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Family of Origin
Singing the Bones: Recovering the Self
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<blockquote data-quote="Scent of Cedar *" data-source="post: 664071" data-attributes="member: 17461"><p>Well, remember what Jung believed about the collective unconscious and how, underneath we are all connected. I am wondering too about that pasa. Here, we wonder whether an illness has been passed genetically, or whether it was attachment disorder and so on but...what about Jung's idea of connection. The barrier would be permeable, amorphous, there and not there or come in our dreams.</p><p></p><p>I read that twins separated at birth will sometimes be found to prefer the same brand of toothpaste.</p><p></p><p>That cannot be genetic...so, what is it that accounts then for the strangely peculiar, seemingly meaningless and yet, really disturbingly this-cannot-be-chance-can-it frequency of those kinds of occurrence in twins?</p><p></p><p>No one can say. </p><p></p><p>Cedar</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Cedar</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Scent of Cedar *, post: 664071, member: 17461"] Well, remember what Jung believed about the collective unconscious and how, underneath we are all connected. I am wondering too about that pasa. Here, we wonder whether an illness has been passed genetically, or whether it was attachment disorder and so on but...what about Jung's idea of connection. The barrier would be permeable, amorphous, there and not there or come in our dreams. I read that twins separated at birth will sometimes be found to prefer the same brand of toothpaste. That cannot be genetic...so, what is it that accounts then for the strangely peculiar, seemingly meaningless and yet, really disturbingly this-cannot-be-chance-can-it frequency of those kinds of occurrence in twins? No one can say. Cedar Cedar [/QUOTE]
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Family of Origin
Singing the Bones: Recovering the Self
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