ABSTRACT

2020 American Board & Academy of Psychoanalysis (ABAPsa) book award winner!

If, when a patient enters therapy, there is an underlying yearning to discover a deeper sense of meaning or purpose, how might a therapist rise to such a challenge? As both Carl Jung and Wilfred Bion observed, the patient may be seeking something that has a spiritual as well as psychotherapeutic dimension. Presented in two parts, The Search for Meaning in Psychotherapy is a profound inquiry into the contemplative, mystical and apophatic dimensions of psychoanalysis.

What are some of the qualities that may inspire processes of growth, healing and transformation in a patient? Part One, The Listening Cure: Psychotherapy as Spiritual Practice, considers the confluence between psychotherapy, spirituality, mysticism, meditation and contemplation. The book explores qualities such as presence, awareness, attention, mindfulness, calm abiding, reverie, patience, compassion, insight and wisdom, as well as showing how they may be enhanced by meditative and spiritual practice.

Part Two, A Ray of Divine Darkness: Psychotherapy and the Apophatic Way, explores the relevance of apophatic mysticism to psychoanalysis, particularly showing its inspiration through the work of Wilfred Bion. Paradoxically using language to unsay itself, the apophatic points towards absolute reality as ineffable and unnameable. So too, Bion observed, psychoanalysis requires the ability to dwell in mystery awaiting intimations of ultimate truth, O, which cannot be known, only realised. Pickering reflects on the works of key apophatic mystics including Dionysius, Meister Eckhart and St John of the Cross; Buddhist teachings on meditation; Śūnyatā and Dzogchen; and Lévinas’ ethics of alterity.

The Search for Meaning in Psychotherapy will be of great interest to both trainees and accomplished practitioners in psychoanalysis, analytical psychology, psychotherapy and counselling, as well as scholars of religious studies, those in religious orders, spiritual directors, priests and meditation teachers.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part One|110 pages

The listening cure

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

Spirituality and psychotherapy

chapter Chapter 2|18 pages

An open heart and an open hearth

Towards an ethic of analytic hospitality

chapter Chapter 3|12 pages

The listening cure

Presence, awareness, attention

chapter Chapter 4|13 pages

The state of contemplation and analytic reverie

chapter Chapter 5|15 pages

Some Buddhist teachings on meditation

chapter Chapter 6|16 pages

Primordial purity and spontaneous presence

The Great Perfection of Dzogchen

chapter Chapter 7|11 pages

‘I do not exist’

Śūnyatā and the terror of non-being

chapter Chapter 8|15 pages

Bearing the unbearable

Intergenerational transmission of trauma

part Two|126 pages

A ray of divine darkness

chapter Chapter 9|13 pages

The trace of the infinite in the face of the other

Lévinas’ ethics of alterity

chapter Chapter 10|12 pages

The origins of the apophatic way

chapter Chapter 11|15 pages

The apophatic mysticism of Dionysius

chapter Chapter 12|11 pages

The apophatic way after Dionysius

chapter Chapter 13|13 pages

Transcending all knowledge

St John of the Cross

chapter Chapter 14|12 pages

Apophatic contemplation in Christianity

chapter Chapter 15|16 pages

Apophatic epistemology in Bion

chapter Chapter 16|15 pages

Without memory, desire and understanding

A commentary

chapter Chapter 17|14 pages

Bion’s O and the apophatic way

chapter |3 pages

Inconclusion