Deep down, what I have proposed is what Carl Jung had already suggested, that in the future someone would come along and give corporeality to the myths, and that psychotherapy would eventually develop a bodily dimension. And as I am so modest I thought that Jung was talking to me (laughter).
So I started with the myth of the Minotaur and the labyrinth, in which the Minotaur is an archetype of our instincts, and the labyrinth is the labyrinth of our existence. Each one of us has a Minotaur within us, which is our instinctual savage part, and most often than not is oppressed. And we live in this labyrinth, that is, we have to constantly make life choices… I think there is nothing more interesting than being lost, because it is the only way that to find our selves. Each of us is in an existential labyrinth and we tend to be as terrorised by this inner Minotaur as the ancient Greeks. That is why they tried to kill it. Our own fear can be considered as an initial form of repression. More recently people like Picasso, Fellini, and many others have redeemed the Minotaur. I have created a therapeutic approach inspired by this myth.