Image: Reflections on the treatment of images and dreams in art psychotherapy groups
2010; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 15; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/17454831003752378
ISSN1745-4840
Autores Tópico(s)Pain Management and Placebo Effect
ResumoAbstract Social Dreaming sees dreams as differentiated particles of the undifferentiated unconscious, here understood as infinite and containers for unconscious wisdom. Through sharing dreams and their free associations in a particularly structured meeting called the Matrix, Social-Dreaming promotes access to unattended knowledge and transformation of thinking. Analytic Art-Psychotherapy groups promote therapeutic change through image making and interpersonal contacts. Neurological phenomena associated with both dreaming and creativity suggest that art and dreams can act as conduits to unattended knowledge, bridging conscious and unconscious thinking. The author suggests that in Art Psychotherapy this dimension could be enhanced by viewing image ownership as collective rather than individual and by routinely using free association in preference to more common, explanatory practices and describes some structural modifications to the context of Art Psychotherapy group work with clinical evidence. The conclusion is that creative thinking promotes homeostasis, a state of internal equilibrium, necessary to well being and a function of internal coherence. The ideas in this work derive from the author's personal experiences in Social-Dreaming and as an Art Psychotherapist. Relevant here are Gordon Lawrence's works on Social Dreaming; David Maclagan's on Imagination and Lois Oppenheim's on Neuro-psychoanalysis.
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