This paper explores the mystical unconscious as a dimension of psychoanalysis that moves beyond psychoanalysis's emphasis on repression and interpretation. Drawing from psychoanalytic insights, mystical traditions, and personal clinical encounters with states of spirit possession, the author argues for a psychoanalytic stance of witnessing. Through concepts such as the mystical vertex, internal third, and the analyst as a double, the author presents psychoanalysis as an art of profound attunement—one that welcomes spectral, sublime, and sacred psychic experiences not as pathology, but as meaningful enactments of suffering, cultural memory, and transformation. This reframes psychoanalysis as an aesthetic and spiritual communion.
Shalini Masih (Sun,) studied this question.