A harsh critique of 1992's new "bling" culture. The speaker warns that simply swapping a Soviet apartment for a penthouse does not constitute identification. He argues that "jealousy of the West" creates false desires. The exercise: Identify one item you bought recently out of envy.
For those willing to brave the clunky interface of Ok.ru and the hiss of decaying magnetic tape, the answer is still waiting there, filed under a keyword that feels less like a search query and more like a spell: Have you found this recording? Share your experience in the comments below or join the discussion in our Ok.ru group "Archives of the New Russian Psyche."
The practical psychology. The lecturer guides the audience through a 20-minute hypnosis to bypass the conscious mind (which is polluted by advertising and propaganda) and reach the "authentic desire nucleus." This is the most valuable part of the recording. Identifikatsiya Zhelanij -1992- Ok.ru-
The speaker explains that desires in the Soviet era were "assigned by the state." Using a phrase like "Ya hochu byt inzhenerom" (I want to be an engineer) was rarely a true identification, but a response to social pressure. The exercise: List five things your parents wanted for you.
In the vast, sprawling digital archives of the Russian social network (Odnoklassniki), there exists a niche yet fervently sought-after piece of content known only by the cryptic keyword: "Identifikatsiya Zhelanij -1992-" (Идентификация Желаний), which translates from Russian as "Identification of Desires." A harsh critique of 1992's new "bling" culture
By Dmitri Volkov | Cultural Archivist
To find , one does not use the standard search bar intuitively. The "minus 1992" syntax is crucial. Advanced users know that adding the year with a minus sign ( -1992- ) filters out modern reinterpretations and isolates the original 1992 analog recordings. A Breakdown of the Seminar Content Based on reviews and transcripts found within Ok.ru groups, here is a typical structure of the "Identifikatsiya Zhelanij" 1992 seminar: The exercise: Identify one item you bought recently
In the context of early 1990s Russian psychology, "identification" did not merely mean "naming" a desire. It meant a deep, archetypal process of distinguishing your true, authentic needs from the imposed ideologies of the Soviet past and the sudden, overwhelming avalanche of Western consumerism.