Skip to content Skip to footer

Beden İmgeler: Öznelerarası Alanda Soma

3,000.00

Why Should You Attend This Training?

Psychological symptoms do not always speak through words; at times, the body expresses what the psyche cannot articulate. This training offers a depth-oriented perspective that approaches the body not merely as a biological structure, but as a living field through which unconscious material emerges.

Mark Winborn’s Jungian and psychoanalytic approach invites participants to reconsider psychosomatic symptoms not simply as medical phenomena, but as symbolic expressions of psychic life.

In this training, you will:

— Examine bodily symptoms from a Jungian perspective as manifestations of unconscious processes. — Develop an understanding of how the body “speaks” within the analytic field through both the analysand and the analyst. — Explore Jung’s concepts of the shadow, subtle body, and psyche-body unity in dialogue with contemporary psychoanalytic thought. — Build conceptual bridges between the body theories of Freud, Reich, Jung, and Bion, alongside current perspectives from neuroscience and affect theory.

If you wish to deepen your understanding of the body as a symbolic and relational dimension of analytic work, this training offers a clinically rich and theoretically compelling experience.

Category: Product ID: 2686

Description

In the field of psychosomatics there are two major schools of thought. The first is the older approach which associates specific psychosomatic symptoms with particular psychological conflicts and developmental arrests. In this approach the body is seen as expressing what is forbidden to express in the mind. The more contemporary approach sees the psyche and body as a unified whole. Therefore, the body is one possible channel for the emergence of unconscious material, which is to be understood and engaged like any other manifestation of the unconscious. Hence, each bodily symptom is embraced like a dream which tells us something about the unconscious of the patient. Like a dream, each symptom is treated as new and unique to the individual. This presentation will embrace this later model of psychosomatics.We will explore Jung’s concept of the body as shadow and as the subtle body, as well as psychoanalytic understanding of the body. Specific emphasis will be place on the analyst’s awareness of somatic experience of both analyst and analysand as well as somatization of psychological symptoms. We will focus on developing sensitivity to somatic information as a means of understanding and interpreting unconscious interaction in the analytic field. In the process we will explore theories of the body associated with Freud, Wilhelm Reich, Carl Jung, Wilfred Bion, as well as supporting research from neuroscience and research on primary affects.

We will explore Jung’s concept of the body as shadow and as the subtle body, as well as psychoanalytic understanding of the body. Specific emphasis will be place on the analyst’s awareness of somatic experience of both analyst and analysand as well as somatization of psychological symptoms. We will focus on developing sensitivity to somatic information as a means of understanding and interpreting unconscious interaction in the analytic field. In the process we will explore theories of the body associated with Freud, Wilhelm Reich, Carl Jung, Wilfred Bion, as well as supporting research from neuroscience and research on primary affects.

Objectives

• Develop understanding of Jung’s conceptualization of the body in Analytical Psychology

• Develop an understanding of psychoanalytic model of the body.

• Increase awareness of somatic experience in the analytic field.

• Increase awareness of somatization of psychological symptoms.

• Creating analytic interpretations based on the somatic experience of the patient as well as the analyst.

en_USEnglish