TITLE:
Healing the Unconscious: Ethics, Shadow, and Catharsis in Practice
AUTHORS:
Chacko P. George
KEYWORDS:
Jungian Psychology, Archetypes, Estrophrodite-Androphrodite Theory, Neo-Jungian Framework, Personality Development, Identity Formation
JOURNAL NAME:
Psychology,
Vol.16 No.10,
October
27,
2025
ABSTRACT: This paper presents a psychoanalytic case study of a 58-year-old woman who developed adult-onset bedwetting following bladder removal surgery and urinary bypass reconstruction. While medically successful, the surgery coincided with the emergence of a recurring, symbol-laden dream that revealed deep connections between unresolved trauma in adolescence, recent moral conflict, and embodied distress. Using Freudian, Adlerian, Jungian, and Neo-Jungian interpretative frameworks, the dream is analyzed as a symbolic narrative through which unconscious tensions manifest in the body. The forest, rotten branches, and the male helper who transforms into a wild animal all reflect a psychic struggle between vulnerability, fear, and repressed desire. A central contribution of this paper is the integration of the author’s theory of the Estrophrodite-Androphrodite archetypes, which conceptualizes human development as a continuum of complementary polarities—life-giving and restraining, receptive and assertive—rather than negating opposites. The dream is understood as a dramatization of these archetypal polarities in conflict, with the unresolved shadow producing somatization in the form of bedwetting. Drawing also from Bessel van der Kolk’s trauma research (van der Kolk, 2014), the case highlights how the body “keeps the score” when emotional integration is blocked by guilt, cultural prohibitions, or unprocessed memories. Ultimately, the study argues for a therapeutic approach that does not merely treat symptoms but addresses the deeper symbolic and archetypal conflicts that underlie psychosomatic distress. By integrating classical psychoanalysis, Jungian archetypal psychology, and Neo-Jungian developments with Biblical and cultural perspectives, this research contributes to a holistic understanding of trauma, symbolism, and healing.