4.8 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 13 October 2022
⏱️ 75 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Obsessions are unwanted, intrusive thoughts; compulsions are unwarranted, involuntary behaviors. Though different, they often go together, for compulsions pose as protection from the imagined bad consequences of obsessions. They tend to escalate, demanding more time and attention: spontaneity is sacrificed to schedule, desire surrenders to compliance, and aliveness is stifled by stiffness. OCD’s insistence on “rightness” attempts to deny feelings, especially anger, neediness, and desire, displacing them onto rigid exercise routines, midnight phone scrolling, finicky dietary convictions, and other attempts to serve performance and perfection. Marie-Louise von Franz, Jung’s close collaborator, says, “Every content of the unconscious with which one is not properly related tends to obsess one, for it gets at us from behind…You can either be possessed by a content constellated in the unconscious, or you can have a relationship to it. The more one represses it; the more one is affected by it.” When the unconscious is denied, it turns to unwanted forms of expression.
Here’s the dream we analyze:
“I am standing in a field in winter. The earth is cold and hard. I have a simple, woven cloth wrapped around my head and am carrying a basket in the crook of my arm. I am in the field harvesting potatoes. I work slowly and methodically, moving up and down the rows, but at some point, I realize that the crops I am harvesting are upside down. The potatoes sit neatly atop the earth, and it is only when I pull them up that I can see all the green parts of the plant. This realization doesn’t phase me, and I continue to harvest. As I work, I am aware of a sense of great peace. I bend to pick up yet another potato and realize there is no resistance, for the potato has no stem, leaves, or roots. It is a solitary object. I stand and hold the potato in the palm of my hand. It is fairly small and somewhat paler than the rest. All of a sudden, the potato sprouts small white wings, which begin to flutter. The potato hovers above my hand for a few moments and then flies away. I watch it against the sky and am suddenly aware that the sky has become a brilliant blue, whereas, in the beginning of the dream, it was a heavy, pearly grey that threatened snow. I awake with a feeling of enormous well-being.”
REFERENCES:
Nancy J. Dougherty and Jacqueline J. West. The Matrix and Meaning of Character: An Archetypal and Developmental Approach. https://www.amazon.com/dp/0415403006/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_CWV9HCTBJT9N9CPJZN7N
Nancy McWilliams. Psychoanalytic Diagnosis: Understanding Personality Structure in the Clinical Process. https://www.amazon.com/dp/1462543693/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_ZADS2EPQNM082KGVM76Z
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0:00.0 | Welcome to this Jungian life. |
0:03.0 | Three good friends and Jungian analysts, Lisa Martiano, |
0:07.0 | Debra Stewart and Joseph Lee invite you to join them for an intimate and honest conversation |
0:12.0 | that brings a psychological perspective to important issues of the day. |
0:17.0 | I'm Lisa Martiano and I'm a Jungian analyst in Philadelphia. |
0:22.0 | I'm Joseph Lee and I'm a Jungian analyst in Virginia Beach, Virginia. |
0:27.0 | I'm Debra Stewart, a Jungian analyst and Cape Cod. |
0:37.0 | Today wonderfully all three of us are here. |
0:40.0 | Some of us have been traveling abroad, some of us have been having other adventures |
0:45.0 | and wonderfully as it always is. |
0:47.0 | We are all three returned and happy to be together again. |
0:52.0 | Today we are going to talk about obsessive, compulsive behaviors, |
0:58.0 | which is really a spectrum of feeling and thinking and doing |
1:03.0 | from an analytic standpoint. |
1:06.0 | Invoking, of course, Jung's insights, but also Freud and the post Freudians |
1:11.0 | had much to say about obsessive thinking and compulsive behavior, |
1:18.0 | a lot of theories about unexpressed emotions, some ideas about being |
1:25.0 | over-controlled in our childhood and ways that we cope with those dynamics |
1:34.0 | as we have internalized them. |
1:36.0 | So today we're going to talk about OCD. |
1:40.0 | I think the framework or the lens for this is just really very, very broad, |
1:46.0 | wide, especially in today's society, where we have a society |
... |
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