Receptivity to the Weight and Heft of the Natural World in our Inner Selves

J Am Psychoanal Assoc. 2024 May 11:30651241247222. doi: 10.1177/00030651241247222. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Through the literary explorations and poetry of Alice Oswald, and through analysis of detailed clinical material from a Kleinian perspective, the authors expand the bounds of reverie as it is usually construed in psychoanalytic consulting rooms. The authors draw attention to the presence of a relationship to the more-than-human world as an integral aspect of our internal experience, and to the value of consideration of the quality and dynamic meaning of connections to the natural world in ordinary analytic work. The relationship to the primary object heavily influences the form taken by the relationship to the natural world, but once established, this connection has the possibility for a life of its own, that can provide a different kind of containment than the human variety, allow experimentation with new ways of being, and can strengthen the ego. The authors address the clinical implications of listening enhanced by an ear for affiliation to the natural world.

Keywords: containment; inner world; internal world; natural world; poetry; receptivity; reverie.