“But the heart glows and a secret unrest gnaws at the roots of our being.
C. G. Jung (CW 9i, Par. 50)
“But the heart glows and a secret unrest gnaws at the roots of our being.
C. G. Jung (CW 9i, Par. 50)
C. G. Jung (CW 9i, Par. 50)
C. G. Jung (CW 9i, Par. 50)
Kathryn Kuisle has a Ph.D. in Analytical Psychology from Union Institute and University, Cincinnati, and a diploma as a diplomate Jungian Analyst from the C. G. Jung Institute, Zurich, Switzerland. She lived and worked in Europe for 16 years prior to living in Colorado Springs where she has had a practice since 2005.
Dr. Kuisle has a private practice in Colorado Springs, Colorado. She offers virtual sessions as needed. Dr. Kuisle offers lectures and workshops on various topics. She has special interest in topics around dreams and fairytales.
She teaches at the C. G. Jung Institute of Colorado in Denver where she also holds the role of President of the Board.
Dr. Kuisle's expertise is working from a depth perspective helping a client examine one’s life and reflect on life, listening to the guidance of the inner guide of the person, especially with the help of dreams and other material that comes from the person’s unconscious.The emotional and psychological issues that may bring a person to therapy include, but are not limited to: Depression, anxiety, unhappiness or restlessness, relationship patterns, woundedness from incest and/or other childhood abuse, addiction, life questions, life transitions, growing old, or facing death.
Waiting and Watching in the Wanderings of Life
Abstract
Vigil keeping, although an ancient ritual, has been practiced for centuries and continues to be a part of present-day life. A vigil can be experienced in a variety of ways with the common theme of waiting and watching. This article presents a brief look at the history of vigil, ways it continues in actual practice today, as well as examples of how an attitude of waiting and watching is valued in many spiritual traditions. Most significantly, this article explores the importance of holding a vigilant attitude in the work of depth psychology. Whether you are an analyst, therapist, client, one searching for meaning and/or struggling with the depths, being patient in the waiting (and vigilant in the watching) opens the door to the soul.
To cite this article: Kathryn Kuisle (2020) Waiting and Watching in the Wanderings of Life,
Psychological Perspectives, 63:3-4, 345-359, DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2020.1816081
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/00332925.2020.1816081
Kathryn Kuisle, Ph.D.
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