ABSTRACT

This chapter describes the theoretical and practical consequences of possessing a therapeutic method of such power. There followed other immediate therapeutic effects, sometimes—as—in disturbances that had lasted for many years. Moreover, those trained in psychoanalysis and traditional dynamic psychotherapy needs to undergo a huge reorientation in thinking and in "therapeutic reflexes". The bringing-into-consciousness of feelings of which patients were formerly unaware is the basic principle of all dynamic psychotherapy, and here it is entirely validated by the therapeutic effects that follow from it. Follow-up on these seven patients reveals the answer in terms of parts of their personality that had been lost but was now resurrected. These consist of emotional freedom, spontaneity, joy, compassion, the capacity for closeness, and, real happiness—qualities that far exceed our necessarily rather pedestrian Criteria and result from true harmony between these former patients and their unconscious.