Chung, Poongryun
Doctoral student, Department of Meditation Psychology Counseling, Dongbang Culture University, Republic of Korea
Correspondence to Chung, Poongryun, E-mail: xdreami2191@naver.com
Volume 35, Pages 63-81, December 2025.
Journal of Meditation Based Psychological Counseling 2025, 35, 63-81. https://doi.org/10.12972/mpca.2025.35.5
Received on November 24, 2025, Revised on December 18, 2025, Accepted on December 30, 2025, Published on December 31, 2025.
Copyright © 2025 Meditation based Psychological Counseling Association.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0).
Purpose: This single-case study explored the effects of emotion-focused Reflected Image Meditation(RIM) on depressive affect in a middle-aged woman with a history of childhood emotional deprivation, sexual trauma, bereavement, and chronic conflict with her mother-in-law. The aim was to examine how biographical wounds and reactivated emotions in adult relationships could be processed and transformed through imagery-based intervention.
Methods: The client received six sessions of emotion-focused RIM. Qualitative data (counseling transcripts, therapeutic drawings, and researcher process notes) were analyzed thematically, and quantitative change was assessed using the Burns Depression Checklist (BDC) and the Stress Response Inventory (SRI).
Results: BDC scores decreased by 48.6% and SRI scores by 31.8%, indicating substantial reductions in depressive and stress-related symptoms. Qualitative analysis showed a progressive emotional shift “from suppression to integration” as the client encountered inner figures such as “the self in need of care,” “the self hiding in shame,” “the self longing to be loved,” “the self burdened by mother’s load,” and “the self afraid of separation.”
Conclusion: Emotion-focused RIM on appears to facilitate the release of suppressed emotions, the emergence of self-compassion, and greater emotional integration in middle-aged women with chronic depressive affect, suggesting its clinical usefulness as a focused intervention for core depressive schemas.
emotion-focused Reflected Image Meditation, depressive affect, self-integration, middle-aged women, single-case study