The Double Spiral in Psychological and Spiritual Healing and Resilience
I have been thinking a lot about the symbol I chose for my new logo – the Double Spiral.
Symbols have been used by humans for millennia to elicit associations within our minds that then trigger thoughts, feelings and even actions.
Today the double spiral might not be as familiar to us as other symbols, such as religious ones like the cross for Christianity, or the 6 pointed star for Judaism, or – to use a modern symbol well known throughout the world, the golden arches of a fast food chain that tells us many things about modern culture (i.e. the speed that food can be prepared and served is more important than the quality of the food itself, etc.).
Nonetheless, although you may have never really noticed it before, the double spiral is an incredibly ancient symbol, and has been used by various cultures throughout the world through the millennia to inspire reflection on the continuous flow of opposites that we experience in our lives: day and night/light and darkness, life and death, the masculine principle and the feminine principle, what we experience inside ourselves and what instead we perceive coming from outside ourselves, etc. etc..
Sometimes it is shown lying horizontally, symbolizing the rising and setting of the sun, and thus the constant flow of life from day, to night, or from the birth of life to the end of it.
When it is instead depicted as in my logo, with its spiraling arms reaching up and down, it elicits a more psychological and spiritual idea of
the deeper we go in understanding our own inner selves, the roots of our lives in our experiential histories and realities, the higher we can go in our ability to experience the truth of life and the joy and “enlightenment” – literally reaching the light – that brings.
In other words, it urges us to remember that when we dig deep into the causes that lie behind our current experience of the world, good or bad, we become free and energized to experience the upward motion of the spiral, towards the light.
In essence, this simple symbol is telling us:
The deeper we dive into our darkness – the painful memories of past traumas, harms and hurts received that continue to drive our reactions in the present; the unaddressed mistakes and weaknesses we have shown; our repressed and often misplaced guilt and shame for our desires and dreams we were taught were wrong; the unprocessed anger and rage that we rightly felt as helpless children when we were harmed by our caregivers or by life itself, and that must be acknowledged and released in healthy ways because otherwise it poisons us – the more enlightened we can become.
The more we journey into our depths so we can embrace and heal the pain that lies hidden there, the freer we become to experience the Beauty of Life.
And not only does it remind us that the deeper we go, the higher we go; it also reminds us that this movement is constant, and does not necessarily happen at the same time. It requires that each movement is experienced separately.
We dive down: we are brought into feelings of pain, depression, despair, anger and rage, etc. by events in life or by our memories. We are flooded with all those difficult emotions; we are sometimes quite literally dragged through their “mud”.
But if we find the courage and the right kind of guidance, we can wade through it and gain important insights along the way. We can find new energy to make new choices and move back up towards the light. We can let go of our addictive patterns that keep us enslaved to unhealthy ways of thinking and acting, to toxic relationships, and all the other ways that the pain of our past continues to play out in our present.
And we move upward, toward the light of new understanding, new levels of love for ourselves, of responsibility and freedom and even joy.
Until the next time we need to dive back down, to release a bit more of our painful histories, or even some of the ancestral trauma we carry within our own hearts and minds. As we do so, the pain can still be great: the deeper we go, the deeper the pain can actually be.
But, the more adept we become at diving into old pain or even the new pain that can come through the kinds of losses and challenges we face in our current lives, the better we get at working through it, and deciding to use this complex energy to make new decisions, to create something new, to rise back up, within ourselves, towards the light.
This is a fine Art; it is the Art of transforming our pain into new life, our failures into new decisions, our traumas into new abilities to love ourselves and others in healthier, more evolved and enlightened ways.
And as we learn this delicate, difficult and yet incredibly inspiring Existential Art of dancing along the double spiral, we create our own Lives as a Work of Art. We become living examples of Life in how it transforms itself and how love and new, enlivened energies can truly be born from the deepest pits of desperation, destruction and despair.
I first learned about this symbol during a supervision I was doing with Antonio Mercurio. I was feeling a lot of despair for how hard it still was for me sometimes, even after decades of very intensive work on myself, to feel any kind of consistent levity of spirit. I was still often on the verge of despair, struggling inside myself to feel any real love for myself or my life. The pain of my early abandonment was still affecting me in many different ways, and it seemed as though my inability to “just get over it” was a clear indication of a failure on my part.
Antonio, instead, assured me that this was not the case. That if I was feeling that much pain, there were still lessons to be learned for it, that I simply was being invited to continue to dive in, and build those internal “muscles” I needed to be able to feel it all, and slowly release it. That if I had suffered so terribly, it meant that I was sensitive, not stupid, and that today my task was to be able to embrace these wounded parts of myself and love them back to health.
And then he told me about the Double Spiral, that he himself had learned about while reading Reinhold Niebuhr, and that had also helped him in his own journey, which was equally challenging, as he, too, was often drawn in very deeply and invited by his Self to clear out every little speck of fear, anger, lack of trust towards life, resentment and hatred and all the rest.
He encouraged me to spend some time and perhaps draw or paint this symbol, and he reminded me that I was not alone in my journey.
I indeed sat down right away after my session, and attempted to create an image that could express this concept of a double spiral where one arm reached down into the pits of my pain, and the other instead circled upwards, towards ever-higher and lighter feelings of freedom, creativity, presence and love. Those early attempts were pretty rudimentary and certainly nothing to show others, but they had a cathartic effect on me.
Sometime later, I found out that Niebuhr not only talked about the double spiral, but that he was also attributed with writing the Serenity Prayer, used widely first in Alcoholics Anonymous, and later in all the 12 step programs that followed in its footsteps. Today, the Serenity Prayer is something that many people here in the USA know about, even if they don’t know the actual prayer itself.
As a recovering person myself, I already knew the Serenity Prayer by heart, and for years I had considered it, and the 12 step approach, the second “pillar” of my own personal healing and evolution, along with the first which was my journey in Existential Personalistic and Cosmoartistic Anthropology.
I consider my path in EPA, in fact, the doorway that made it possible for me to not only develop myself professionally and become a counselor in that method as well as a licensed psychologist: perhaps most importantly, it opened my eyes, my heart and my mind to the reality of the spiritual dimension, and to the opportunity to develop this part of my Self without necessarily having to adhere to any kind of religion.
It helped me begin to open to broader concepts of “god” beyond those I had been raised with and that I had rejected many years before, which in turn allowed me to open up to the 12 step approach, and finally achieve lasting release from various ways my compulsive disorder had “disordered” me throughout my life.
These two pillars, in fact, along with then many other techniques that I have picked up along the way, continue to guide me as I go through my life, through the constant cycles of dipping down into the darkness of my personal and ancestral and even the collective history of humanity, to then lift back up into new levels of inspiration, love of myself of others and of life, of an increasing ability to receive the goodness and beauty that is also here, and to use the entirety of my journey as a service to the whole.
May you also find the strength and courage that you need to dive deep and embrace your wounds with loving compassion, so you can then rise back into your life with increasing confidence and wholeness.
It is not an easy journey, I know well – but undertaking a journey with the help and guidance of others who are doing it themselves, and who have also devoted considerable time, energy and money to learn how to help others, is truly an incredible experience.
That is what I decided to do, back in January of 1990 …. and since that moment, my life has taken a completely different trajectory than it would have otherwise.
I chose to heed the call of my soul to dive in deep…. and while the effort required to become truly Alive, no longer medicating myself or running from the pain in other ways, has sometimes felt daunting and impossible, it has brought me to a quality of life – both inner and outer – that I would have never dreamed possible.
Yes, it might mean feeling some pain sometimes, still …. and even feeling hopeless; when I am down in that lower spiral, it can still sometimes feel endlessly dark, lonely, and without any real purpose.
But with practice, I have learned that every dip “down” truly is followed by insights that then allow me to make new choices and move back up to the ascending spiral, and reach ever greater integration, awareness, agency and creativity. Joy.
It does take effort, and today I now know without any doubt that no one can do this work but me. We are each called to embrace our own lives, our own souls, and choose what we are going to do.
Every day we have a choice:
are we going to choose despair and hopelessness, or entrust ourselves completely to the beliefs and whims of others?
Even well meaning family, friends, medical professionals or even apps designed to rewire our brains cannot do the inner work for us. (And while yes, our brains need to be rewired and there is no question that using apps can help us “reprogram” ourselves, they can not give us the love we desperately need, that we can only receive from other beings that are alive and can engage in emotionally energized exchanges with us).
Or are we going to dive in, and choose to take new action and connect with others who can help us learn how to love ourselves, our lives, and Life itself in new, more life-enhancing ways – not because they are telling us what to do out of text-book learning (even though the learning is valid and important – but alone it is not infused with the emotional value of experience, which develops empathy and compassion), but because they know what the journey is like?
There are many ways we can choose Life over remaining stuck and suffering. Today, thanks to the many developments in psychological and spiritual understandings, informed also (but not replaced by) the incredible technological advances we are benefitting from, we have all kinds of philosophies, therapeutic approaches, practitioners and options to choose from.
For me, the one that has always excited me the most, and has offered a foundation for my own personal and professional growth even while exploring many other fascinating and helpful techniques (such as Family Constellations and Evolutionary/Transformational Astrology and Human Design), is Antonio Mercurio’s ideas around Life as a Work of Art (the link will take you to a page describing my new workshop – check it out, it might be a great way to start your journey), and if you have found my site, welcome.
I hope you find some inspiration and if you are looking for guidance and support I am more than happy to explore if working together could be a good fit.
Contact me to set up a free 15 minute chat, or you are also welcome to send me an email with any questions you may have. I always answer my emails, and usually manage to find time for sessions quite quickly, within a couple/few weeks at most. I look forward to hearing from you, and in any case wish you the very best in your own journey of healing, self discovery and unfoldment.
Life is Beautiful, and it is waiting for you.





