BUDDHISM AND PSYCHOANALYSIS: A PERSONAL REFLECTION |
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Authors: | David Nichol MD |
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Institution: | (1) David Nichol, 1044 Sir Francis Drake Boulevard, Kentfield, CA 94904, USA |
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Abstract: | Around 600 BC Siddhartha Gotama practiced intensive meditation for several years and found a way for people to cultivate a sense of equanimity, wisdom, and compassion in their lives. Around 1900 AD Sigmund Freud undertook several years of intensive self-analysis and developed theories and therapeutic techniques for understanding how the unconscious operates in our lives to perpetuate neurotic suffering, and how we might gain insight and relief from that suffering and be more free to move toward our potential in this life. This article gives an overview of Buddhist theory and practice, gives an account of the author’s personal journey through both disciplines, and then point outs the similarities and differences in them, leading to an integration of elements of these two paths of exploration of the psyche, for the purpose of mutual enrichment.Dr. Nichol is a graduate of the Menninger Clinic and the Houston-Galveston Psychoanalytic Institute, and he is in private practice. |
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Keywords: | Buddhism meditation psychoanalysis |
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