Jungian Therapists in New Brunswick
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Stacey Sanderson
Registered Psychotherapist, Registered Social Worker, Subject Matter Expert
I am Subject Matter Expert in complex, relational trauma, narcissism and high conflict divorce. If you are in a toxic relationship, I can help you navigate the process while learning the powerful boundaries and strategy you need to get to the next chapter in your life feeling confident and empowered. I will help you understand the attachment patterns that are keeping you stuck.
Chris Graham
Professional Counsellor, MPCC-Provisional designation with the Canadian Professional Counsellors Association (CPCA).
I work with pilots and men in high-pressure careers who are navigating anxiety, burnout, identity challenges, or major life transitions. Many of the people I support are looking for counselling that is practical, confidential, and respectful of their professional context. For pilots concerns about career impact, medical implications often create hesitation around seeking support.
Sarah Elizabeth Smith
Licensed Clinical Therapist
I offer psychotherapy and somatic therapy for adolescents and adults in Sackville, NB and virtually through telehealth. I often work with clients with addiction, eating disorders, anxiety, personality and mood disorders, and C-PTSD. I am a psychodynamic therapist which means that we take the time to build trust in the therapeutic relationship and we often explore self and interpersonal patterns.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Jungian
What is Jungian therapy?
Jungian therapy (also called Analytical Psychology) is based on the work of Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung, who was a colleague and later a major critic of Freud. Jung's psychology emphasizes the unconscious — both the personal unconscious (repressed personal material) and the collective unconscious (a deeper layer of universal, inherited patterns called archetypes). Jungian therapy aims at psychological individuation — the lifelong process of becoming more fully and authentically oneself — by exploring unconscious material through dreams, imagery, symbols, creativity, and the therapeutic relationship.
What are the key concepts in Jungian therapy?
Key Jungian concepts include the self (the centre of the total psyche), the ego (conscious identity), the shadow (the unconscious repository of what we deny or disown in ourselves), the persona (the social mask), anima and animus (the inner feminine and masculine), archetypes (universal patterns — the Hero, the Mother, the Trickster), complexes (emotionally charged clusters in the personal unconscious), and individuation (the process of psychological wholeness). Dreams, active imagination, and symbolic expression are primary tools for accessing these dimensions.
What does Jungian therapy help with?
Jungian therapy is particularly suited to midlife questions, identity and meaning crises, spiritual development, creative blocks, recurring relationship patterns, depression and existential emptiness, anxiety that seems to have a deeper source, and the integration of difficult aspects of oneself (the shadow). It is a depth approach best suited to people interested in genuine self-exploration and psychological growth rather than symptom management alone. It can complement clinical treatment for depression, anxiety, and trauma.
What does a Jungian therapy session look like?
Jungian sessions are typically open-ended — the client may bring a dream, an image, a piece of art, or whatever is most alive for them. The therapist helps explore the symbolic meaning of what arises, listening for what the unconscious may be communicating. Dream work involves amplification — exploring the images in the dream through personal associations and universal symbolic meanings. Active imagination is a method of entering into dialogue with inner figures. Sessions are often less structured than CBT but deeply exploratory.
How long does Jungian therapy take?
Jungian therapy is typically a longer-term undertaking — individuation is conceived as a lifelong process, not a brief course of treatment. Many people engage with Jungian therapy for years, finding it a deepening practice of self-knowledge and integration. Short-term Jungian-informed therapy is possible when the focus is more circumscribed, but the fuller depth of the approach tends to unfold over a longer timeframe. This makes it a commitment in both time and resources.