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.
FIGURE 2.2
The Bunnikins plate. Memory privileges emotional truth.
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.
FIGURE 3.1
Steve’s pen-and-ink drawing, the “Sandpit drawing,” reveals the emergence of early trauma.
FIGURE 5.1
The king and queen from The Rosarium (Jung, 1946b, p. 213). Affective engagement enables change.
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.
FIGURE 5.3
The clockface analyst. Is it safe to trust her?
FIGURE 5.4
The analytic garden. How do I feel about her?
FIGURE 5.5
To try to relate feels dangerous.
FIGURE 5.6
A good enough attachment.
FIGURE 5.7
The little black cat learned
secure attachment.
FIGURE 7.1
Dream sandscape.
FIGURE 7.2
The years of my life.
FIGURE 7.3
The labyrinth.
FIGURE 8.1
Psychobiology of high and low arousal enactments. Reproduced from Schore (in press).
FIGURE 9.1
The complex dynamics of relationship in group supervision.
FIGURE 10.1
The riches of attachment.