User:GSH2023

 Robert Tyminski, DMH , is a Jungian analyst in San Francisco. He is a member and past president of the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco and a Clinical Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco.

Tyminski has published several books:

1.	Tyminski, R. (2014). The Psychology of Theft and Loss: Stolen and Fleeced. Hove, East Essex, United Kingdom and New York: Routledge.

2.	Tyminski, R. (2016). Hoţul Interior, Psihologia Furtulu şi a Pierderii [The Psychology of Theft and Loss: Stolen and Fleeced. Routledge: 2014] (Munteanu, O., Trans.). Bucureşti, Romania: Psihologia Pentru Toţi (PPT).

3.	Tyminski R.F. (2016). Crooked Lines. San Francisco: R. F. Tyminski.

4.	Tyminski, R. (2019). Male Alienation at the Crossroads of identity, Culture and Cyberspace. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom and New York: Routledge.

5.	Tyminski, R. (2022). The Psychological Effects of Immigrating: A Depth Psychology Perspective on Relocating to a New Place. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom and New York: Routledge.

He has also multiple articles on various topics, including:

On immigration:

1.	 Tyminski, R. (2018). “Just Black Sometimes”: Analytical Tools Applied at the Frontlines of Social Upheaval, Part 1. Journal of Analytical Psychology, 63(5), 619-640.

2.	 Tyminski, R. (2019). “Just Black Sometimes”, Part 2: Reflections on an Adolescent’s Journey. Journal of Analytical Psychology, 64(3), 386-405.

3.	Tyminski, R. (2020). Is Identity a Fiction? Jung Journal: Culture & Psyche, 14(2), 30-48.

On adolescence:

1.	Brady, M., Tyminski, R., & Carey, K. (2012). To Know or Not to Know: An Application of Bion’s K and -K to Child Treatment. Journal of Child Psychotherapy 38(3), 302-317.

2.	Tyminski, R. (2021). Adolescents Coping with the COVID-19 Pandemic: ‘Every Day is Like Another Sunday’. Journal of Analytical Psychology,66(3), 546-560.

3.	 Tyminski, R. (2022). Notre Rapport Collectif au Temps Durant La Pandémie de COVID-19 : Fins, monotonie et Numérisation de L’expérience. Des Fins, Cahiers Jungiens de Psychanalyse 155, 7-19. 4.	 Tyminski, R. (2022). Back to the Future: When Children and Adolescents Return to Office Sessions Following Episodes of Teletherapy. Journal of Analytical Psychology,67(4)

On male psyche:

1.	Tyminski, R. (2012). Lost for Words: Difficulty Expressing Feelings in Work with Three Adolescent Boys. Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 38(1), 32-48.

2.	Tyminski, R. (2015). Lost in (Cyber)space: Finding Two Adolescent Boys Hiding from their Own Humanity. Journal of Analytical Psychology, 60(2), 220-244.

3.	Tyminski, R. (2016). Misreading Narcissus. International Journal of Jungian Studies, 8(3), 159-167.

4.	Tyminski, R. (2017). Addiction to Cyberspace: Virtual Reality Gives Analysts Pause for the Modern Psyche. International Journal of Jungian Studies, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19409052.2017.1390483, 10(2), 1-12.

5.	Tyminski, R. (2018). Males Coming to Terms with Sexuality in Adolescence, In Jungian Child Analysis. In A. Purnett (Ed), Jungian Child Analysis (pp. 183-203) Fisher King Press, United States.

6.	Tyminski, R. (2020). Apocalyptic Themes in Times of Trouble: When Young Men Are Deeply Alienated. Proceedings of the XXI Congress of the IAAP. Journal of Analytical Psychology, 65(1), 27-43.

7.	Tyminski, R. (2020). The Archetypal Power of Images in Videogaming. The Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism, https://aras.org/sites/default/files/docs/000136Tyminski.pdf

8.	Tyminski, R. (2022). Editor’s Introduction to: A Boy’s Terror and Fascination with the Male Body. In M. T. Brady (Ed), Braving the Erotic Field in the Psychoanalytic Treatment of Children and Adolescents (pp. 139-150) Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom

On clinical topics:

1.	Tyminski, R. (2005). Long -Term Group Psychotherapy for Children with Pervasive Developmental Disorders: Evidence for Group Development. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy 55(2), 189-210.

2.	Tyminski, R. (1999). When the Therapist Must Symbolize Because the Patient Cannot: Therapeutic Trial by Fire. Journal of Jungian Theory and Practice, 1, 27-42.

3.	Tyminski, R. F. (2006). The week the Couch Arrived. Journal of Analytical Psychology 51(5), 643-659.

4.	 Tyminski, R. F., & Moore, P. J. (2008). The Impact of Group Psychotherapy on Social Development in Children with Pervasive Developmental Disorders, International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 58(3), 363-379.

5.	Tyminski, R. F. (2009). Fleeced: A Prospective from Antiquity on Contemporary Addictions. Jung Journal: Culture & Psyche, 3(3), 52-68.

6.	Tyminski, R. (2011). Medea, Jason, and Their Illusions of the Golden Fleece: a Jungian Contribution to Transference Dreaming. International Journal of Jungian Studies 2011, 3(1), 21-35.

7.	Tyminski, R. and Concannon, C. (2012). The Life Cycle of One Group Psychotherapy Training Program: Lessons for the Multiple Benefits of This Training. Group: Journal of the Eastern Group Psychotherapy Society, 36(4), 303-316.

8.	Tyminski, R. (2014). The Medea Complex-Myth and Modern Manifestation. Jung Journal: Culture

And on various other topics:

1.	Tyminski, R. (1998). Reducing Funding Risk and Implementing a Fundraising Plan: A Case Study. Nonprofit Management and Leadership, 8(3), 275-286.

2.	Tyminski, R. F. (2003). The Symbol and The Neuron: Two Developmental Paths,Two Theories, and Two Puzzles. [Review of books The Developing Mind: Toward a Neurobiology of Interpersonal Experience, and The Symbolic Impetus: How Creative Fantasy Motivates Development]. The San Francisco Jung Institute Library, Review of Books 22(1), 29-48.

3.	Tyminski, R. (2017). Robert Tyminski on Political Life: My Father’s Strange Definition of Politics. Jung Journal: Culture & Psyche, 11(2), 75-83.