“…Juxtaposing psychotherapeutic and shamanic literatures reveals that practitioners from these domains have been constructed in broadly similar ways; namely as charlatans, mentally ill and 'wounded healers' (Hadjiosif, 2020). Although the concept of the 'wounded healer' (WH) originates in shamanic traditions, it springs up in the discourse of several interrelated mental health professions such as psychiatric nursing (Conti-O'Hare, 1998;MacCulloch & Shattell, 2009), counselling psychology (Martin, 2011), clinical psychology (Farber et al, 2005), psychiatry (Kirmayer, 2003), social work (Straussner et al, 2018), criminology (LeBel et al, 2015) and many schools of psychotherapy (Arnaud, 2017;Farber, 2017;Rice, 2011;Zerubavel & Wright, 2012); most notably the Jungian tradition of psychoanalysis (Merchant, 2011;Wong, 1997). Portrayals of psychotherapists as WHs have proliferated in the past few decades (Amundson & Ross, 2016;Millon et al, 1986;Rippere & Williams, 1985;Sherman & Thelen, 1998), the suggestion being that the experience and overcoming of emotional pain imbues one with both interest and insight in human suffering.…”