ABSTRACT

The psychic act of thinking has the faculty of apprehending thoughts that claim a place within the mind. We need to think in order to bear the burden of thoughts that we carry as humans, often without comprehension, and in general, with fear, because of its extraordinary threat. The field of clinical practice has expanded now with patients who consult in search of help due to their difficulties in thinking. The inability to think is different from an attack on thinking or on the mind. In the clinical relationship, language can become a labyrinth. We use language to communicate, but at the same time, as a medium to incommunicate. Attempts have been made to differentiate psychosomatic states according to the predominance of the central or autonomic nervous system. The differentiation according to the predominance of one nervous system or another does not provide any specific clarification.