ABSTRACT

This thoughtful and comprehensive book sheds new light on Sandplay Therapy, a method founded in the 1960s by Dora Kalff. It is based on the psychology of C.G. Jung and Margaret Lowenfeld, with inspiration from eastern contemplative traditions. This method is effectively used for psychotherapy, psychological counselling and development of the personality with children and adults.

This book grew out of the collaboration of a supervision and research group with Italian therapists which regularly met for a period of over 10 years under the guidance of Martin Kalff. It focuses on how to understand in more depth the processes clients experience in Sandplay Therapy. An important feature of Sandplay is the possibility to create scenes in a box with sand. Worlds arise through the shaping of the sand and the use of miniatures, humans, animals, trees, etc. These creations manifest inner conflicts as well as untouched healing potential.

This book discusses a number of techniques based on mindfulness such as ‘spontaneous embodiment’, the use of colours, spontaneous poetry, ‘entering into the dream’, to understand the work done in a Sandplay process and dreams and presents examples of clinical cases. These techniques are not only valuable for supervision but can also be used in therapy to help clients reconnect with body and feelings.

part 1|107 pages

A new perspective: The individuation process in Sandplay Therapy: Neural integration, resonances in soma and psyche

chapter 1|21 pages

Historical premises

chapter 4|39 pages

A process of healing

Neural integration and individuation in Sandplay

part 2|41 pages

The method and the group

chapter 5|2 pages

Prelude

chapter 6|6 pages

Like a ritual

chapter 8|5 pages

Body and movement

chapter 10|14 pages

Sandplay and meditation

Creative grains of transformation

part 3|76 pages

Clinical experiences

chapter 13|6 pages

Artwork in black

Drawing and therapy

chapter 14|11 pages

Body and sand

Dramatization

chapter 15|18 pages

A rebirth

The story of a woman

chapter 16|10 pages

Acknowledging the wound

The story of a man

chapter |1 pages

Editorial notes