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Ramos integrates Jung’s concept of the collective unconscious —the layer of the psyche shared by all humans—into the understanding of organic disease. Archetypes, the universal patterns of behavior and imagery, act as the bridge between the physical and the psychological. For example, a chronic illness might "constellate" an archetype, such as the Wounded Healer, forcing the individual into a process of individuation —the lifelong journey toward psychological wholeness. Clinical Application: Active Imagination
Common phrases like having a "broken heart" or "cold feet" are examples of how unconscious motivations can be translated into physiological "picture-language". The Role of Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious The Psyche of the Body: A Jungian Approach to P...
The relationship between the mind and the body has long been a subject of debate, often trapped in the Cartesian dualism that views them as separate entities. However, in The Psyche of the Body: A Jungian Approach to Psychosomatics , Denise Gimenez Ramos challenges this split by presenting a model where the psyche and soma (the body) are "two aspects of the living being". This approach moves beyond seeing illness as a purely biological failure and instead treats the body as a symbolic canvas upon which the unconscious speaks. The Body as a Symbolic Expression This approach moves beyond seeing illness as a