COAGULATIO: The Alchemy of Settling Down
This Jungian Life Podcast
Joseph Lee, Deborah Stewart, Lisa Marchiano
4.7 • 2.1K Ratings
🗓️ 5 March 2026
⏱️ 68 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
COAGULATIO marks the psychological moment when possibility takes shape. Uncertainty recedes as we commit to our choices, and life slows and “thickens” into stable commitments and a predictable path.
Join Jungian analysts Lisa Marchiano and Joseph Lee as we continue our exploration of Jung’s alchemical stages. This week, we discuss the concept of coagulatio, or the solidifying of what was once liquid.
Coagulatio involves settling into a path, a vocation, a relationship, or an identity. Yet these stages of solidification also carry with them loss. Incarnating something in the real world, whether in our creative life, marriage or career, means letting go of infinite possibility. Coagulatio can be seen as an antidote to puer psychology; signifying the demanding task of growing up and settling down.
We also investigate the process of coagulatio in the consulting room, where finding language or images with an analyst can shape our distress into something we can work with. Similarly, dream work offers the chance to condense our psychic turmoil into tangible, relatable images that can be used in a process of growth or transformation.
Coagulatio is not a permanent state: the alchemical phrase “solve et coagula” indicates a dynamic rhythm between dissolution and solidification. In the course of our life, we may find our stable path starts to feel joyless and rigid, at which point we may return to solutio, when structures loosen again and must be re-formed.
Read the dream we analyze and find this episode’s resource list on our website: https://thisjungianlife.com/coagulatio/
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | We can fall in love with the salutio stage or even the sublimatio stage. |
| 0:04.9 | If we have a personality that likes to prospect, likes options to stay open, |
| 0:10.7 | typologically, that's the P-type in the Myers-Briggs, |
| 0:14.9 | and that if we stay in all possibilities, the swirling solution of options, |
| 0:21.5 | at the end of our lives, we often have very little to show for it. |
| 0:25.5 | So too much coaguladio can be a problem. |
| 0:28.9 | Things get fixed too quickly, a little too tightly. |
| 0:33.3 | But in the natural sequence, when we come up with a brilliant idea |
| 0:37.2 | and there's an enormous amount of energy about it, |
| 0:40.3 | like starting a podcast, |
| 0:42.2 | that it's demanding the opportunity to be lived out, |
| 0:49.5 | to be made so, |
| 0:52.1 | so then it can be an object that we relate to and learn much about. |
| 0:59.9 | Welcome to this Jungian life. |
| 1:02.4 | Three good friends and Jungian analysts, Lisa Marchiano, Deborah Stewart and Joseph Lee, |
| 1:07.9 | invite you to join them for an intimate and honest conversation that brings |
| 1:12.1 | a psychological perspective to important issues of the day. |
| 1:17.5 | I'm Lisa Marchiano, and I'm a Jungian analyst in Philadelphia. |
| 1:21.6 | I'm Joseph Lee, and I'm a Jungian analyst in Virginia Beach, Virginia. |
| 1:26.6 | I'm Deborah Stewart, a Jungian analyst in Virginia Beach, Virginia. I'm Deborah Stewart, a Jungian analyst on Cape Cod. |
| 1:41.2 | Today we're going to work again through our alchemical sequence in the way that Jung found it so valuable. |
| 1:50.4 | Today we're going to talk about the coagulatio. |
... |
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