ELEMENTS OF DREAM INTERPRETATION
In his book: Let Your Body Interpret your Dream, Eugene Gendlin has these pointers as a guide to dream interpretation:
Experience and experiment the dream. Focus. It is not about trying to intellectualize the dream, but to experience the dream and to feel it. Listen to the stirrings within, be open to change, be forward –moving.
Associations: Feeling - what did you feel in the dream, what in your life feels like it? Yesterday - what did you do yesterday? What preoccupied you?
Drama, place: What was the main place in the dream? Have you ever been in a place like that? How did it feel?
Story: Summarize the story-plot of the dream. What in your life is like that? Summarize the events of the dream in two or three steps.
Character: Who was the most important character. Were there unknown persons.Who do these people remind you of?
Working with characters: What part of you is that in the dream. What feelings arise when you consider a particular character. What adjectives can describe that person, be that person,imagine yourself to be a particular character. How would you feel and act? Can the dream continue? Vividly visualize the end of any important scene. Watch and wait for any changes in images and feelings.
Decoding techniques: Symbols - think of symbols; what was that thing, what is it used for? Did you dream of a house? What shapes and colors can you remember? Were there animals?
Body analogy : Was there any object in your dream that can be an analogy for the body?
Conterfactuals: What situation in the dream is specifically different from the actual situation? Why would the dream make these changes?
Developmental Dimensions: Childhood - what childhood memories are related to your dream. Personal growth - how are you trying to develop? Are you feeling stuck in a rut lately? Sexuality – could the dream be about your current feelings or actions towards your sexuality
Spirituality - what creative or spiritual potentials might the dream reflect?
It is believed that Gendlin’s use of the body association in dream work has some precedent in the Gestalt method. He took it a step further with the bodily sense and awareness.
As strange as our dreams are at times, dreams are real to us in the dream state. It is present and vivid, yet difficult to remember when we wake up. We are puzzled about having been in another world in our sleep. The intensity of the relationships and events which we actively take part in are forgotten.
Dream becomes a forgotten language.
About the Author:
Bonnie Moss writes about spirituality, tools available to all to walk the path. Visit her website, a metaphysical site that offers information on tarot, crystals, aura, angels, journalling and other topics. She is the Executive Secretary of Tarot Canada International, as well as a regular contributor of articles to the newletter Future Endeavours.
http://goldencupcafe.tripod.com
Article Source: http://newagearticles.com
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