Depth Psychology and the High Desert
Roswell, New Mexico carries more psychological weight than almost any city its size in America. The 1947 incident — whatever actually occurred on that ranch north of town — lodged itself permanently in the collective imagination, spawning decades of speculation, mythology, and a particular flavor of outsider consciousness that the town has embraced, complicated, and never fully escaped.
Carl Jung would have found this fascinating. In 1958, the year before his death, he published Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies — a book that analyzed UFO reports not as potential extraterrestrial phenomena but as projections of the collective unconscious. At a time of Cold War anxiety and technological acceleration, Jung argued, the human psyche was creating circular, celestial images — mandalas projected into the sky — as a compensatory response to spiritual disorientation. The “saucers” were the unconscious speaking in the only language modernity had left it.
Whether or not that explains Roswell, the interpretation illuminates something real about the region’s psychology. Southeastern New Mexico is a place where the landscape itself invites a particular kind of introspection. The Llano Estacado spreads flat and enormous in every direction. The sky is immense. Human settlements look temporary against it. Carlsbad Caverns plunges into the earth nearby — a literal underworld accessible by elevator. Sitting with that landscape long enough, something shifts in the sense of scale.
The Psychology of Isolation and Service
Roswell’s economy has long centered on agriculture, oil and gas, and the military presence at Holloman Air Force Base and the White Sands Missile Range corridor. These cultures share a psychological posture: stoicism, functionality, a suspicion of the interior life as indulgence. Men especially in these communities often develop what Jungians call an overdeveloped persona — a social mask of competence and toughness that becomes so habitual the person underneath grows inaccessible even to themselves.
This isn’t a pathology unique to the region. But the geographic isolation compounds it. The nearest major metropolitan mental health infrastructure is El Paso, three hours to the south. Therapists in Roswell are scarce. The cultural permission to seek help is limited. And so people carry things — grief, depression, relationship fractures, the accumulated weight of unexplored interior terrain — for years before circumstances force a reckoning.
Online Therapy as Access
Online therapy was already changing this before the pandemic; afterward, it became standard practice. A secure video session doesn’t require the three-hour round trip, or the acknowledgment to neighbors that you’re seeking help. It happens in your home, in private, at whatever hour your schedule allows.
Jungian depth psychotherapy is particularly well-suited to these situations. It’s not a quick fix. It proceeds slowly, attending to what keeps recurring — in dreams, in relationships, in patterns of behavior that don’t respond to willpower alone. It works with the whole person, including the parts that have been most effectively suppressed.
Jill Ansell, LPCC, is licensed in New Mexico and brings both clinical training and a genuine feel for the landscape and culture of the state’s more remote communities. She works with adults across southeastern New Mexico including Roswell, Artesia, Carlsbad, Lovington, Hobbs, and Clovis. Schedule a free 15-minute discovery call to begin.