ABSTRACT

Without question, supervising sandplay is a unique experience, because it allows part of the therapeutic process to be visible to supervisors. Supervisors not only have verbal reports of the therapeutic process but are also affected by images made and shared by the clients in supervision. Depending on the moment in their individuation process, they (both supervisor and supervisee) can see, feel, and analyze the same scenes in different ways, yet these situations resound in the psyches of both, sometimes resulting in a very creative process.