Dream Psychology eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 183 pages of information about Dream Psychology.
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Dream Psychology eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 183 pages of information about Dream Psychology.

There are dreams about landscapes and localities in which emphasis is always laid upon the assurance:  “I have been there before.”  In this case the locality is always the genital organ of the mother; it can indeed be asserted with such certainty of no other locality that one “has been there before.”

A large number of dreams, often full of fear, which are concerned with passing through narrow spaces or with staying, in the water, are based upon fancies about the embryonic life, about the sojourn in the mother’s womb, and about the act of birth.  The following is the dream of a young man who in his fancy has already while in embryo taken advantage of his opportunity to spy upon an act of coition between his parents.

"He is in a deep shaft, in which there is a window, as in the Semmering Tunnel.  At first he sees an empty landscape through this window, and then he composes a picture into it, which is immediately at hand and which fills out the empty space.  The picture represents a field which is being thoroughly harrowed by an implement, and the delightful air, the accompanying idea of hard work, and the bluish-black clods of earth make a pleasant impression.  He then goes on and sees a primary school opened ... and he is surprised that so much attention is devoted in it to the sexual feelings of the child, which makes him think of me."

Here is a pretty water-dream of a female patient, which was turned to extraordinary account in the course of treatment.

At her summer resort at the ...  Lake, she hurls herself into the dark water at a place where the pale moon is reflected in the water.

Dreams of this sort are parturition dreams; their interpretation is accomplished by reversing the fact reported in the manifest dream content; thus, instead of “throwing one’s self into the water,” read “coming out of the water,” that is, “being born.”  The place from which one is born is recognized if one thinks of the bad sense of the French “la lune.”  The pale moon thus becomes the white “bottom” (Popo), which the child soon recognizes as the place from which it came.  Now what can be the meaning of the patient’s wishing to be born at her summer resort?  I asked the dreamer this, and she answered without hesitation:  “Hasn’t the treatment made me as though I were born again?” Thus the dream becomes an invitation to continue the cure at this summer resort, that is, to visit her there; perhaps it also contains a very bashful allusion to the wish to become a mother herself.[1]

Another dream of parturition, with its interpretation, I take from the work of E. Jones. "She stood at the seashore watching a small boy, who seemed to be hers, wading into the water.  This he did till the water covered him, and she could only see his head bobbing up and down near the surface.  The scene then changed to the crowded hall of a hotel.  Her husband left her, and she ‘entered into conversation with’ a stranger." The second

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Dream Psychology from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.