions Moreno made, and they're bigger than just psychodrama. They're about communication and also the feelings and attitudes behind a renewed and expanded vision of what effective and constructive communication can be.

Happy New Year to all. 

I am enjoying the discussion and I am now hooked in with the word soul. Soul speaks in terms of vision, feelings, insight and intuition, therefore, it is difficult to put soul into words...the problem has been how to have soul and ego communicate and stay in alignment. I think that we are all involved in our own ways in doing this and that Moreno was certainly the visionary leader. As Einsteins said 
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant.
We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift. Einstein
Souldrama is merely trying to give some structure to psychodrama by openiing seven doors to spiritual transformation using psychodrama. Who was it who said "We all sit in a circle and suppose and the secret sits in the center and knows?"

Anyone know? Blessings
-----Original Message-----
From: Adam Blatner [mailto:adam at blatner.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 3, 2008 11:35 PM
To: 'CGayle', list at grouptalkweb.org
Cc: SaphiraL at AOL.COM
Subject: The Soul of Morenian Work

.hmmessage P {	PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 0px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 0px; MARGIN: 0px; PADDING-TOP: 0px}BODY.hmmessage {	FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Tahoma}A lateral response about Moreno and Kabbalah... 
 lateral in that I'm not going to be linear or rational: I sense that Anath, Saphira, and others who have met Moreno have experienced an intangible quality that is hinted at in the literal meaning of the word, "enthusiasm," the "-thus-" being really "-theos-" -- a sense of god-inspiration, filling.
 The scope of his vision also shared this continuing vision from his young years when he participated in co-creating at least the beginnings of an effort at a religion of encounter. 
 At this level of feeling and intuition, there are similar resonances. We're also speaking of charisma, and why I was deeply struck with this weird ol' guy's excitment and animated presence when I first saw / heard him talk in 1966. That's that sketch I did of him. 

 Anyway, what I mean by lateral is that I've been reading some Rumi as part of a discussion group that I'm a member of (i.e., a "Socrates' Cafe" group here at Sun City Texas) , and that's the next topic. Rumi is so crazy (like a fox)... and this non-rational poetry, these paradoxes, resonate with the themes spoken about many true great mystics---and here I guess I would not argue that Moreno might be one of them--- 

 So there's the more rational, linear mind that wants to be a bit careful about our claims about Moreno, with qualifications and all.. and there's another part that has shared the deep sense of feeling moved and inspired by the less tangible elements. I'm reminded of another Hasidic Jewish story, about a fellow who went to see the local saint or tzaddik in a town some miles distant. On his return, he was asked, "So, what did you learn?" "Learn?" replied the man, "I learned... I watched how the tzaddik tied his shoelaces!" 

 Kinda zen, huh? So bless you---thanks, Saphira, for chiming in---and Anath, for your sharing some personal anecdotes. Thanks Ed for your continuing efforts to bring yet more of Moreno's work to us, some of it through Zerka, some other things you're doing... 
 And all you who are playing. 

These are valuable contributions Moreno made, and they're bigger than just psychodrama. They're about communication and also the feelings and attitudes behind a renewed and expanded vision of what effective and constructive communication can be. 

 Warmly, Adam

 Warmly, Adam
----- Original Message ----- 
From:CGayle
To:list at grouptalkweb.org
Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2008 2:13 PM
Subject: Re: Moreno a kabbalist?


I have found more connections w/ Moreno's writings when I started to read classical/traditional Jewish and Kabbalah sources (which is only tip of surface b/c has to be what has been translated) vs modern texts on Judaism and Kabbalah. I have been studying Torah in Orthodox circles the last year and one-half. Has taken my learning, and challenged/inspired my learning, on a much different level...a quantum leap? It's been an interesting journey...which feeds my soul deeply....yet socially challenging. People are very welcoming, yet talk about lack of tele! 
Cynthia Gayle

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