Why This Level of Training Is Needed Now
We are living in a world where depth has slowly been diluted. Capacity is increasingly hidden beneath what is safe and considered proper practice. We have normalised tightly sequenced work, contained sessions, and predictable formats and the question now is what we do when the work no longer fits inside them?
Many practitioners reach a point where the work starts to feel constrained. Sitting with clients or groups, they can feel that something deeper is present, alive in the body, the atmosphere, the images, the silences - but there is no shared language or training to meet it.
So the work stays at the level of theory, formulation, or hypothesis. Not because these are wrong, many are intelligent and useful - but because they are safer. They don’t require the practitioner to enter the field, engage the imaginal, or risk being changed by what is emerging.
Over time, this creates a quiet frustration. A sense that the work has more to give, that people need something deeper, but that there is no permission, confidence, or supervision to go there. Depth becomes something we talk about rather than something we know how to inhabit.
Inscension exists for practitioners who can feel this tension and no longer want to work around it — who want training that includes the field, the imaginal, and the realities that arise when intensity, symbol, and unconscious material are allowed to move.



