JUNGIAN ANALYSIS
I work in a dialogue of shared thinking, analyzing, and interpreting, oriented toward the search for meaning and the recognition of unconscious motives.
The analysis is dialectical in nature, exploring the dynamic relationships between different areas of the psyche and the analytical relationship within an unfolding discourse.
Behaviors, unconscious motives and past traumas are examined in the context of current events, but also in terms of their focus on future purposes. This means that unconcious motives not only stem from past traumas, but are also driven by the need for integration and the pursuit of psychic wholeness. This dynamic is that what Jung called the process of individuation. In terms of the alchemical language, the central mystery of coniuntio aims at the synthesis of opposites, the assimilation of blackness and the integration of the devil.
SUPERVISION
In my view, (In my recognition,) good supervision practice is a relationship grounded in mutual respect and trust. It is a hermetic vessel in which both supervisor and supervisee engage in an in-depth analysis of unconscious motives, their dynamics, and the recognition of symbolic material within a shared space of meaning.
Supervision explores the subtleties of the patient-therapist and therapist-supervisor relationships, as well as dynamics between patient therapist and organisation.
I work with trainees in Jungian psychoanalysis as well as with psychotherapists of various modalities and levels of experience.
The frequency of meetings depends on individual needs and mutual availability.