Jamie San, Leia Meow,Yang & Kaz Hayashi (in front).
Jung Dragons was the stable of Kaz Hayashi, Yang & Jamie San in WCW. They were managed by Leia Meow. Image File history File links Jung Dragons from http://www. ... Image File history File links Jung Dragons from http://www. ... In professional wrestling, a stable is a group of wrestlers within a promotion who have a common element -- friendships, either real or storyline, a manager who manages all of them, or a common angle, which puts them together as a unit (recent examples include Evolution, La Résistance, The Cabinet... Kaz Hayashi is a professional wrestler who once worked for WCW as a member of Jung Dragons. ... Akio James Yun (born on May 13, 1981 in Hollywood, California), better known as Yun Yang, Jimmy Yang or Akio, is an American professional wrestler of Korean descent performing for World Wrestling Entertainment on the SmackDown! brand. ... Howard as Jamie Noble Jamie Howard also known as James Gibson, or Jamie Noble is a professional wrestler who, notably, wrestled for WWEs SmackDown! brand. ... WCW logo from 1999-2001. ... In professional wrestling, a manager is a non-wrestler character who is paired with a wrestler. ... Kris as Kimona Wana-Laya Kris Laum (born November 23, 1976 in Osaka, Japan) was a professional wrestling valet and manager in ECW and WCW. She used the names Kimona Wana-Laya and Leia Meow. ...
Jung felt that there had been a connection, somehow, between himself as an individual and humanity in general that could not be explained away.
According to Jung, someone whose own mother failed to satisfy the demands of the archetype may well be one that spends his or her life seeking comfort in the church, or in identification with "the motherland," or in meditating upon the figure of Mary, or in a life at sea.
Jung borrowed the idea from physics, where entropy refers to the tendency of all physical systems to "run down," that is, for all energy to become evenly distributed.
In the old western culture and mythology (including some regions), the dragon is most of the time a symbol of evil or the dark side (as being the opposite of the light side) or of the night or of death and destruction, that archetype can also be found in some eastern myths.
Jung, a psychologist, also refers to the dragon as an archetype (hero must defeat the dragon before being able to become the hero and he must do so because otherwise the dragon will overwhelm the birth of the god).
Jung, also refers to the dragon as an archetype (hero must defeat the dragon before being able to become the hero and he must do so because otherwise the dragon will overwhelm the birth of the god).