I am a clinician with a particular emphasis on the expressive use of unconscious experience, often in the form of whatever comes to patient and therapist's awareness, and in the consciously unintended ways that often times commonplace wordings and expressions may be heard as pertaining to other out-of-awareness realities as well, which if considered, may sometimes expand the experiential moment in therapeutically helpful ways. This way of working has led me to add to our conception of the intrapsychic/ interpersonal relational unconscious a broader formulation of the unconscious that I have termed the envelopmental unconscious, which refers to all factors and actions, known and unknown, that may not or not yet be within the domain of the human psyche, and which may impact the therapeutic participants in real and immediate ways. (The Envelopmental Unconscious, in, American Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience; 2022, 10 (3), 125-133). Such a clinical sensibility adds, I think, an important dimension of experiential aliveness to our more conscious formulations in the quest for meaning and therapeutic change, as attunement to experiential moments is already a perspective on what change is.