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Working With Dreams: Initiation into the Soul’s Speaking About Itself PDF

235 Pages·2020·16.275 MB·English
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Working With Dreams This book is about the practice of working with dreams. Rather than presenting a general theory about dreams, it focuses on the dream as phenomenon and raises the question how we must look at dreams if our approach is supposed to be a truly psychological one. So far most essays on, and the practice of, Jungian dream interpretation have paradoxically centered around the person of the dreamer and not around the dream itself. Dreams were used as a means to understand the analysand and what is going on in him or her. Jung’s fundamental shift from his earlier person- based psychology and pre- alchemy stance to his mature soul-b ased psychology, informed by the hermetic logic of alchemy, has not been followed, which was already noted by Jung himself: “My later and more important work (as it seems to me) is still left untouched in its primordial obscurity.” The present study is based decidedly on the stance of mature Jung and his very different views about dreams. His most crucial insights in this regard include that in dreams the soul speaks about itself (not about the dreamer), that the dream is its own interpretation and therefore needs to be circumambulated (rather than translated into the language of psychology and everyday life), and that dream images have everything they need within themselves (rather than needing associations from the dreamerʼs daily life). This book discusses in detail what all this means in practice and what it demands of the psychologist. A decisive transposition away from ordinary consciousness, a “crossing to the other side of the river,” is required of the consciousness that wants to approach dreams psychologically. Numerous aspects of dreams and special questions that come up in working with dreams are discussed. At the end of this book our working with dreams is situated in the wider question of the psychological task in general by exploring Jungʼs insistence that psych- ology has to transcend the “consulting room,” Hillman’s move “From mirror to window” and, in Plato’s parable, the revolutionary move out of, and return to, “the cave.” While limited to the topic of dreams this book may also serve as an indirect introduction to an understanding of psychology as a “psychology with soul” (Jung) or as the discipline of interiority. Wolfgang Giegerich is a Jungian analyst, now living in Berlin, and the author of numerous books, among them What is Soul? and Neurosis: The Logic of a Metaphysical Illness. His most recent works are The Historical Emergence of the I and What Are the Factors That Heal? Working With Dreams Initiation into the Soul’s Speaking About Itself Wolfgang Giegerich First published 2021 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN and by Routledge 52 Vanderbilt Avenue, New York, NY 10017 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2021 Wolfgang Giegerich The right of Wolfgang Giegerich to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. British Library Cataloguing- in- Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data A catalog record has been requested for this book ISBN: 978-0-367-52510-1 (hbk) ISBN: 978-0-367-52513-2 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-003-05824-3 (ebk) Typeset in Times by Newgen Publishing, UK Contents Sources and abbreviations viii Introduction 1 I What is a dream? 7 The dream as a conscious phenomenon: The dream as text 7 Ontological rupture 12 The dream as interpretation 17 “Ontology” of the dream- internal world 21 1. The seeing of a dream 22 2. Mutability and malleability 23 3. Shadowiness 26 4. Lacunality 28 5. “Just in time” apparition, not substantial being 29 6. Concepts cloaked in sensible shapes 31 II Why dreams? 34 The significance of dreams in therapy 34 1. The soul’s speaking 34 2. “I do not know the answer either” 38 3. Dreams versus sandplay and painting 41 4. Listening to patients’ stories as if they were dreams? 43 When patients don’t dream 45 III The proper attitude towards the dream 51 Crossing the river: The standpoint of soul 51 The three stances to “crossing the river” and the three forms of otherness 55 Psychotherapy— the making of psychology 57 The dream as corpse 66 vi Contents Not knowing as methodological starting point 73 The necessity of my going under 76 IV The dream interpreter 81 Whom does the therapist address when working on dreams with a patient? 81 Who in the therapist interprets the dream? 85 My interpretation 91 The Now of dream interpretation 94 V Interpreting the actual text of dreams 98 “Object level,” “subject level” and the objective psyche 98 Trap: Dream interpretation as the dream’s translation into the terms of one’s psychological theory 100 Getting started: Beginning with the subject. Circumambulating the dream 103 Turning to the “object”: The dream as subject and self 109 Inner infinity and the wildness of the living image 115 Actually working with dreams 119 Discerning the proper horizon of and context for individual dream elements 122 Narcissistic blow: “It has a say now, not you!” Or: The patient as obstacle 126 The dream- I 132 The dream- I and the other 137 1. Necessary distinctions and decisions 137 2. The antagonists 141 3. The soul’s via negativa 142 4. How to view the ego defenses in dreams 143 5. Opposition as obvious conflict between Two and the dialectic of successful flight 146 6. Opposition as the dream- I’s malgré lui doing the other’s bidding 149 7. Opposition as antithetical meaning of one and the same 150 8. Opposition as impugning the known truth 152 Psychic and biological processes in dreams 155 Semantic content versus syntactic structure 158 VI By way of one example: A dream and its psychological interpretation 166 Contents vii VII The dream and the patient 176 The therapy situation as impairment of dream interpretation 176 Absolute- negative interiorization of the patient into the dream 179 “So the dream shows me that. And now?” 180 Terrible dream images, unbearable for the patient? 182 VIII Miscellaneous questions 185 The types and topics of dreams 185 Does the dream have a message for us? 187 Archetypal dream motifs. Numinous, religious dreams? 189 Whose dream is it? 195 “Big” dreams 197 The dream series 201 Excursus: Can one learn to interpret dreams? 203 IX The ulterior purpose of and assignment for dream interpretation: From Natura to Ars 206 X Beyond working with dreams 214 Pushing off to the dimension of the soul’s real life 214 Index 220 newgenprepdf Sources and abbreviations For frequently cited sources, the following abbreviations have been used: CW: Jung, C. G., Collected Works. 20 vols. Ed. Herbert Read, Michael Fordham, Gerhard Adler, and William McGuire. Trans. R. F. C. Hull. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1957– 1979. Cited by volume and, unless otherwise noted, by paragraph number. GW: Jung, C. G., Gesammelte Werke, 20 vols., various editors, Olten and Freiburg im Breisgau: Walter- Verlag, 1971– 1983. Cited by volume and, unless otherwise noted, by paragraph number. Letters: Jung, C. G., Letters. 2 vols. Ed. Gerhard Adler. Bollingen Series XCV: 2. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1975. MDR: Jung, C. G., Memories, Dreams, Reflections. Rev. ed., Ed. Aniela Jaffé. Trans. Richard and Clara Winston. New York: Vintage Books, 1989. Cited by page number. Erinn.: Erinnerungen, Träume, Gedanken von C.G. Jung, ed. by Aniela Jaffé, Zürich and Stuttgart (Rascher) 1967. CEP: Giegerich, W., Collected English Papers, 6 vols. New Orleans, LA (Spring Journal Books), 2006 ff., now London and New York (Routledge) 2020. Transl. modif.: Appearing at the end of a citation, this indicates that I modified the par- ticular quotation from the Collected Works in order to bring the English translation a bit closer to the wording and spirit of Jung’s original German text. Introduction It is clear from the title of this book, Working with Dreams, that its focus is on the practical aspects of dream interpretation. It is, first of all, addressed to analysts who in their psychotherapeutic sessions with patients or analysands are confronted with their dreams and have to work with them. Writing from within the Jungian tradition of psychology, I will not offer a general theory of dreams, what they are, and why and how they come about. I will not try to explain them, be it from the “psychic apparatus,” from a person’s biography or daily- life experience, from the brain and the newest neurophysiological findings, not from archetypes, let alone as the voice of God or angels. I am only concerned with the phenomenon “dream” itself as it actually appears in human experience (especially in the context of psy- chotherapeutic processes) and our approach to it. As I pointed out, the focus of Working with dreams is decidedly on practical aspects. But this immediately raises the question of what “practical” means in psychology. Other than science and technology, psychology cannot become practical in the sense of being solely intent upon the object, which means in our case that it cannot apply itself directly to dreams. It is constitutive for psych- ology that it must not forget itself, the psychologically thinking subjective mind, the consciousness that is doing the thinking. For this reason this book, despite being about the practice of dream interpretation, is not conceived as a practical help for the practitioner, a kind of “how- to” book of dream interpretation and is therefore not either full of case reports with dream examples or individual dream symbols, whose meaning is given. It cannot serve as a reference book on dream images. Instead, the main purpose of this book, as of any psychological study, is the training of the reader’s psychological mind, the psychological preparation of the psychologist’s, of our own, thinking, in this case our thinking about dreams. The central questions to be answered are: how do we have to view and approach dreams if our access to dreams is supposed to be truly psychological? This book is, one might say, one long meditation about the general principles of psycho- logical dream interpretation. The question of when our working with dreams is truly psychological and when not is crucial. If this book is concerned with the phenomenon “dream” and does not see dreams against the backdrop of a given overall (be it scientific or

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