This chapter demonstrates that integrating information from self-report attachment scales and the traditional self expressive tools (Rorschach and TAT) can assist the clinician in planning the therapy and ?mapping? the ?therapeutic journey?. The resulting picture is more detailed, accurate, and deep, and it illustrates the particular feelings and thoughts the client might be experiencing in his or her relationships. The Rorschach and TAT can inform therapists about subconscious aspects of the client?s life and draw their attention to dissociated or denied parts that the client is unable to disclose because they are too painful or distressing. The traditional tools help the therapist observe the roots of the client?s withdrawal, guardedness, and pain, as well as feelings about the absence of protecting and attentive figures. The TAT stories potentially heighten the therapist?s empathy toward his or her clients in that the stories enable therapists to imagine, understand, and empathically resonate with their clients? subjective experience. The data can cue therapists regarding the specific therapeutic stance most likely to be in tune with a particular client?s developmental needs, as well as warn therapists regarding potentially ?dangerous areas? and transference ?traps?. The combined knowledge of clients? attachment style and their Rorschach and TAT profile is analogous to a map given to a hiker entering a forest for the first time. A map shows all the passes in the forest, but it does not show how the trees change color or how the quality of the light differs in relation to the sun?s zenith or when it is cloudy, rainy, or windy. The Rorschach and TAT depict the delicate details over and above the general map of attachment styles. An ?informative map? such as this is a substantial help in the beginning of therapy and also in the appraisal of the therapeutic progress. The material in this chapter supports Shaver and Mikulincer?s (2005) claim that research on adult attachment provides persuasive evidence for many of the unconscious processes discovered and described by psychodynamic clinicians. Clinicians can benefit from the growing research in attachment and traditional tools. Similarly, adult attachment researchers can profit from psychoanalytic insights. The integration of insights achieved in both fields has the potential to enrich both fields and lead to a more comprehensive and integrative understanding of our clients.