Todd Hayen – Crop Circles and Ancient Egyptian Symbolism. Sunday 18th October 2020.6.00pm – 7.30pm U.K time (BST). This presentation will also be recorded to download if you cant be at the event.
Todd Hayen is a practicing psychotherapist in Toronto, Canada. His current interests include Crop Circle research,
regression therapy, parapsychology, alternative Egyptology (Khemitology), the psychology of music, Jungian archetypal psychology and consciousness studies. Before studying psychology, Todd was a composer, orchestrator, and conductor in the Hollywood motion picture industry. He also specializes in the treatment of artists, musicians, dancers and actors and addresses the unique issues that creative types encounter in life. He holds an MA in Consciousness Studies, an
MA in Counselling Psychology, and a PhD in Depth Psychotherapy. Todd grew up in Virginia, USA; his parents were both professional actors and taught theatre at Shenandoah University. Todd moved to Los Angeles in 1980 and then relocated to Toronto in 2011. He is married to Cindy Hayen who also is a Registered Psychotherapist and specializes in animal (canine) assisted therapy. Todd’s most current book is Ancient Egypt and Modern Psychotherapy: Sacred Science and the Search
for Soul (Routledge). He is chief editor of the International Journal of Regression Therapy and is core faculty at The Living Institute, a transpersonal psychology school in Toronto.
Presentation: Crop Circles and Ancient Egyptian
Symbolism.
The meaning, and purpose, behind ancient Egyptian symbolism has recently taken on new dimensions in definition and understanding. The early Victorian and Eurocentric archeologists interpreted the Egyptian pantheon and the symbols the Egyptians used in their hieroglyphs, funerary rites and religious practice in a rather limited fashion. It wasn’t until the famed researcher R. A.
Schwaller de Lubicz came on the scene in the late 1930’s that we began to see the true meaning behind the architecture, geometry, and other symbols the ancients used to express their own unique cosmology that represented to them a clear view of life, death, and their physical environment. Crop circles and this ancient Egyptian perspective of the universe have a central point of commonality: the importance of symbolism. Few would probably argue that the circles are primarily an expression
through abstract symbol and geometry. What can we learn about crop circles through a study of the Egyptian’s use and meaning of symbols? And what can we learn about ancient Egypt through our study of the symbology of crop circles?