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Transpersonal Psychotherapy & Healing the Soul Wound

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Transpersonal Psychotherapy & Healing the Soul Wound Concepts Chiron & the Wounded Healer Wholeness, Processing and Transforming the Wound – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transpersonal Psychotherapy & Healing the Soul Wound


1
Transpersonal Psychotherapy Healing the Soul
Wound
  • Concepts

2
Chiron the Wounded Healer
Cognitive processes (e.g., "How are you thinking
about yourself vis-à-vis the problem and
environment?") Affective processes (e.g., "How
do you feel about the problem, people concerned,
and your relationship to them?") Action
processes (e.g., "How is your behaviour blocking
problem resolution in your life?") Spiritual
processes (e.g. ("How does your spiritual
emptiness distance you from your connections
with the cosmos and all living things).
3
Wholeness, Processing and Transforming the Wound
  • "And what would your Wise Mind like to tell you
    about your situation?"
  • "What is it like? What is happening? Tell us as
    much as you can."
  • What meaning do you make of this situation? We
    understand that whatever is taking place is a
    necessary experience on our path.
  • Tell me about the darkness and what it says to
    you? What is the meaning.
  • Where do you feel the darkness in your body and
    tell me about it?
  • How can you transform the situation? It's
    really about even more than forgiveness. It's
    about reframing the entire experience of our
    challenges by seeing the perfection in them,
    seeing that they are necessary steps toward
    transformation and wholeness.

4
3 fundamental assumptions underlying the
Transpersonal approach
  • our mind is clouded
  • the untrained mind can be trained
  • training focuses the consciousness moves us to
    action.

5
Elements for Achieving Wellness
  • Developing Awareness
  • Becoming Compassionate
  • Emotional Transformation
  • Ethical Training
  • Meditation and Re-focusing
  • Understanding Motivation
  • Wisdom

6
World Collapse and the wound Gary
Nixon says that bringing out the fundamental
dualism of being and nothingness, which has not
been worked out fully in the Western
humanistic-existential perspective (Wilber).this
moment of world collapse a conversation it
represents a change from our typical
self-centered mode of being in which we ask what
use things have been to us (Nishitani).I
look for opportunities to facilitate the journey
of clients from emptiness to the roaring silence
of the present. The challenge is to accept and
embrace the emptiness because the supernatural
and the mundane are the same.
7
Traditional Model of Treatment
  • According to Duran, the traditional way of
    healing encompasses symbol, myth, and ritual
    (p.141). Different ways of accessing these are
    through the use of art, stories, dreams, use of
    peyote, sweat lodge, singing/dancing, ceremony,
    role play, sculpting, and relaxation/meditation
    to name a few. Duran outlines a model of
    treatment in which traditional Indigenous
    thinking and practice are utilized in conjunction
    with Western practice. Essentially, an effective
    program for Indigenous people would have
    traditional Native psychology at its core.

8
Colonialism
  • It is the practice, theory, and attitudes of the
    dominating cultural center (p.117). Colonial
    discourse is the apparatus of power that
    strategically creates a space for a subject
    people through the production of knowledge by
    the colonizerwhich are stereotypical...Its
    mechanism is the scientificwritingetc. which
    create the foundation and rationale for the
    colonialagenda (p.117). These concepts
    together create the foundation for racism.
  • QUESTIONS How do we deconstruction our racist
    socialization?

9
Postcolonial Paradigm
  • A way of thinking, discussing, and writing about
    reality that not only acknowledges and
    encompasses non-dominant ways of being and doing,
    but explicitly uncovers the stereotypes,
    prejudice, and racism inherent in the colonial
    way of framing reality. This framework
    legitimizes the colonized experience and
    critiques the colonizers assumption that theirs
    is the only or primary way of knowing and being.

10
Soul Wound
  • A term that describes the deep inter/trans
    generational sorrow that Indigenous communities
    experience as a result of the historical
    injustice, conquest, and destruction that was
    (and is) perpetrated upon them. The suffering
    experienced by Indigenous communities is, at its
    core, spiritual because it involved a raping of
    the most meaningful aspects of their culture
    family, language, traditions, connection to
    Spirit, Nature, and each other.

11
Internalized Oppression
  • Colonialism creates an oppressive environment
    whereby people are disallowed or unable (because
    its too dangerous or risky) to express anger and
    frustration. These feelings are turned inward
    and directed at ones self and/or
    family/community. This anger can be expressed in
    violence, for example, through domestic violence,
    sexual abuse, suicide, or murder (of ones own
    people). It can also be expressed more subtly
    through depression, low self (or community)
    esteem, apathy, substance abuse, or mental
    illness.

12
Intergenerational Trauma (PTSD)
  • Studies have shown that PTSD is generationally
    cumulative thus, as each generation of
    childrens normal development tasks are unmet and
    traumas are unresolved, the pattern of
    dysfunctional behaviour modeled to their children
    intensifies. Indigenous people experienced the
    same sudden separation from their loved ones as
    well as a disconnection from the Earth their
    Mother. Furthermore, acculturation stress is a
    continuing factor in the perpetration
    ofsymptomatology that isPTSD (p.32).
    Effective therapy with families would start with
    the validation of the externally imposed
    craziness (p.159) in order to acknowledge the
    trauma perpetrated on the family before focusing
    on the continuing trauma cycle within the family.

13
Warrior Psyche
  • Many of the problems that Indigenous men
    experience are ramifications of the colonization
    of warriors. The colonizers mythology and
    practices were so diametrically opposed to those
    held in sacred trust to the warriors psyche of
    Indigenous men. They were unable to protect
    their families and communities and furthermore,
    their role in the traditional economy was lost.
    The result a deep psychological trauma of
    identity loss (p.36).

14
Therapist-Centered Therapy
  • This is a different perspective from Rogers
    client-centered therapy. Instead of giving up
    power (empowering) and orienting oneself to the
    client (person-centered empathy), the onus is on
    the therapist to be centered, knowledgeable about
    oneself, and comfortable with the power of ones
    role as healer. This perspective acknowledges
    and embraces the directive, seemingly mystical,
    and powerful abilities of the healer. The belief
    is that if the therapist is grounded and strong,
    the greater effect s/he will have on the client.

15
Dream Work
  • Dreams are also seen as expressing the innermost
    (inborn), hidden parts of us thus, exploring our
    dreams is exploring our destiny and purpose.
    Also, dreams can be a vehicle for information,
    messages, and processing either within ourselves,
    or between ourselves and the spirit world.

16
Archetypes
  • Duran Duran states that issues of the psyche
    can best be understood using Jungs Archetypal
    Psychology combined with Indigenous cosmology.
    Jung made a connection between the myths and
    images/symbols of the New and Old World. This
    convinced him that these same motifs emerged out
    of some deep human source that is common to all
    people (p.66) thus, there is a common thread
    that weaves the human psyche (p.66).

17
Alcohol Spirits
  • In a traditional Indigenous worldview, alcohol is
    seen as a destructive spiritual entity that is
    confronted as if in spiritual warfare (p.139).
    Thus, alcohol use and abuse is as much a
    spiritual matter as a health issue moreover,
    these are not considered as separate. Because
    alcohol transcends individual/personal boundaries
    (being a spiritual entity/issue), its use and
    misuse affects the whole community. Thus, the
    methods of healing encompass community, ritual,
    symbol, myth, and spirit (p.141).

18
Sandtray
  • This is a non-intrusive and non-verbal way for
    children and/or families to express themselves.
    They can make a story, dream, or free-play. If a
    child has experienced trauma, these traumatic
    events will be revealed in a non-traumatic,
    symbolic fashion (p.164). Furthermore, the
    sandtray provides the child with a vehicle that
    allows for symbolic ideomotor responses that
    have cathartic and therapeutic qualities
    (p.164). The sandtray gives the child control at
    a conscious and unconscious level. Consciously,
    s/he can create a world in the sand that is
    healthy and ideal. Unconsciously, the symbolic
    play begins to resolve the trauma through the
    idio-motor memory (p.164).

19
Indigenization
  • This term refers to the replacement of
    Eurocentric models with local, native idioms
    (p.125). Essentially, it is FN people making
    sense of their world in their way for their
    people instead of the dominant society (that
    colonized them) interpreting their world for
    them. It is validating, legitimizing, and
    utilizing the worldview and knowledge that was
    already there, but may have been dormant, hidden,
    or almost forgotten through the colonization
    process. For a woman, it is like rediscovering
    the ancient traditions of midwifery after
    experiencing a traumatic hospital birth. For a
    person who was shuffled through countless foster
    homes, it is like coming home to your birth
    parents that have been searching for you all
    these years. It is finding yourself and
    realizing you were always there.

20
A Transpersonal Therapist
1. Openness to the transpersonal dimension,
including the belief that contacts with
transpersonal realms may be Transformative and of
greatest healing potential 2. The ability to
sense the presence of, or a report of numinous
experience, whether it should appear in a dream,
a vision, a synchronous event or a contact with a
spiritual teacher 3. Some knowledge of a variety
of spiritual paths 4. Activate pursuit of your
own spiritual development 5. Degree of openness
about him/herself, his/her own spiritual
orientation, and experience 6.A firm grounding
in psychotherapy (Scotton, in Hutton, l993, p.
141).
21
  • Tonglen
  • sending and taking
  • Listening at a deep level
  • Engenders compassion
  • Process preparation, regulating breathing,
    transforming, accepting
  • Tonglen does not allow us to just sit there and
    reflect, we become engaged with our client on the
    human level, sharing in what we as humans have in
    commonTonglen keeps us in the room, firmly
    planted in our chair, listening and feeling with
    great curiosity and sincere caring.
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