“…63-69), Frankl's (1960 logotherapeutic technique of "paradoxical intention," and existential psychotherapy's "paradox of primal integration," which aims to contact and release the real self" (Rowan, 2001, p. 103). Moreover, appreciation of paradox is central to "the paradox principle" (Schneider, 2015), social polarization (Schneider, 2013(Schneider, , 2020, the dialectical process and paradox of transformation (Hart, 2000(Hart, , 2009, acceptance and commitment therapy, the empirically rich research base of self-determination theory (see Deci & Ryan, 2008;DeRobertis & Bland, 2018, and the experiential liberation (or ontological freedom) of the existential-integrative approach, where clients are "supported to 'reoccupy' (e.g., embody) the parts of themselves that have been denied" (Schneider, 2008, p. 38). Similarly, paradox integration is foundational to the body-centered psychotherapy method of Hakomi (Kurtz, 1990(Kurtz, /2015, which focuses on the organization of experience (i.e., whether there is a presence, or lack, of communication, integration, and coherence of an individual's parts in relation to their whole).…”