Article

Understanding Depth Psychology: An Invitation from the Soul

Topic: Therapy and CounselingBy Ed SantanaPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,424 legacy views

Legacy rating: 5/5 from 3 archived votes

I was brought to depth psychology through my love of typology. As a corporate consultant, each time I taught a workshop on the Myers-Briggs assessment I found that people were finding new ways of seeing themselves and others. Bridges of understanding were being formed and those I trained were accessing new insights about the paradigms they operated within.

As I ventured deeper into the work, I spent a year doing a program on transformational leadership with Carol Pearson, Ph.D. at Georgetown University. It was rich, imaginal, and deep. It was my first direct experience with C.G. Jung, James Hillman, and Robert Johnson. Carol became a mentor and her work with archetypes was electrifying. Through archetypes my work deepened into finding new ways to see and understand the world. It wasn't before too long that the study of archteypes led directly to the source—Classical Greek mythology and the works of Joseph Campbell.

From the earliest days of ancient Greece, myths were an expressive and symbolic way of understanding human nature and relationships, including love, conflict, and the challenges of personal and collective experiences. Throughout the Renaissance and later centuries, artists and writers kept Greek mythology alive with super psychological depictions of the vastly powerful and complex gods. Explaining mythology from a psychological perspective, Jung said “Myths are original revelations of the preconscious psyche, involuntary statements about unconscious psychic happenings” (1951).

The field of psychology and the work of psychotherapy, from early beginnings with Freud and Jung and their forbearers, understood the importance of applying mythological themes to patient narratives and symptoms. Today, psychology has moved too far away from its traditional and deep-rooted connections to Greek mythology, and the result has been to lose sight of the range and depth of human experience, as well as to significantly increase the pathologizing of patients. Jung said, “We are still as much possessed by autonomous psychic contents as if they were Olympians. Today they are called phobias, obsessions, and so forth; in a word, neurotic symptoms” (1954). The gods of ancient Greek mythology have taken center stage in our pathologies.

But Greeks made room for a much broader range of psychological variation within their culture. Charles Boer, translator of ancient Greek texts, wrote decades ago about the value of a mythological perspective (1970): "These days, as our own country increasingly narrows its own single-minded focus on things, one realizes again why what the Greeks have given us is “classic” and for all time. How helpful it must have been in their day to have had this network of Gods and Hymns, to know that one was not crazy or alone or odd in one’s fantasies and dreams, as one always must feel in a monotheistic system when the God of that system does not authorize the way one wants to see things."

Today, these broader perspectives are being re-introduced and championed by archetypal and depth psychologists across the globe. The late psychologist James Hillman put it quite literally, Archetypal psychology can put its idea of psychopathology into a series of nutshells, one inside the other: within the affliction is a complex, within the complex an archetype, which in turn refers to a God. Afflictions point to Gods; Gods reach us through afflictions (1975)." In our afflictions we access the shadows of our being, but also experience the numinous forces driving us toward wholeness.

Article author

About the Author

Ed Santana is a professional Psychotherapist in downtow
Toronto. In private practice, he works with individuals and couples facing life's challenges. He is also Executive Director of the Ontario Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, a division of the AAMFT. In private practice, he works from a Depth Psychology background. For more information, visit: http://www.edsantana.com

He holds a Master’s in Counselling and Depth Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara and a Bachelor of Arts degree from Penn State University. He also spent two years at Georgetown University earning three professional certifications in Executive Coaching, Group Facilitation, and Transformational Leadership. He is currently completing a Ph.D. in Depth Psychotherapy at Pacifica Graduate Institute.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Part I : How Do Past and Parallel Lives Influence Current Life Workshop Excerpted from Soul Talk: Rescripting Karmic Contracts, 2008, Adele Tartaglia

Related piece

Article

Excerpted from Soul Talk: Rescripting Karmic Contracts, 2008, Adele Tartaglia In this article I shall describe new processing techniques to handle regression memories that trigger past life traumas in reference to child therapy. Using these processes Increases the rate of Spontaneous Healing 100%. Regression is easier for a child because they live in an imaginary world and a session can be framed as a game. Furthermore they aren’t programmed yet to believe their souls only have one inca ate life.

Related piece

Article

Everyone Has a Gift….Divine Synchronicity at Work From “Everything We Need to Know We Learn from the Media” One thing I realized early in life was that we all have gifts to share with each other without exception. We can and should share what we have learned along the way irrespective of not being “The Expert” so touted in today’s society.

Related piece

Article

FitFive Healthy Kids Program gets children off to a good start in life.For children to be fit and healthy they require a balanced diet and sufficient exercise from their earliest years. This should be self-evident to all. Habits established in childhood last a lifetime - both the good and bad ...

Related piece