Psychotherapists who practice Buddhist meditation can develop a
heightened awareness of their own body sensations. This book describes
the work of psychotherapists who had developed the skill of using their
body-awareness inter-subjectively: their bodies had become sensitive
instruments that resonated with the unconscious emotional and physical
experiences of their patients and clients, in a form of body-based
counter-transference. The author discusses clinical vignettes from the
practice of six meditating psychotherapists, in New Zealand, Britain,
and the USA, and describes ways in which self-other boundaries, both
psychic and physical, were temporarily transcended in their work with
patients.