ABSTRACT

A commonly encountered experience of both analyst and analysand is that of the void. It is spoken about at different stages of therapy and refers to experiences that have different origins. Sometimes the experience of the void is around a relatively limited aspect of the psyche but at other times the void seems much more global and threatens to engulf the entire personality; the whole individual psyche then seems threatened by the possibility of dissolution into nothingness.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part |58 pages

The Territory

chapter One|19 pages

On the territory of the void

chapter Three|14 pages

Primary or secondary?

chapter Four|11 pages

Psychotherapy and spirituality

part |55 pages

ORIGINS of the VOID EXPERIENCE

part |53 pages

Introduction to ORIGINS of the VOID EXPERIENCE

chapter Five|10 pages

Empty of oneself

chapter Six|7 pages

The void in psychogenic autism

chapter Seven|12 pages

Another "black hole"

chapter Eight|7 pages

Memory within the Borderline condition

chapter Nine|10 pages

Trauma as a void experience

part |72 pages

Amplifications

chapter Ten|12 pages

Myths and legends of the Creation

chapter Eleven|12 pages

Dimitri's void

chapter Twelve|15 pages

The King's sacrifice

chapter Thirteen|11 pages

The "Birthday Present"

chapter Fourteen|20 pages

The dark night of the soul

part |54 pages

Treatment

part |52 pages

Introducing the management of void states

chapter Fifteen|17 pages

Aspects in the treatment of void states

chapter Sixteen|13 pages

Connections, walls, and windows

chapter Seventeen|18 pages

On active imagination

part |58 pages

Individual Experiences

chapter Eighteen|33 pages

Void as a gender experience

Part I: Mostly masculine

chapter Nineteen|23 pages

Void as a gender experience

Part II: Female encounters