Sandplay Therapy and Active Imagination: What Are the Similarities and Differences? Reflections about Jung’s Writings on Active Imagination
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Sandplay Therapy: Similarities and Differences with Active Imagination
2.1. Paola Carducci’s Congressional Contribution
2.2. Jung’s Writings on Active Imagination from the Perspective of Sandplay Therapy
3. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Jung’s Writing on Active Imagination | (Kalff) Sandplay Therapy |
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“Often the hands know how to solve a riddle with which the intellect wrestled in vain” ([13], par. 180) | The “manifesto” of SPT as it is based on a significant involvement of the hands in the analytic process. |
When there is a high blockage at the conscious level, only the hands are capable of fantasy [14] | In SPT, hands have a primary role—they shape the sand, choose the objects, and place them in the sandtray. |
The hands draw or model images that are sometimes alien to the conscious mind [14] | The hands, in SPT, often give life to images beyond the consciousness’ control. |
It is not the consciousness determining what to depict but rather the unconscious [6,13,16] | In SPT, the consciousness (through the hands, the sandtray, and the objects) loans its expressive tools to the unconscious content. |
The product of AI is determined by both the consciousness and the unconscious [13] | The symbols used in SPT (i.e., miniatures, objects, and figures created in the sand) represent the third element originating from the confrontation between the consciousness and the unconscious. |
The product of AI is related to the conscious situation of the person [17] | The symbols used by the person in SPT might have a relationship with the conscious situation of the person. |
Patients try with all their energies to give shape to the unspeakable [20] | SPT allows for the representation of contents that are not verbally expressible. |
The differentiation between the consciousness and the contents of the unconscious occurs through the isolation of the unconscious by its personification [21] | Through the three-dimensionality provided by miniatures, the manipulation of the sand, and the use of the tray’s blue space, the person is facilitated in personifying the unconscious content. |
It is fundamental that the person lives the images instead of understanding and interpreting them [22] | Thanks to the observation/contemplation of the three-dimensional image in SPT, the person might activate the dialogue between the consciousness and the unconscious and live the image. |
Archetypes must be objectified to avoid their over-flooding of the consciousness [3] | The sandtray—simultaneously a free and protected space [11] —limits the risk of inflation by the unconscious. The miniatures and the figures in the sand, objectifying an image arising from the unconscious, also serve this purpose. |
It is important “to do” rather than just talk [20] | In SPT, the analysands “do”; they move with their whole body around the shelves and use their hands while placing, removing, or moving objects in the sandtray. |
Creating a form allows the person to continuously study all its parts, favoring the development of the image’s potential to its maximum [20] | Thanks to the production of the image in the sandtray, the person is stimulated to observe the image from various angles, fueling the development of its individuation potential. |
If the person meditates long enough upon a dream, carrying it inside him/herself and looking at it several times, something almost always emerges [20] | In SPT, after creating the image, the person observes it in a meditative/spiritual state. Furthermore, analysands carry the image within them and can continue to observe and contemplate it inwardly. |
When the person concentrates on an internal image and does not interrupt its natural flow, the unconscious produces a series of images that make up a complete story [3] | SPT, through a series of images created in the sandtray across different sessions, narrates the psychic development that turns towards the individuation of the analysand. |
Interpretations should be kept to a minimum, they should never go beyond the confines of the image produced by the analysand, and they should be interspersed with “maybes”, “ifs”, and “buts” [16] | The SPT analyst must interpret for him/herself the symbols emerging in the sandtray, generally without communicating them. |
Jung, while waiting to build the altar in the village he built, found a red stone in the shape of a pyramid and understood that it must be his altar [21] | In SPT, the person can feel “chosen by the object” on the shelf rather than “choosing the object”. |
Once Jung placed the red stone on the altar, he remembered the underground phallus of his dream as a child and felt relief [21] | In SPT, placing an object (or creating a shape) in the sandtray might activate unconscious elements and complexes and therefore a sense of relief. |
It is essential to discover the hidden image behind an emotion [21] | SPT allows the person to observe (in an objectified form) the images emerging from the unconscious, with the consequent uncovering of the image hidden behind the emotion. |
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Loscalzo, Y. Sandplay Therapy and Active Imagination: What Are the Similarities and Differences? Reflections about Jung’s Writings on Active Imagination. Behav. Sci. 2024, 14, 553. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14070553
Loscalzo Y. Sandplay Therapy and Active Imagination: What Are the Similarities and Differences? Reflections about Jung’s Writings on Active Imagination. Behavioral Sciences. 2024; 14(7):553. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14070553
Chicago/Turabian StyleLoscalzo, Yura. 2024. "Sandplay Therapy and Active Imagination: What Are the Similarities and Differences? Reflections about Jung’s Writings on Active Imagination" Behavioral Sciences 14, no. 7: 553. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14070553
APA StyleLoscalzo, Y. (2024). Sandplay Therapy and Active Imagination: What Are the Similarities and Differences? Reflections about Jung’s Writings on Active Imagination. Behavioral Sciences, 14(7), 553. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14070553