The interpretation of dreams is the royal road to knowledge of the unconscious activities of the mind.
( Freud )
It has been objected on more than one occasion that we infact
have no knowledge of the dreams that we set out to interpret,
or,
speaking more correctly, that we have no guarantee that we
know
them as they actually occured.
In the first place, what we remember of a dream and what we
exercise our interpratative arts upon has been mutilated by
the
untrustworthiness of our memory, which seems incapable of
retaining a dream and may have lost precisely the most important
parts of its content. It quite frequently happens that when
we
seek to turn our attention to one of our dreams, we find ourselfs
regretting the fact that we can remember nothing but a single
fragment, which itself has much uncertainty.
Secondly, there is every reason to suspect that our memory
of
dreams is not only fragmentary but innacurate and falsified.
On
the one hand it may be doubted whether what we dreamt was
really
as hazy as our recollection of it, and on the other hand it
may
also be doubted whether in attempting to reproduce it we do
not
fill in what was never there, or what was forgotten.( Freud,
pg.512 )
Dream acounts are public verbalization and as public
performances, dream accounts resemble the anecdotes people
use to
give meaning to their experience, to entertain friends and
to
give or get a form of satisfaction.
In order to verbalize the memory of a dream there are at least
three steps one must take. First putting a recollected dream into
words requires labelling categories, and labelling categories
involves interpretation. Next since the dream is multimodal,
putting them into words requires the collapsing of visual
and
auditory imagery into words. Finally since dreams are
dramitizations narrarating a dream is what linguist call a
performance or demonstration and the rule, " What you
see is what
you get ", cannot apply, since only one party can see.
( Dentan,
PH.D,1988 )
In the case of dream accounts, it is the context which is
vital. After all, since meaning is context, they are by
definition meaningless. David Foulke, who wrote the book
Dreaming: A Cognitive Psychoanaylsis Analysis, correctly states
" that dreams don't mean anything ". But people
make meaning,
" as bees make honey compulsively and continuously, until
it
satisfies their dreams and their lives ". ( Dentan PH.D,
1988 )
In analysing the dreams of Freud's patients he would sometimes
use a certain test. If the first account of the patient's
dream
was too hard to follow he would ask them to repeat it. In
by
doing so the patient rarely uses the same words. But the parts
of
the dream which he descibes in different terms are by fact
the
weak spots in the dream. By Freud asking to repeat the dream
the
patient realizes that he will go to great lengths to interpret
it. Under the pressure of the resistance he hastily covers
the
weak spots in the dream's disguise by replacing any expression
that threaten to betray its meaning by other less revealing
ones.
( Freud, pg.515 )
It will no doubt surprise anyone to be told that dreams
are nothing other than fullfilments of wishes. According to
Aristotle's accurate definition," a dream is thinking
that
persists in the state of sleep." Since than our daytime
thinking
produces psychical acts, such as, judgement, denials,
expectations, intentions and so on. The theory of dreams being
wish fullfilment have been divided into two groups. Some dreams
appear openly as wish fullfilment, and others in which the
wish
fullfilment was unrecognizable and often diguised.
The next question is where the wishes that come true in dreams
originate? It is the contrast between the consciously percieved
life of daytime and a psychical activity which has remained
unconscios and only becomes aware at night. There is a
distinguishing origin for such a wish. 1) It may have been
aroused during the day and for external reasons may not have
been
satisified. Therefore it is left over for the night. 2) It
may
have arisen during the day but been repudiated, in that case
what
is left over is a wish that has not been dealt with but has
been
suppressed. 3) It may have no connection with daytime life
and be
one of those wishes which only emerges from the suppressed
part
of the mind and becomes active at night. 4) It may be a current
wishful impulse that only arise during the night such as sexual
needs or those stimulated by thirst. The place of origin of
a
dream-wish probably has no influence on its capacity for
instigating dreams. ( Freud, pg. 550-551 )
Freud states that a child's dreams prove beyond a doubt that
a
wish that has not been dealt with during the day can act as
a
dream-instigator. But it must not be forgotten that it is
a
child's wish. ( Stanely R. Palombo, M.D., 1986 )
Freud thinks it is highly doubtful that in the case of an
adult a wish that has not been fullfiled during the day would
be
strong enough to produce a dream. There may be people who
retain
an infantile type of mental process longer than others. But
in
general Freud feels a wish left over unfullfiled from the
previous day is insufficient to produce a dream in the case
of an
adult. He admits that a wishful impulse originating in the
conscious will contribute to the instigating of a dream ,
but it
will probably not do more than that.
My supposition is that a conscious wish can only become a
dream-instigator if it succeeds in awakening an unconscious wish
with the same tenor and in obtaining reinforcement from it . (
Freud,pg. 552-553 )
Freud explains his theory in an analogy:
A daytime thought may very well play the part of the entrepreneur
for a dream, but the entrepreneur, who, as people say, has the
idea and the initiative to carry it out, can do nothing without
capital. He needs a capitilist who can afford the outlay for the
dream, and the capitilist who provides the psychical outlay for
the dream is invariably and indisputably, whatever may be the
thoughts of he previous day, a wish from the unconscious.( Freud
pg.)
Sometimes the capitilist is himself the entrepreneur, and
indeed in the case of the dreams, an unconscious wish is stirred
up by daytime activity and proceeds to construct a dream.
( Palombo, M.D, 1986 )
The view that dreams carry on the occupations and interests
of waking life has been confirmed by the discovery of the
concealed dream-thoughts. These are only concerned with what
seems important to us and interests us greatly. Dreams are
never
occupied with minor details. But the contrary view has also
been
accepted, that dreams pick up things left over from the previous
day. Thus it was concluded that two fundamentally different
kinds
of psychical processes are concerned in the formation of dreams.
One of these produces perfectly rational thoughts, of no less
than normal thinking, while the other treats these thoughts
in a
manner which is bewildering and irrational.
Referring to Freud's quote stated in the beginning, by
analyzing dreams one can take a step forward in our understanding
of the composition of that most mysterious of all instruments.
Only a small step forward will enable us to proceed further
with
its analysis. ( Freud, pg. 589 & 608 )
The unconscious is the true psychical reality, in its
innermost nature it is as much unknown to us as the reality
of
the external world, and it is as incompletely presented as
is the
communications of our sense organ.
There is of course no question that dreams give us knowledge
for the future. But it would be truer to say instead that
they
give us knowledge of the past. For dreams are derived from
the
past in every sense. Nevertheless the ancient belief that
dreams
foretell the future is not false. ( Freud, pg. 662 ) By picturing
our wishes as fulfilled, dreams are after all leading us into
the
future. But the future, which the dreamer pictures as the
present, has been molded by his indestructible wish into a
perfect likeness of the past. ( Palombo, M.D, 1986 )
Although there has been some descriptive study of the
incidence and character of feeling in REM dreaming, there
has
been no investigation of the appropriateness of dream feelings
to
accompany dream imagery. It has been suggested that, the
generation of affect in dreaming may not be as reliable as
the
generation of other forms of dream imagery. Dream affect
generally seems to be consistent with the larger narrative
context of the dreams. ( David Foulkes & Brenda Sullivan,
1988 )
Research by Cohen and Wolfe has shown that a simple
distraction in the morning had a strong negative effect on
dream
recall. The study concerned a variable relatively neglected
in
dream research, the level of interest the subjects have about
their dreams. One finding was that interest in dreams appeared
to
vary with sex : woman reported that they more frequently
speculated their dreams and discussed them with other people
than
did men. These differences could reflect a greater tendency
for
woman to pay more attention to their emotional life and inner
self. ( Paul R. Robbins & Roland H. Tanck, 1988 )
Exhibitionism is a psychosexual disorder which, according
to
DSM-III has the following diagnostic criteria :
Repetitive acts of exposing the genitals to an unsuspecting
stranger for the purpose of achieving sexual excitement, with
no attempt at further sexual activity with the stranger. ( pg.
272 )
The essential conflict in exhibitionism is castration
anxiety. Today more attention is paid to the patient's manifest
content. Manifest dream content can sometimes give a clear
and
condensed presentation of the essential conflict in
exhibitionism, i.e., castration anxiety. ( Ivan Buzov, 1988
)
One assumes naturally that the past events incorporated in
his patient's dream imagery may be defensive substitutions
for
other more objectionable events of the past. Through its relation
to the dream, the screen memory, like the day residue, provides
access to the associative structures of memory in which are
embedded the wishes and events whose repression lies at the
core
of the neurotic process. ( Palombo M.D, 1986 )
Dreams do not consist solely of illusions, If for instance,
one is afraid of robbers in a dream, the robbers, it is true,
are imaginary- but fear is real .( Freud, pg. 74 )
Affects in dreams cannot be judged in the same way as the
remainder of their content, and we are faced by the problem
of
what part of the psychical processes occurring in dreams is
to be
regarded as real. That is to say, as a claim to be classed
among
the psychical processes of waking life. ( Freud, pg. 74 )
The theory of the hidden meaning of dreams might have come
to
a conclusion merely by following linguistic usage. It is true
that common language sometimes speaks of dreams with contempt.
But, on the whole, ordinary usage treats dreams above all
as the
" blessed fullfilers of wishes ". If ever we find
our
expectations surpassed by the event, we exclaim , " I
should
never have imagined such a thing even in my wildest dreams
"!
( Freud pg. 132-133 )
Bibliography
Buzav, Ivan, " Exhibitionism : The Essential Psychical Conflict in Manifest Dream Content," The American Journal of Psychoanalysis, Sum. 1988, Vol.48(2) pp. 180-183.
Dentan, Robert Knox, " Butterflies and Bug Hunters : Reality and Dreams, Dreams and Reality," Psychiatric Journal at the University of Ottawah, Jun. 1988, Vol.13(2) pp. 51-59.
Foulkes, David and Sullivan, Brenda, " Appropriateness of Dream
Feelings to Dreamed Situations," Cognition an Emotion, Mar. 1988, Vol.2(1) pp. 29-39.
Freud, Sigmund, " The Interpretation of Dreams, " Basic Books A Division of Harper Publishers, year unknown.
Palombo, Stanley R. M.D, " Day Residue and Screen Memory in Freud's Dream of the Botanical Monograph," Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, May, 1986, Vol.36(4) pp. 881-903.
Robbins, Paul R. and Tanck, H. Roland, " Interest in
Dreams and Dream Recall," Perceptual and Motor Skills,Feb.
, 1988, Vol.66 (1) pp. 291-294.