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FIGURE 2.1

Naja shows us that face, voice, sense of self, and sense of the other are all intimately linked with early right-brain functioning—in this instance, providing stimulus to the later developing language centers in the left hemisphere.

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FIGURE 2.2

The Bunnikins plate. Memory privileges emotional truth.

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FIGURE 2.3

Example of a set of expressions shown to mothers. Lenzi, D., et al. (2008). Neural basis of maternal communication and emotional expression processing during infant preverbal stage. Cerebral Cortex, 19(5), 1124-1133. Reproduced with permission of Oxford University Press.

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FIGURE 3.1

Steve’s pen-and-ink drawing, the “Sandpit drawing,” reveals the emergence of early trauma.

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FIGURE 5.1

The king and queen from The Rosarium (Jung, 1946b, p. 213). Affective engagement enables change.

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FIGURE 5.2

The bad black cat mother. This picture first appeared as plate 1 in Wilkinson, M. (2006). Coming into mind: The mind-brain relationship: A Fungian clinical perspective. London: Routledge. Reprinted with permission of Routledge.

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FIGURE 5.3

The clockface analyst. Is it safe to trust her?

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FIGURE 5.4

The analytic garden. How do I feel about her?

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FIGURE 5.5

To try to relate feels dangerous.

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FIGURE 5.6

A good enough attachment.

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FIGURE 5.7

The little black cat learned
secure attachment.

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FIGURE 7.1

Dream sandscape.

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FIGURE 7.2

The years of my life.

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FIGURE 7.3

The labyrinth.

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FIGURE 8.1

Psychobiology of high and low arousal enactments. Reproduced from Schore (in press).

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FIGURE 9.1

The complex dynamics of relationship in group supervision.

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FIGURE 10.1

The riches of attachment.