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The Esalen Institute
has often been in the public spotlight, most notably for its
role in encouraging new understandings of human nature in the
sixties and initiating citizen diplomacy with the Soviet Union
in the eighties. However, it has also sponsored an array of
programs out of the public eye, programs that have had far-reaching
effects. The following list, though by no means comprehensive,
highlights some of these initiatives.
- 1962: The
eminent psychologist Abraham Maslow, co-founder of both humanistic
and transpersonal psychology, arrived at Esalen by chance,
and came to play an important role in its development, leading
several workshops and guiding the founders. Esalen workshop
leaders eventually played a pivotal role in the growing discipline
of humanistic psychology.
- 1964: Fritz
Perls, co-founder of Gestalt therapy, arrived at Esalen in
poor health and relatively unknown. In the ensuing five years
at Esalen, his health improved and he was provided a public
platform for his work through regular demonstrations in the
lodge and sundry workshops. By his death in 1970, several
training centers had opened and Gestalt had become an important
component of the psychotherapeutic landscape.
- 1967: Will
Schutz published the national-bestseller Joy and took up residence
at Esalen, which subsequently became a major center for his
style of encounter groups, thereby helping to spark a boom
in group-centered therapies.
- 1970: an
Esalen team visited Europe to find new approaches to personal
growth and discovered Roberto Assagiolis psychosynthesis,
an eclectic and comprehensive approach to development focused
on the positive and "higher" dimensions of humans.
This group then introduced Assagiolis work to America
in the winter of 1971. Key figures: Michael Murphy, James
and Susan Vargiu, Stuart and Sukie Miller, James Fadiman,
Robert and Donna Gerard.
- 1970-1971:
a number of Esalen group leaders traveled to Arica, Chile
to study with the Sufi teacher Oscar Ichazo. Key figures:
Claudio Naranjo, John Lilly, Steven Stroud, Jack Downing.
This eventually resulted in the proliferation of work on the
Enneagram, a system of personality typology, as well as the
founding of the Arica school.
- 1971-5: summer
programs in Berkeley, co-sponsored with the Association of
Transpersonal Psychology, on "Human Consciousness: Exploration,
Maps, and Models." Core seminars taught by: John Lilly,
Dorothy Fadiman, James Fadiman, John Perry, Charles Tart,
Stanley Keleman, Arthur Hastings, Stanislav Grof, Joan Halifax-Grof,
Jean Houston, and Arthur Deikman. These summer programs helped
shape the nascent discipline of transpersonal psychology.
- 1977: during
a month-long seminar at Esalen, Christina and Stanislav Grof
invented Holotropic Breathwork, a non-drug method for exploring
non-ordinary states of consciousness using deep breathing
in a group setting with evocative music and bodywork. In 1987,
they created a formal training program, which has since spawned
its own international organization and journal.
- 1965: George
Brown, professor at UC-Santa Barbara, first began teaching
workshops at Esalen on new paradigms of education.
- 1966: Esalen
sponsored "Education in the Year 2000," a workshop
jointly led by Richard Farson, director of the Western Behavioral
Sciences Institute; George Leonard, west coast editor for
Look magazine and winner of more national awards for education
reporting than any other writer; and Richard Suchman, Director
for the Divisions of Elementary-Secondary Research and Higher
Education Research in the U.S. Office of Education.
- 1966: Rollo
May, a leading figure in humanistic psychology, led a workshop
on "Education and the Dimensions of Consciousness."
- 1966: James
Bugental, prominent existential psychologist, facilitated
a workshop on "Ontogogy: Education for the Human Frontier."
- 1967: a Ford
Foundation grant led to the creation of the Ford/Esalen Project
in Confluent Education, joining affective and cognitive learning.
Dr. George Brown, a regular Esalen workshop leader and Professor
of Education at UC-Santa Barbara, spearheaded the program.
His work was summarized in an Esalen book entitled Human Teaching
for Human Learning. and a subsequent book called The Live
Education: Innovations Through Confluent Education and Gestalt.
This project gave rise to the Confluent Education program
at UC-Santa Barbaras School of Education, which has
conferred more than 80 doctorates and 300 masters degrees.
- 1968: Esalens
vice-president, George Leonard, drawing upon his reporting
background and experience in the human potential movement,
published Education and Ecstasy, a radical, utopian vision
of education that is still influential today.
- 1970: Esalen
San Francisco sponsored a regular series of lectures and workshops
for educators on humanistic education.
- 1970-1973:
Esalen implemented a sub-grant from George Browns Ford
Foundation work in which fourteen teachers and principals
spent three years training in Esalen techniques and then applied
such methods to their work in education.
- 1971: Esalens
education work, under the direction of Sukie Miller, was awarded
a Title-III grant from the state of California for a demonstration
program in confluent reading in the Newark school system.
- 1973: Esalen
seminars on education became available for academic credit
through the UC-Santa Barbara extension program.
- 1977: Esalen
created the Gazebo school under the guidance and vision of
Janet Lederman, a regular seminar leader on educational subjects,
an innovative teacher, and author of Anger and the Rocking
Chair. The Gazebo became a long-term experiment in applying
new principles to the field of education.
- 1987: invited
conference on "Early Childhood Education for the '90's,"
convened by Janet Lederman.
- 1962: Esalen
opened as an educational center, with a strong emphasis on
incorporating the body into visions of human development.
Over the years, a distinctive style of massage developed and
became known as Esalen massage. Thousands of massage practitioners
from around the world have now been trained in this approach.
- 1963: Charlotte
Selver arrived at Esalen for the first time, bringing with
her the Sensory Awareness approach, first developed by Elsa
Gindler in Germany. Through her regular workshops at Esalen
this work became much more widely known and practiced.
- 1964: Ida
Rolf, creator of Structural Integration, began a series of
extended residence periods. Structural Integration involves
a deep muscular-fascial restructuring of the body. With Esalen
as a platform, this work grew into international prominence,
with its own licensing body and training program.
- 1965-present:
Esalen offered a major West Coast venue for Reichian and neo-Reichian
approaches to personal growth, among them the Bioenergetics
of Alexander Lowen and John Pierrakos.
- 1970: Moshe
Feldenkrais, creator of the Feldenkrais method, held his first
major training in the United States at Esalen.
- 1971: Judith Aston
gave her first training in Aston Patterning at Esalen.
- 1987: conference
on "The Biological, Psychological, and Cultural Body:
Methods of Transformation" bringing together experts
in various somatic disciplines, including Don Hanlon Johnson,
Ted Melnechuk, Emilie Conrad DaOud, George Leonard,
Judith Aston, Thomas Hanna, Candace Pert, Bonnie Bainbridge
Cohen, George Solomon, Charlotte Selver, Michael Murphy, Leslie
Gray, Barbara Halpern, and Susan Griffin.
- 1988: first
of three conferences on "The Body and Spirituality,"
funded by Laurance Rockefellers Fund for the Enhancement
of the Human Spirit, convened by Don Hanlon Johnson. Participants:
Lauren Artress, Diana Beach, Shepherd Bliss, Grita Gil-Austern,
Alan Jones, June Keener-Wink, Paul LaChance, Daniel OConnor,
Michel Pantenberg, Paula Pohlman, Rosemary Radford Reuther,
Brother David Steindl-Rast, Thomas Stoll, and Alton Wasson.
- 1989: second
conference on "The Body and Spirituality" convened
by Don Hanlon Johnson. Participants: Phyllis Ocean Berman,
Richard Bollman, Sandy Boucher, Sister Myriam Dardenne, Sister
Rose Mary Dougherty, Clare Fischer, Reverend Marsha Foster,
David Griffin, Rosemarie Freeney Harding, Elise Saggau, Dmitri
Spivak, Halima Toure, Ted Tracy, Arthur Waskow, Rabbi Sheila
Weinberg, Judith Aston, Emilie Conrad DaOud, Robert
Hall, and Jean Lanier.
- 1990: third
conference on "The Body and Spirituality." Participants:
Joseph Couture, Emilie Conrad DaOud, Sister Myriam Dardenne,
Robert Hall, Rosemarie Harding, Vincent Harding, Barbara Holifield,
Don Hanlon Johnson, Michael Murphy, Naomi Newman, Dr. Mohammed
Shaalan, Brother David Steindl-Rast, Father Thomas Matus,
Father Innocenzo Gargano, Victor and Luiza Krivorotov, Dmitri
and Leonid Spivak, Vladimir Petrovich Zinchenko.
- Out of the "Body
and Spirituality" conference series came several projects,
including the Healing Center for Survivors of Political Torture
in San Francisco, and the Group for Healing the Body of Slavery,
based in Oakland.
- 1991: Conference
convened by Don Hanlon Johnson on Somatics and Phenomenology.
Participants: Elizabeth Behnke, Seymour Carter, Edward Casey,
Maureen Connolly, Chris Gove, Robert Hall, Drew Leder, Kennard
Lipman, David Rehorick, Glen Mazis, Kay Toombs.
- 1992: invited
conference on "Somatic Therapy and People of Color"
convened by Clyde Ford and Don Johnson.
- 1995: Don
Johnson edited the first in a series of CIIS-sponsored texts
on somatic literature Bone, Breath, & Gesture : Practices
of Embodiment as an outgrowth of the working group established
through the Esalen conferences, which included Emilie Conrad
DaOud, Continuum; Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen, Body-Mind
Centering; Clifford Smythe, Feldenkrais; Michael Salveson,
Rolfing; Darcy Elman, The F. M. Alexander Guild; Robert Hall,
Lomi; Michael Marsh; Martha Herbert, MD, PhD, Harvard Medical
School; and Stuart Newman, PhD, NY Medical School.
- 1997: Don
Johnson edited the second volume, entitled Groundworks: Narratives
of Embodiment, to emerge from the working group, including
articles by Robert Hall, Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen, Emilie Conrad
Daoud, Michael Salveson, Elizabeth Beringer, and Darcy
Elman. Each therapist described how he or she approaches and
diagnoses a patient's problem, how he or she determines what
and where to work, and the progress of a session.
- 1998: Don
Johnson edited the third volume, entitled The Body in Psychotherapy:
Inquiries in Somatic Psychology, with cases that explored
the interface between bodywork and clinical psychology.
- 1971-1974:
Esalen created the Program in Humanistic Medicine in which
twenty carefully selected medical professionals met monthly
over a period of three years to explore various human growth
methods, somatic disciplines, Eastern spiritual practices,
and alternative medical models. This understanding was then
applied to a more humane practice of medicine. Dr. Rachel
Naomi Remen and the late Dr. Alan Barbour, among others, participated
in the first group. This program also trained and consulted
for SAMA (Student American Medical Association).
- 1973: workshop
on "Holistic Medicine" led by Gay Luce.
- 1974: workshop
entitled "Four Pillars of Health: A Workshop in Preventative
Medicine" led by John McCamy and Al Drucker.
- 1974: workshop
on "Femininity in Humanistic Medicine" featuring
Rachel Naomi Remen, Marguerite Abell, and Mary Morgan.
- 1974: first
Esalen month-long workshop devoted to health. It emphasized
nutrition, bodywork, structural integration, meditation, and
group work, and was led by Dr. John McCamy
- 1974: the
Program in Humanistic Medicine became a separate entity called
the Institute for Study of Humanistic Medicine after receiving
a $1.2 million grant from HEW Manpower. This program was subsequently
adopted by Mt. Zion Hospital.
- 1976: The
first federal legislation (PL94-434: Health Professions Education
Assistance Act) mentioning "humanistic medicine"
came before Congress, sponsored by Sukie and Stuart Miller,
directors of Esalens program.
- 1976: month-long
seminar for professionals and graduate students entitled "Holistic
Medicine and Traditional Healing," facilitated by Joan
Halifax-Grof, Dr. Stanislav Grof, and Dr. Kenneth Pelletier.
Visiting faculty included: Carl & Stephanie Simonton,
Michael Harner, John Lilly, Gay Luce, and Julian Silverman.
- 1976: Wayne
Jonas attended an alternative health month-long workshop,
planting many of the seeds which later manifested in his work
as the head of the NIH Office of Alternative Medicine.
- 1979: Esalen
approved by the Board of Registered Nursing and the Califonia
Medical Association in California as a provider of continuing
eduction.
- 1979-1980:
two public conferences on "Stress: Harnessing Its Energy
for Health," led by stress experts Hans Selye and Meyer
Friedman, targeted to nurses and physicians for continuing
education.
- 1981: creation
of a four-month residential training program in Holistic Health,
designed for health care professionals and students in the
health field. It included fifteen major areas of study: homeopathy,
gestalt, acupuncture, herbology, group process, nutrition,
tai chi, massage, healing meditations, organic gardening,
movement integration, bach flowers, anatomy, deep tissue,
and community health. This residential training was repeated
in the fall of 1982 and the fall of 1983.
- 1981: invited
conference on "The Perinatal Period: Interface of Biology
and Behavior," bringing together specialists in neurobiology,
neuroendocrinology, anatomy & physiology, clinical psychology,
obstetrics, hypnotherapy, psychiatry, and philosophy to discuss
the effect of birth on consciousness and to find ways to create
more humane and psychologically sensitive birth experiences.
Participants: Peter Levine, Jeffrey Babbitt, Lewis Mehl, Suzanne
Arms, Stanislav Grof, John Lilly, Gayle Petersen, Michael
Leon, David Cheek, Michael Leon, Jack Downing, Stephan Porges,
and Ian MacNaughton.
- 1981-1987:
six conferences on "Citizen Diplomacy" organized
first by James Hickman and subsequently by James Garrison.
During the first of these conferences, Joseph Montville coined
the term "track-two diplomacy" to refer to private-sector
initiatives between Soviets and Americans that supplemented
formal diplomatic channels. Participants: James Hickman, Joseph
Montville, Jay Ogilvy, John Marks, Michael Murphy, Dulce Murphy,
Peter Schwartz, and David Harris. The first conference provided
John Marks with his primary inspiration for the creation of
the NGO Search for Common Ground in 1982 (www.sfcg.org), which
now has offices in Washington, Brussels, Amman, Bujumbura,
Gaza City, Kiev, Luanda, Monrovia, and Skopje. This group
engages in creative conflict-reducing and bridge-building
activities in many of the worlds most troubled zones.
- 1982: pioneered
the first spacebridges, allowing Soviet and American citizens
to speak directly with one another via satellite communication.
These spacebridges inspired subsequent satellite teleconferences
between Soviets and Americans, including an ongoing Congress-to-Supreme
Soviet teleconference.
- 1983-1987:
four conferences, entitled the Erik Erikson Symposia, on the
political psychology of Soviet-American relations with career
diplomat Joseph Montville and psychologists Erik and Joan
Erikson. Participants: the eminent historian James McGregor
Burns, diplomat Joseph Montville, John Mack, Charles Lindbloom,
political psychologist Vamik Volkan, theologian Harvey Cox,
psychologist Erik Erikson, philosopher Sam Keen, and psychologist
James Hillman. Many participants were members of the Political
Psychology Society and through Andre Melville, prominent Soviet
delegate to that society, their reflections on the psychodynamics
of the relationship between the superpowers were transmitted
to high levels of the Soviet bureaucracy. Effects: 1) James
Blight attended one meeting and was inspired to take a similar
psychodynamic approach to the Cuban missile crisis, which
resulted in several books and a PBS documentary. 2) Joseph
Montville edited a special edition of the Journal of Political
Psychology called "A Notebook on the Psychology of the
U.S.-Soviet relationship." 3) John Mack, a Pulitzer Prize-winning
psychoanalyst at Harvard, set up his own research center called
The Center for Psychology and Social Change, influenced by
Esalen work. 4) Vamik Volkan, professor of psychiatry at the
University of Virginia medical school, created the Center
for the Study of Mind and Human Interaction at UVA.
- 1983: co-sponsored
a conference entitled "Faces of the Enemy." Speakers,
including Sam Keen, Ashley Montagu, Robert Bly, and Soviet
diplomat Valentin Berezhkov, discussed the psychology and
politics of enmity, propaganda, and projection. Keens
book Faces of the Enemy, destined to become a classic in the
field, was influenced by this conference.
- 1984: meetings
between Dulce and Michael Murphy and the leaders of the Soviet
Writers Union eventually led to its joining the International
Pen Club.
- 1985: helped
create the Association of Space Explorers with astronaut Rusty
Schweickert, the first forum in which Russian and American
astronauts and cosmonauts could share their experiences in
space and their hopes for the future of space exploration.
- 1985: signed
one of the first agreements between an American private-sector
group and the USSR Ministry of Health, brokered by Dulce Murphy.
This agreement facilitated work in the areas of health promotion,
productivity in the work place, and non-pharmacological methods
of treating disease and stress.
- 1986: co-produced
a spacebridge on Chernobyl and Three Mile Island with the
American Association for the Advancement of Science and the
USSR Academy of Sciences.
- 1986: major
delegation of Soviet writers toured the United States under
the auspices of the Soviet-American exchange program.
- 1987: convened
a conference on "Sino-American Dialogues on Social and
Economic Transformation" led by James Garrison.
- 1988: hosted
Academician Abel Aganbegyan for his first visit to the United
States as one of Gorbachevs chief economic advisors.
This led to the development of a management training program
in Moscow with senior executives from across the Soviet Union.
- 1988: sponsored
the first Russian conference on psychoneuroimmunology (PNI),
an interdisciplinary field concerned with the relationship
between psychological processes and the functioning of the
immune system. Inspired by Dulce Murphy, this conference led
to productive Russian-American collaborative research in the
field and to a follow-up conference, held in 1991 at Leningrads
Institute for Experimental Medicine.
- 1989: coordinated,
in conjunction with the United States-based International
Center for Economic Growth and Moscow State University, a
conference called "Entrepreneurship in the World Economy."
- 1989: hosted
Boris Yeltsin on his first trip to the United States. Esalen
arranged meetings for Mr. Yeltsin with President Bush, former
President Reagan, and many leaders in business and government.
- 1990: conducted
the Furth Ruble Prize, an international competition for the
best proposal offering a practical solution to the question
of ruble convertibility in international trade. Award recipients
were chosen by a panel of Soviet and American scholars, including
Abel Aganbegyan, Joseph Brada, Ed Hewett, and Nobel Laureate
Wassily Leontief.
- 1992: organized
a conference in Moscow to address the resurgence and persistence
of neo-Bolshevism in Russian society. Russian and American
participants confronted the Bolshevist mentality and discussed
ways to embrace democratic pluralism rather than totalitarianism.
- 1992: played
an instrumental role in a conference, held at the Vatican
in Rome, to raise awareness of the emotional and physical
needs of people with disabilities.
- 1993: hosted
a major conference at Stanford University, entitled "Toward
the Further Reaches of Sport Psychology," in which prominent
coaches, athletes, and sport psychologists from the former
Soviet republics and the United States discussed current trends
in theoretical and applied sport psychology.
- 1994: The
Russian-American Center became a separate 501 c-3, although
it remains in close collaboration with Esalen.
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