Workbook VThis is a featured page

That's more-or-less it. The rest of this workbook is to help you work through the details of your dream.

So, look at your dream facts. You know your life; you know what's important to you, what your strongest emotions are about. You can pick up the tone of the dream, how you're getting along with the unconscious.

Each dream-fact is an emotional-symbolic heiroglypic which bears analogy to something you care about. It's a custom riddle, meant to be understood.

Start with the big ones, the most significant, the most prominent. Here are some questions to ask yourself:

What kind of thing is this?

What kind of situation is this?

At what time in my life is this kind of thing (or place, or person) from? (The dream message may be about your current feelings about that time.)

How do I think of this kind of person?

Why would this be important to me?

Keep in mind:

The people in your dream often represent different parts of you. Carl Jung realized that when a man dreamt of a woman, she often represented his feminine principle: she was his counterpart, the embodiment of those characteristics which would make him complete; likewise when a woman dreamt of a man.

But more generally, a dream-character familiar to you represents a mental process you're familiar with; a dream-character you like, something about yourself that you like. I've seen, for example, a girl represent her desire to eat as a strange fat woman.



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