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  • We also live in our dreams, we do not live  only by day. Sometimes we accomplish our  

  • greatest deeds in dreams.” Carl Jung, The Red Book  

  • Are dreams the product of random brain activityor a side effect of the mind consolidating its  

  • memories? Are they, as Sigmund Freud suggestedthe expression of repressed wishes and desires?  

  • Or is there something richer and more  meaningful to dreams that escapes the  

  • notice of many in the modern day? Carl  Jung believed there was, and in this video,  

  • we are going to explore why dreams are  of vital importance to our mental and  

  • physical health and how the art of dream  interpretation can revitalize our life.   

  • It is only in modern times that the dream, this  fleeting and insignificant looking product of  

  • the psyche, has met with such profound contemptFormerly it was esteemed as a harbinger of fate,  

  • a portent and comforter, a messenger of the godsNow we see it as the emissary of the unconscious,  

  • whose task it is to reveal the secrets  that are hidden from the conscious mind,  

  • and this it does with astounding completeness.” Carl Jung, Two Essays on Analytical Psychology  

  • The interpretation of dreams was an integral part  of Jung's therapeutic approach. According to his  

  • own estimate, he analyzed no less than  80,000 dreams. In his Seminar on Dreams,  

  • Jung stated thatdreams are messages sent  up from the unconscious”. And so to grasp  

  • the significance of dreams, we must understand  how Jung conceived of the unconscious psyche.  

  • In a lecture given in 1934, Jung wrote thatIt is  as if our consciousness were...a ship on the great  

  • sea of the unconscious.” (Carl Jung, ETH ZurichThe fate of a ship is partially determined by the  

  • activity of the sea and likewise the direction of  our life is highly influenced by the unconscious.  

  • Furthermore, just as the sea contains resourcestreasures, and dangers that are not easily seen  

  • from the surface, so too potentials for good  and evil are hidden in our unconscious depths.  

  • Psychological development, according to Jung, is  facilitated by bringing unconscious contents into  

  • the light of consciousness, for this enriches our  conscious personality, increases our knowledge,  

  • and promotes psychological wholeness. “One does  not become enlightened by imagining figures of  

  • light, but by making the darkness conscious.”  (Carl Jung, Alchemical Studies) More than any  

  • other phenomenon dreams can facilitate  this process as they act as a window into  

  • the unconscious mind, or as Jung explains:  “...the dream is a spontaneous self-portrayal,  

  • in symbolic form, of the actual situation  in the unconscious...The dream is  

  • specifically the utterance of the unconscious.” Carl Jung, Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche  

  • Paying attention to our dreams, and therein  making more of the unconscious conscious,  

  • bestows many benefits. One of which is that  dreams contain insights which in waking  

  • life we are unable, or unwilling, to see.  “When we sleep the soul is lit up completely by  

  • many eyes; with them we can see everything  that we could not see in the daytime.”  

  • Aeschylus Intuitions or gut feelings that are not  

  • consciously processed, subtle hunches about the  true character of other people, as well as blind  

  • spots and self-deceptions that are inhibiting  our developmentall are examples of insights  

  • which our unconscious can reveal in dreamsThis ability of a dream to disclose knowledge  

  • otherwise unavailable to waking consciousness  is why throughout history, in the words of Jung,  

  • the dream has been regarded as a truth-telling  oracle.” Or as Jung explains in more detail:   

  • The unconscious is the dark being within that  hears what our conscious ears do not hear, and  

  • sees what our conscious eyes do not perceive...We  only become aware of this unheard hearing,  

  • this unseen seeing, when the unconscious  sends us these forgotten images in dreams.”    

  • Carl Jung, ETH Zurich 1933-41 As windows into the unconscious,  

  • dreams also provide us with information  about the health, or sickness, of our body.  

  • For the unconscious is intimately connected to the  biology of the body and involved in regulating the  

  • functioning of organs. It is thus capable of  detecting subtle abnormalities in the body,  

  • and it is not unusual for the unconscious  to disclose these abnormalities in dreams,  

  • long before any overt symptoms show. Or as the  Jungian psychoanalyst James Hall explains:   

  • It is by no means an easy matter to make  organic diagnoses from dream material,  

  • although there are many striking examples  of such predictions: the dream of an inner  

  • "explosion" preceding the leaking of an  aortic aneurysm, the appearance of dream  

  • figures with gall bladder disease prior to that  illness being suspected in the dreamer, etc.”   

  • James Hall, Jungian Dream Interpretation Dreams can also warn us of the type of  

  • future that may manifest if we  continue in our errant ways.   

  • Dreams prepare, announce, or warn about  certain situations, often long before they  

  • actually happen.” wrote Jung, “This is not  necessarily a miracle or a precognition.  

  • Most crises or dangerous situations have a long  incubation, only the conscious mind is not aware  

  • of it. Dreams can betray the secret.” Carl Jung, The Symbolic Life  

  • Jung provides an example of a dream of this  type. Jung's colleague, an amateur mountaineer,  

  • told Jung of the following dream: He was  climbing a mountain, and the higher he climbed,  

  • the better he felt. When he reached the summit  of the mountain he wanted to continue to climb  

  • and so he stepped off the summit into  thin air, and suddenly he awoke.   

  • Jung intuitively felt this dream to be a warning  from the unconscious. He implored his colleague  

  • to take extra precautions on any future climbs  or avoid them altogether. But the man did not  

  • heed the advice. Three months later the man  went climbing, and in the words of Jung:   

  • “A guide standing below saw him literally step out  into the air while descending a rock face. He fell  

  • on the head of his friend, who was waiting lower  down, and both were dashed to pieces far below.”   

  • Carl Jung, Practice of Psychotherapy Dreams also play an important role in  

  • the creative process. We know from  the history of philosophy, science,  

  • art, and literature, that many great creations  and discoveries have been inspired by dreams.  

  • A dream informed the Russian chemist Dmitry  Mendeleyev of the correct order of the elements  

  • based on atomic weight. August Kekule was shown  the structure of the benzene ring in a dream.  

  • The basic theme of Robert Louis Stevenson's novel  Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde came to him in a dream.  

  • While Carl Jung stated that all his  greatest ideas were conceived in dreams:   

  • In the end, the only events in my life worth  telling areinner experiences, amongst which I  

  • include my dreams and visions. These form  the prima materia of my scientific work.  

  • They were the fiery magma out of which the  stone that had to be worked was crystallized.”   

  • Carl Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections Dreams also have the capacity to break us  

  • free from a worldview that is too constricting and  from a day-to-day existence that is too mundane.  

  • The dreams that do this are  sometimes calledbig dreams”.  

  • Big dreams are the highly significant dreams  that are often remembered for a lifetime,  

  • and some even prove to be among the  most valuable experiences of life.  

  • These are the dreams that possess a religious  or spiritual significance, provide insights  

  • regarding the eternal questions of life, and even  transform how we view ourselves and the world.  

  • Regarding the nature of big dreams, the Swiss  psychologist Marie-Louise von Franz writes:   

  • Occasionally, one has a dream that is so remote  from one's life, so numinous (Jung's favorite  

  • word for intensely moving experience), and so  strange and uncanny that it does not seem to  

  • belong to the dreamer. It is like a visitation  from another world, which in truth it is,  

  • the other world being the subterranean one of  the unconscious. In ancient times, and even  

  • today among some people, such dreams are regarded  as messages from the gods or ancestral figures.  

  • These dreams are calledbigdreams by Jung.”  Marie-Louise von Franz, Dreams  

  • Jung recounted a particularly striking big dream  he experienced in 1944, just after suffering a  

  • heart attack that nearly killed him. Jung dreamt  that he was walking in the wilderness and stumbled  

  • upon an old chapel. When he entered the chapelhe saw a yogi seated in the lotus position,  

  • in deep meditation. Jung continues:  “When I looked at him more closely,  

  • I realized that he had my face. I stared in  profound fright, and awoke with the thought:  

  • 'Aha, so he is the one who is meditating  me. He has a dream and I am it.' I knew that  

  • when he awakened, I would no longer be.”  Carl Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections  

  • Big dreams are rare. Most people experience no  more than a handful of them. The dreams that  

  • most frequently populate our sleeping hours  are what Jung called compensatory dreams.  

  • The function of such dreams is  to compensate, or correct for,  

  • the one-sidedness, errors, deviations, or  other deficiencies of our conscious attitude.  

  • The more our conscious mind is ill-adapted  to reality, and the more we are evading the  

  • tasks of life, the more we will be visited  by dreams of a compensatory nature.     

  • When we pay attention to our dreamsself-regulating tendency in the soul comes  

  • into play which counterbalances the one-sidedness  of consciousness or completes it so that a kind of  

  • wholeness and a life's optimum is achieved.”  Marie-Louise von Franz, Dreams  

  • A few examples will help clarify  the nature of compensatory dreams.  

  • A man who is not fulfilling his duties as a father  will have dreams that his children hate him in  

  • order to bring him to the awareness that he is  avoiding one of the most important tasks of life.  

  • A woman who is too identified with her persona, or  social personality, will have dreams of committing  

  • crimes or engaging in immoral behavior so  that she sees the shadow, or unconscious  

  • dark side of her personality, that she needs to  integrate to develop a more complete character.  

  • Or a man who approaches middle ageyet remains dependent on his parents,  

  • will have dreams that portray him ashelpless child, or as being smothered to death,  

  • so that he becomes aware of the perilous situation  which his lack of independence is creating.     

  • “…the compensatory function of dreams  offers welcome assistance. [Compensatory  

  • dreams]…illuminate the patient's situation inway that can be exceedingly beneficial to health.  

  • They bring him memories, insights, experiencesawaken dormant qualities in the personality,  

  • and reveal the unconscious element in his  relationships. So it seldom happens that  

  • anyone who has taken the trouble to work  over his dreamsremains without enrichment  

  • and a broadening of his mental horizon.”  Carl Jung, Development of Personality  

  • But if dreams are significant messages sent from  the unconscious, why are they so difficult to  

  • decipher? Why doesn't the unconscious present  these messages to us in a form that is easier  

  • for our conscious mind to understand? While the  conscious mind is capable of rationality and  

  • logic, the unconscious is by nature irrational –  it does not operate by the laws of logic and it  

  • communicates primarily in symbols, not words.  “As a plant produces its flower, so the psyche  

  • creates its symbols. Every dream  is evidence of this process.”   

  • Carl Jung, The Symbolic Life The fact that the conscious and  

  • unconscious mind communicate in different  languages explains why dreams are enigmatic.  

  • Yet just because we do not fully understand the  meaning of the symbols presented to us in dreams,  

  • does not mean they do not influence us. For just  as fairy tales, myths, religious teachings and  

  • rituals transcend rational understanding yet have  influenced human beings for thousands of years,  

  • dreams can influence the course of our life  even if we do not fully understand them.   

  • Dreams pave the way for life, and they determine  you without you understanding their language.”  

  • Carl Jung, The Red Book Or as Jung explained elsewhere:   

  • It is often objected that the [dream] must be  ineffective unless the dream is understood. This  

  • is not so certain, however, for many things  can be effective without being understood.  

  • But there is no doubt that we can enhance its  effect considerably by understanding the dream,  

  • and this is often necessary because the voice  

  • of the unconscious so easily goes unheard.”  Carl Jung, Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche  

  • To understand dreams and thereby enhance their  effects, we should make a habit of recording our  

  • dreams first thing in the morning - for memories  of dreams quickly fade as we go about our day.  

  • When we come across a dream which we feel is  particularly significant, we can engage in  

  • what Jung called dream amplification. Amplifyingdream involves reflecting on the dream and weaving  

  • ideas, concepts, and associations around it. This  might include recalling memories that we think  

  • are related to the dream, allowing our intuition  to freely speculate on its meaning, or thinking  

  • about whether the dream is related to a task we  are not fulfilling or if it is compensating for  

  • a conscious attitude that is ill adapted to the  demands of life. In interpreting a big dream,  

  • amplification is aided by knowledge of mythology  and religion, for big dreams are often composed  

  • of the recurring symbols and motifs that are found  cross-culturally in religions and myths. We will  

  • know that we have stumbled upon a correct dream  interpretation when, in the words of Jung,   

  • “…the interpretation "clicks"; when there is  the feeling that it absolutely hits the fact,  

  • one knows one is on the right track.” Carl Jung, Seminar on Dreams  

  • Or as von Franz elaborates regarding  Jung's method of dream amplification:   

  • Jung did not interpret his dreams by immediately  forming a clear idea of what they meant; instead,  

  • he carried them around within himself, lived with  them inwardly, as it were, and asked questions of  

  • them. If he came across something in a book or  in an outer experience which reminded him of a  

  • dream image, he would add it to that image, so  to speak, so that a fabric of ideas developed,  

  • with a constantly increasing richness.”  Marie-Louise von Franz, Dreams  

  • If we pay more attention to our dreams and  devote more time to understanding them,  

  • we will possess an effective antidote against  many of the collective sicknesses of our age.  

  • For in Jung's analysis, much of what plagues  modern society, be it endemic levels of neurotic  

  • illnesses, mass-delusions, a widespread level  of cowardice amongst the general population,  

  • an extreme susceptibility to propaganda, orsheeplike obedience to corrupt authority figures,  

  • is the result of a dangerous disconnect  between the conscious mind and the unconscious.  

  • Modern man has lost touch with his instinctswith the basic facts of human nature, and with  

  • a commonsense wisdom that is millions of years  old. As it is dreams that help forge a connection  

  • to this ancient ground of our being, the more we  pay attention to our dreams, the more we will find  

  • the inner strength and intuitive wisdom needed to  thrive in a sick society. Or as Jung explains:   

  • Dreams are impartial, spontaneous products of  the unconscious psyche, outside the control of the  

  • will.”, explains Jung. “They are pure nature; they  show us the unvarnished, natural truth, and are  

  • therefore fitted, as nothing else is, to give us  back an attitude that accords with our basic human  

  • nature when our consciousness has strayed too far  from its foundations and runs into an impasse.”   

  • Carl Jung, Civilization in Transition

We also live in our dreams, we do not live  only by day. Sometimes we accomplish our  

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