Douglas Thomas has a private Jungian-based psychotherapy practice in Pasadena, California, where he specializes in work with dreams, LGBTQ+ issues, and alternative sexualities. He also teaches as adjunct faculty at Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara, California. Dr. Thomas has written articles for the Journal of Jungian Scholarly Studies and International Journal of Jungian Studies. His essay ""My Kinky Shadow: The poetics of the sadomasochistic Other"" was published last year in Routledge’s The Spectre of the Other in Jungian Psychoanalysis. For more information, visit Dr. Thomas’ website at Drdouglasthomas.com.
I was asked some years ago if I could capture the essence of Jung's psychology in a phrase. My mind went blank and time seemed to drag out. But then it came: everything belongs. There is nothing in human experience or in human behavior that is not the proper purview for reflection through the Jungian lens. Douglas Thomas' book, The Deep Psychology of BDSM and Kink: Jungian and Archetypal Perspectives on the Soul's Transgressive Necessities, is an exquisite example of this belongingness of what most might generally feel should be left to the nether regions of human behavior. Yet, what Doug makes abundantly clear is that the human soul seeks expression, relationship and incarnation in even the most hellish of forms, even those where human evil is at the very edge. In looking at what some may consider forbidden topics. Doug has done a deep service not only to depth psychology by bringing these topics out of the closet and into full light of day, but also to those members of the BDSM and kink communities, enabling them to find soulful meaning in their activities, so rejected by the general collective. Practitioners of depth psychology, as well as partitioners of erotic choices far outside what is considered normal, will benefit from a close reading of Doug's magnificent offering. It is indeed a gift. Russell Lockhart, author: Words As Eggs: Psyche in Language and Clinic (1983), Psyche Speaks: A Jungian Approach to Self and World (1982) Psychology is transformed by The Deep Psychology of BDSM and Kink, which explores alternative sexualities as integral to soul. Drawing from the Red Book, Douglas Thomas frees C. G. Jung from his compulsory heterosexist mode of individuation, and reveals kink sexualities in psychic dynamics described by James Hillman. The book shows that archetypes are deeply implicated in BDSM and kink through spiritual themes such as suffering, the underworld, evil, ecstasy and death. Depth Psychology needs this book to conjoin sexuality with the sacred, see the body's dreamworld and, ultimately, to understand kink in collective cultural relationships. This book is a must. Susan Rowland (PhD), author: Jung: A Feminist Revision (2002), The Sacred Well Murders (2022) Those of us grappling for decades, clinically and personally, with the meaning of sexualities like BDSM will no doubt welcome Thomas's book as a big breath of fresh air long time coming. His whip-smart approach to the transgressive ways and compelling means of sexual dominance and erotic submission manages throughout to lay bare all the potentially rich archetypal dimensions of this form of erotic encounter, and does so for both academic and kinkster alike. Discriminating without being judgmental, at all times alive to the power and the glory of sex in the psyche, Thomas illuminates a place many of us know intimately. Robert Hopcke, author: Jung, Jungians, and Homosexuality (1991)