Body as Shadow: Jung’s Embodied Individuation Process

Author(s) : Erica Lorentz

Body as Shadow: Jung’s Embodied Individuation Process

Book Details

About the Author(s)

Erica Lorentz fell in love with dance as a child. Later, she was interested in a broad range of dance and movement modalities that brought her into energic, emotional, and imaginal expression. At the age of twenty-three, she began working with her authentic movement (Movement as Active Imagination) mentor, Janet Adler. Adler put her feet on the path of an embodied approach to psychology. Authentic movement taught her not only how to tune deeply into her own embodied soul (energy, emotions, imagination, somatic unconscious, and subtle body), but also it taught her how to sit with and witness others without judgement or interpretation. This became a foundation for her analytic work.

In graduate school, Erica Lorentz focused on object relations under the tutelage of psychoanalyst Dr. Elaine Seigel. Working with autistic and schizophrenic children and adolescents demanded that she use an embodied nonverbal approach to create a transference relationship. After graduating, she taught object relations at Antioch Graduate School of Professional Psychology for four years.

Her training did not feel complete. It left out the creative and archetypal power of the unconscious world. In 1988, she began training to become a psychoanalyst with the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian Analysts (IRSJA). At this time, she had a clinical practice and taught courses and lectures on Jung and the expressive arts at the Jung Center in Houston TX. Eventually, she became the Director of the School for Expressive Arts.

In 1998, she wrote her thesis on “Jung, Spirituality, and the Body” and became a Jungian psychoanalyst (IAAP). The research for her thesis revealed how much Jung honored and spoke of the importance of embodied experience for transformation and how central it was in his theory. She became a training analyst for the IRSJA. Presently, she is a training analyst in the C. G. Jung Institute of New England and has a private practice.

Since 1986, she has given lectures and taught workshops focused on Jung and the body and embodied active imagination throughout the US and Canada, and in the UK. She has created several webinars for the Jung Platform and has been interviewed by Pacific radio. One of her lectures was filmed by New England Public Radio. In 2024, she had the honor of teaching in India for the Jungian psychoanalytic router training program, SMART, an expressive arts training program, and Christ University, where she gave a brief talk at the inauguration of the Indian Psychology Lab and a lecture for the graduate psychology department.

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