Evan Morse
Jungian-oriented Psychotherapist
What is the work?
- The time will come
when, with elation
you will greet yourself arriving
at your own door, in your own mirror
and each will smile at the other's welcome, and say, sit here. Eat.
You will love again the stranger who was your self.
- from "Love After Love" by Derek Walcott
Evan Morse, MSW, LICSW
I am a Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker with 13 years of experience in the field of mental health. Currently, I have a small, Jungian-oriented psychotherapy practice in Beverly, MA, where I specialize in work with adults who suffer with depression and/or anxiety. I have experience with a wide range of issues, including depression, anxiety, self-esteem issues, relationship difficulties, creative blocks, and parenting issues.
My clinical work experience includes work in a variety of settings, including outpatient psychotherapy, psychiatric crisis teams, and inpatient psychiatric units. Beyond my degree in clinical social work from the Simmons College School of Social Work , I am a Stage One training candidate at the CG Jung Institute of Boston.
If you are interested in Jungian-oriented psychotherapy, please see my contact page.
What is Jungian-oriented Psychotherapy?
Jungian-oriented psychotherapy, as I practice it, is an eclectic psychotherapeutic approach which actively uses the approach developed by the Swiss psychiatrist C. G. Jung. It is not, however, "Jungian Analysis." To be Jungian-oriented typically indicates that the therapist is conscious of material that goes beyond the confines of the personal unconscious.
Symbols, dreams and other products of the unconscious that reveal the working of the psyche are especially important in a Jungian-oriented therapy.