Do you ever feel that you’re "not
      quite here"? …that there’s a "bit of a hole" somewhere?…or
      an empty space that never gets filled?…We are beings of consciousness
      and feeling – consciousness that moves and flows, feelings that move our
      states of being from deep within. A violent shock can literally make us
      jump out of our skins. A traumatic experience can cause us to dissociate
      or separate part of ourselves from what is happening…"it was like
      watching it happening from a distance". A loved one who leaves us can
      take our heart with them if we "give our heart away". Even
      leaving a place that we love can "tear us in two" and can result
      in our leaving part of ourselves, part of our consciousness, behind in
      that place.
      Wholesome reintegration is not automatic
      or inevitable and many of us are aware of an area of emptiness within…
      perhaps felt as loss… that something is missing. From the most ancient
      days of shamanic practice, this has been viewed as a loss of a part of
      one's soul and there are many traditional techniques for the retrieval and
      reintegration of that part of oneself that has become ‘lost’. In most
      cases, this has involved the shamanic practitioner travelling to the bardo
      or underworld, finding and negotiating with that part of the client’s
      soul or consciousness that has been abandoned and returning it to the
      waiting client.
      A modern, and in some ways more
      effective and empowering way of working, is where the practitioner guides
      the client him/herself through the experience of
      locating/negotiating/reuniting with and reintegrating that part of
      him/herself that has been lost. The client is guided through an extended
      relaxation process before being guided to a tunnel or stairway that leads
      deep into the earth. At the end of the passage is another world, where
      their spirit guide or guardian angel awaits. This, in itself, can be a
      powerful experience. Accompanied in consciousness by the practitioner,
      they embark on a boat that carries them along a river, during the course
      of which a power animal on the river bank is identified and befriended.
      Eventually they disembark and the magic of the moment takes place as the
      part that was lost is rediscovered…
      What follows is entirely personal; the
      lost fragment may feel rejected or abandoned and need to be comforted or
      even persuaded to return….there may be other parties involved in the
      original event who need to be dealt with appropriately, before being
      forgiven and released….eventually, all is resolved and the client (more
      complete than when they left) returns to normal reality and a period of
      assimilation. It isn’t a scary process; it is our own consciousness that
      we are exploring and, since it is ours, it is a place that is deeply
      familiar and where we feel at home.
      The process of reintegration is
      empowering and emotionally uplifting; it leaves us feeling stronger, more
      whole and more wholesome. This is the most ancient ‘psychotherapy’
      and, in my experience, amongst the most direct, most effective and most
      efficient (usually requiring only one session of three hours) ways of ‘bringing
      ourselves back home’.