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People seek help….not so much to fix what's broken, but to get what's broken blessed. — James Hillman ———————————————
Why Depth Work?
Often we feel like something is “off.” Not quite right. We may not be fully depressed or anxious. Nothing that rises to the level of a clinical crisis. And still, a nagging sense lingers: something is missing. Life feels flat, stuck. Meaning slips through our fingers. Purpose becomes hard to name.
This may not be a medical emergency, but it may feel like a spiritual and emotional summons: a quiet but persistent call to pay attention to the life beneath the life.
Though our pockets may be full, our souls can remain empty. Many otherwise successful, well-supported people experience a quiet crisis of meaning: a sense that life has become performative, disconnected, or drained of vitality. The job is fine. The family is fine. The friends are fine. But you feel adrift.
Depth work begins here: with that intuition that something more is possible.
A Different Kind of Work
Unlike conventional therapy or coaching, this is not about symptom management or problem-solving. It’s about turning inward. Exploring the symbolic, unconscious dimensions of experience. Listening for what is trying to emerge, not just what’s trying to be fixed.
Drawing on Carl Jung’s depth psychology, I work with individuals to catalyze both inner and outer transformation. We explore the forces, conscious and unconscious, that shape your thoughts, behaviors, and patterns. The goal is not quick answers but lasting integration. Wholeness over performance. Soul over solution. The work is not about forcing transformation. It is about creating enough space, honesty, and attention for the psyche to speak in its own way.
Depth work means engaging with the deeper structures of meaning, value, and identity that orient your life.
A Typical Session and Practices That Support the Process
A typical session begins with whatever is alive for you: a dream, a question, an image, a conflict, a mood, a memory, or a feeling that will not quite leave you alone. We slow down around it, listen for its symbolic meaning, and explore what it may be asking of you. There is no script and no pressure to perform. The work unfolds through conversation, reflection, and careful attention. This process may include:
Dreamwork
Active imagination
Mindful inquiry
Symbol exploration
Journaling
Somatic noticing
Sandplay
These tools are not ends in themselves. They are ways of inviting the unconscious into conversation. Ways of seeing what we have not yet been able to name.
What This Makes Possible
This is slow work. Subtle work. But also transformative work.
Over time, it may lead to:
A renewed sense of purpose
An ability to hold complexity without collapse
A deeper connection to inner truth
Emotional and spiritual maturation
A life that feels more you
You begin to notice that the biggest problems in life rarely disappear because they’re “solved.” Instead, they are outgrown as your understanding of them, and of yourself, deepens.
Why Jung?
Jung understood that modernity had severed us from the sacred, the mysterious, the symbolic. Rationality gave us efficiency and material progress, but often at the cost of soul.
His medicine? Reconnect with what reason discarded:
Myths, dreams, and symbols
The wisdom of the unconscious
The necessity of shadow work
The path of integration and wholeness
Jungian work isn’t about transcendence. It’s about incarnation. About becoming more fully who you already are, beneath the habits and defenses that once kept you safe, but now keep you small.
Beginning the Journey
If you find yourself in a moment of transition, or if you feel a quiet but persistent call toward something deeper, this work may be for you.
You're not alone in asking the deeper questions. And you don't have to navigate them alone.
Death & Rebirth
Only to the extent that we expose ourselves over and over to annihilation can that which is indestructible in us be found. ― Pema Chodron