Spiritual Emergency and the Collective Work of Staying Alive: An Interview with Nisha Gupta

Spiritual Emergency and the Collective Work of Staying Alive: An Interview with Nisha Gupta

Nisha Gupta is an existential phenomenologist, a depth psychotherapist, a creativity scholar, and an artist. She's an Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of West Georgia and earned her PhD in clinical psychology from Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. She's also, if she doesn't mind me saying, a bit of a rising star as an early career psychologist, having won early career awards from the APA divisions for both humanistic and qualitative psychology.

Dr. Gupta's work centers on lived experience and the problems of form and method in the field. She is an advocate of the psychological humanities, disseminating psychology to the public as art, including paintings, film, poetry, and literary memoir, for community healing and social change. Her artwork seeks to raise critical consciousness and empowerment regarding marginalized lived experiences, such as sexual and gender oppression, creative madness, and spiritual emergencies. In psychotherapy practice, she integrates depth and liberation psychotherapy perspectives.

In this conversation, we talk about phenomenological filmmaking and what film can capture about distress, identity, time, and relationships that often elude other approaches to psychological research. We also talk about spiritual emergency and the phrase "dark night of the soul," including the difference between those frameworks and the more familiar language of symptoms and disorders.

Dr. Gupta also shares her own experience of navigating a spiritual emergency as a clinical psychologist. We discuss what helped, what did not, what clinicians tend to miss in these situations, and what it would mean to build a better set of responses around people going through them.

Finally, we discuss liberation psychology and collective resilience, including the question of how to think about suffering when its sources are social and political, and how to avoid reducing resilience to individual "grit."

***

Thank you for being with us to listen to the podcast and read our articles this year. MIA is funded entirely by reader donations. If you value MIA, please help us continue to survive and grow. https://www.madinamerica.com/donate/

To find the Mad in America podcast on your preferred podcast player, click here: https://pod.link/1212789850

© Mad in America 2026. Produced by James Moore https://www.jmaudio.org

Jaksot(291)

Beyond Paternalism or Abandonment in Mental Health Care: An Interview with Neil Gong

Beyond Paternalism or Abandonment in Mental Health Care: An Interview with Neil Gong

Neil Gong is an assistant professor of sociology at UC San Diego, where he researches psychiatric services, homelessness, and how communities seek to maintain social order. Neil's new book, "Sons, Dau...

17 Heinä 202440min

The Connection Cure: An Interview with Julia Hotz

The Connection Cure: An Interview with Julia Hotz

Julia Hotz is a solutions-focused journalist based in New York City. She is the author of the forthcoming book, The Connection Cure: The Prescriptive Power of Movement, Nature, Art, Service, and Belon...

10 Heinä 202451min

Conveying Hope, Empowering Teens: An Interview With Jessica Schleider

Conveying Hope, Empowering Teens: An Interview With Jessica Schleider

Jessica Schleider is a clinical psychologist, researcher, and founding director of the Lab for Scalable Mental Health (www.schleiderlab.org). She's a leader in single-session interventions for youth ...

26 Kesä 202433min

Madness, Utopia and Revolt: An Interview With Sasha Warren

Madness, Utopia and Revolt: An Interview With Sasha Warren

Sasha Durakov Warren is the author of the new book Storming Bedlam: Madness, Utopia, and Revolt published by Common Notions Press. Sasha is a writer based in Minneapolis. His experiences within the ps...

19 Kesä 202451min

Demedicalizing Depression: An Interview with Milutin Kostić

Demedicalizing Depression: An Interview with Milutin Kostić

Milutin Kostić is a practicing Serbian psychiatrist trained in the tradition of biological psychiatry who has become a new figure in the critical psychiatry movement. Affiliated with the Institute of ...

22 Touko 202442min

Leaving Biological Psychiatry Behind - An Interview With Rodrigo Nardi

Leaving Biological Psychiatry Behind - An Interview With Rodrigo Nardi

Rodrigo Nardi is a psychiatrist and psychologist. He obtained his psychology degree in the year 2000, and following that, he obtained a certificate in CBT, and a Master's Degree in Clinical Psychology...

15 Touko 202442min

Context and Care vs Isolate and Control - An Interview with Arthur Kleinman

Context and Care vs Isolate and Control - An Interview with Arthur Kleinman

Arthur Kleinman is a towering figure in psychiatry and medical anthropology. He has made substantial contributions to both fields over his illustrious career spanning more than five decades. As a Prof...

24 Huhti 202444min

Undisclosed Financial Conflicts of Interest in the DSM-5: An interview with Lisa Cosgrove and Brian Piper

Undisclosed Financial Conflicts of Interest in the DSM-5: An interview with Lisa Cosgrove and Brian Piper

On the MIA podcast this week we turn our attention to conflicts of interest (COIs) and new research from the British Medical Journal (BMJ). Mad in America has previously examined the problems with co...

20 Maalis 202425min

Suosittua kategoriassa Terveys ja hyvinvointi

unicast
psykopodiaa-podcast
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
vakeva-elama-viisaampi-mieli-vahvempi-keho
tiedenaiset-podcast
rss-pitaisko-erota
rss-narsisti
puhu-muru
rss-kuumilla-aalloilla
rss-pt-paahtio
meditaatiot-suomeksi
selviytyjat-tarinoita-elamasta
terapiassa
fitnesskulmapodcast
junnut-pelissa
rss-nautinto
audio-sport-juoksu
fitnessvastaanotto
rss-addiktit
rss-seuraava-potilas