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Dream Symbol Conflict

A Wisdom Archive on Dream Symbol Conflict

Dream Symbol Conflict

A selection of articles related to Dream Symbol Conflict

We recommend this article: Dream Symbol Conflict - 1, and also this: Dream Symbol Conflict - 2.
Dream Symbol Conflict

ARTICLES RELATED TO Dream Symbol Conflict

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Punishment

Punishment - Symbolizes guilt feelings due to conflict in your life, inner or outward. If you are punishing someone else in the dream, parent, partner or sibling, it may represent resentment toward that person; a part of yourself that has been projected onto that person. Being punished by a policeman or judge may symbolize an over-dominant super-ego (conscience).

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Punishment, Dream Dictionary Punishment, Meaning of dreams about Punishment, Dream Interpretation Punishment, Dream Analysis Punishment, Dreaming of Punishment

 

Punishment, Guilt feelings, Guilt, Punishing, Punishing someone else, Parent, Partner, Sibling, Being punished by a policeman, Over-dominant super-ego, Over-dominant, Super-ego, Being punished by a judge, Judge, Policeman, Police, Conscience

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Buddha

Buddha

The Buddha figure symbolizes much the same as does the figure of Jesus. Historically, their lives parallel each other.. Therefore, the symbol of Jesus in a dream often has the same meaning as that of the Buddha.

 

A Buddha figure will probably signify either your true self or the wisdom that lies in the unconscious and beyond reach until you resolve to get better acquainted with your psyche, or the healing required for your conflict ridden psyche.

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Buddha, Dream Dictionary Buddha, Meaning of dreams about Buddha, Dream Interpretation Buddha, Dream Analysis Buddha, Dreaming of Buddha

 

Buddha, Religious symbols, Jesus, Christ, Christian, Buddhism, Wisdom, True self, Healing, Wisdom, Insight, Compassion, Discipline, Spiritual dreams, Inner spirituality

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Police

Police Seeing the police in your dream indicates some failure to perform or to honor obligations and commitments. The police also symbolize structure, rules, and control. A more direct interpretation of seeing the police in your dream forewarns that you should avoid reckless behavior. Dreaming that you are arrested by the police, suggests that you feel sexually or emotionally restrained because of guilt. Dreaming that you are a police officer, represents your own sense of morality and conscience. The dream may serve to guide you down a straight path. If you have recurring dreams that you are a police officer, then it may mean that your past actions have left you feeling guilty. Consider your behavior/actions as the cop. Dreaming that you are having difficulties contacting the police, suggests that you have yet to acknowledge your own authoritativeness in a situation. You need to take control and be in command of the direction of your life. Dreaming that you are pulled over by the police, suggests that you need to slow down and take things down a notch. Seeing or dreaming that you are a police officer chasing a felon indicates that your naughty and more devious side is in conflict with your moral standards.

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Police, Dream Dictionary Police, Meaning of dreams about Police, Dream Interpretation Police, Dream Analysis Police, Dreaming of Police

 

Police, Obligations, Commitments, Structure, Rules, Control, Avoid reckless behavior, Reckless behavior, Warning, Difficulties contacting the police, Straight path, Recurring dreams, Police officer, Guilty, Past actions, Authoritativeness, Take control, Be in command, Pulled over by the police, Slow down, You are a police officer chasing a felon, Moral standards, Devious

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - War

War

Dreaming of a war means disorder and chaos in your personal affairs. You also be experiencing some internal conflict or emotional struggle. You are feeling torn between aspects of yourself. Perhaps the dream may indicate that you are being overly aggressive or you are not being assertive enough.

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol War, Dream Dictionary War, Meaning of dreams about War, Dream Interpretation War, Dream Analysis War, Dreaming of War

 

War, Army, Military, Soldier, Battle, Battlefield, Weapon, Weapons, Soldiers

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Sigmund Freud

Sigmund Freud

Freud theorized that there were two types of dream content manifest and latent.

 

Manifest (superficial) content, he believed, had no significance because it was a mask for underlying (unconscious) issues of the dream. He believed the latent content contained unconscious wishes or fantasies. He also postulated that dreams originated either from the id or the ego. If it originated from the ego-it satisfied an instinct, according to Freud. If it originated from the id, it solved a conflict.

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Sigmund Freud, Dream Dictionary Sigmund Freud, Meaning of dreams about Sigmund Freud, Dream Interpretation Sigmund Freud, Dream Analysis Sigmund Freud, Dreaming of Sigmund Freud

 

Sigmund Freud, Freud, Freudian, Manifest dream content, Latent dream content, Dream content, Unconscious, Superficial, Superficial content, Latent content, Manifest content, Ego, Id

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dream Interpretations Dictionary - Vagabond, tramp

 

Dream Interpretation Vagabond, tramp

The vagabond is a symbol of unstructured life and weak morals that will cause conflicts. Dreaming about a vagabond or being one indicates that you are travelling in "loose" company and prefer to live unstructured life with little work and lots of fun. Having a vagabond as a friend: your moral standards are weak, you are in bad company.

 

Source: Dream-Land, http://www.dream-land.info

 

(See also: Dream Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Vagabond, tramp, Meaning of Dreams about Vagabond, tramp, Dream Interpretation Vagabond, tramp)

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Cliff

Cliff

To be at the edge of a cliff is to be where earth meets both sea and sky. Sky is a symbol of consciousness/masculinity; sea is the unconscious/femininity.

 

(1) What is symbolized may be a critical point in your life, a time for decision.

 

(2) The decision may be one concerning the polarity of male and female, the masculine and feminine components of your psyche. If you are a woman, it may be that a decision has to be made concerning the conflicting worlds of career and domesticity. (Sky would then symbolize masculine assertiveness and active participation in the world; sea, feminine attributes such as motherhood and nurturing.)

 

(3) The cliff edge may be the "end of the road", signifying that you have come as far as you can in a particular endeavor of lifestyle, and that something radically new is called for. Perhaps this new approach to living means entering into a close relationship with Nature (represented by the sea or sky) or bringing together the conscious and unconscious parts of your psyche.

 

It may be a question of whether you can find within yourself enough strength and faith to step out into the unknown future; or throw yourself off the cliff - that is, withdraw from life's challenge.

 

(4) The horizon may be the significant thing in the dream. This may mean you are being challenged to take a bigger view of things, to see life and/or yourself on a grander scale, in order to find a new and more satisfying motivation for your life.

 

Reference: Eric Ackroyd

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Cliff, Dream Dictionary Cliff, Meaning of dreams about Cliff, Dream Interpretation Cliff, Dream Analysis Cliff, Dreaming of Cliff

 

Cliff, Rock, Mountain, Edge of a cliff, Consciousness, Masculinity, Unconscious, Femininity, Sky, Cliff edge, Horizon, End of the road

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Guilt

Guilt

Expressions of guilt are common in dreams. The cause of the guilt-feelings may be indicated in the dream or a later one.

 

(1) Normal guilt-feelings are the psyche's way of telling us we are not on the right road to personal happiness.

 

(2) Neurotic guilt-feelings are irrational. For instance, if the father of a five-year-old boy dies, the boy may feel responsible for his death; and the feelings of guilt and a desire to punish himself may linger on into adulthood, not at the conscious level but in the unconscious.

 

(3) Guilt-feelings may arise out of conflict between inner impulses and conventional - social or religious - morality. Here we have two kinds of duty: duty to society and duty to ourselves, which is a duty to fulfil our "destiny" - that is, the potential that is contained in the basic structure of our individual psyche.

 

Reference: Eric Ackroyd

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Guilt, Dream Dictionary Guilt, Meaning of dreams about Guilt, Dream Interpretation Guilt, Dream Analysis Guilt, Dreaming of Guilt

 

Guilt, Guilt, Personal happiness, Happiness, Neurotic guilt-feelings, Responsible for death, Desire, Adulthood, Childhood, Morality, Social morality, Religious morality, Destiny

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dream Interpretations Dictionary - Axe, axes

 

Dream Interpretation Axe, axes

The axe in a dream may appear as a weapon or a tool. But at all times, it is a symbol of battle or fight. In dreams it may symbolize quarrels with people in your environment, and if you are the one who is using the axe, your role in this arguments is the major one. If you are the wood: the separation from your love partner is about to happen. Picking up an axe is a sign of bad luck, terror and conflict. An axe-dream often means that your authority is only a show, and is not based on the strength of your character. If you see someone else working with an axe, it means that you are suffering, because of the inconsiderate actions of others.

 

Source: Dream-Land, http://www.dream-land.info

 

(See also: Dream Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Axe, axes, Meaning of Dreams about Axe, axes, Dream Interpretation Axe, axes)

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Death

Death/Dying

Also See Dream Motifs-Death

 

Death or dying in a dream seldom refers to an actual death. Death refers to changes in one's life, or attitudes toward certain persons, or fears of dying. Here are some possibilities of what death, dying or a dead person may represent in a dream. Death is a motif and may be the central motif of the dream.

 

Basic meaning: The old is dying; make way for new beginnings.

 

(1) The dead person may be you, even though its image within the dream takes on characteristics of other persons or other things. The message may be that your old self needs to be left behind. This may mean you must stop carrying around with you the crippling burden of your past (irrational guilt-feelings or other negative self programming); and, instead, you must open yourself to what the present moment is offering. Alternatively, the "old self" may be old attachments, habits, ambitions, values, goals; in which case the dream is telling you that the only way forward for you lies through giving these up and looking deeper within yourself for better values, etc. (where better means more in tune with your real self).

 

(2) What is being expressed in the dream may be your own anxiety about dying. Death is inevitable, and facing up to that fact may bring great rewards: self-acceptance; new values; a broadening of one's personality, compensating for past omissions or lopsidedness and utilizing hitherto neglected personal resources. This would be especially applicable if you are in the second half of life.

 

(3) If the dead person in the dream is actually a living person - and especially if that person is your partner or parent or sibling - the dream may be expressing unconscious resentment towards that person, or a desire to be independent of that person. Feelings toward someone close are often ambivalent (conflicting): love or respect mixed with fear or hatred or resentment or jealousy.

 

(4) Does the dream contain a dead person you actually knew? If so, the dream may mean you should take notice of what he or she said or did, or of what happened to him or her. The dead person is "coming back", not to haunt you but to advise and help you (the dead person actually represents parts of your unconscious self that is wiser than your waking ego).

 

There's really nothing 'spooky" about meeting dead people in dreams. Such encounters may help you fulfill a long-desired deep relationship, or to put something right. For example, you may learn to forgive the person and as a consequence get peace and healing for yourself.

 

(5) If the gender of the dead person is stressed, the meaning may be that your masculinity/femininity or your anima/animus needs reviving.

 

(6) A dead animal in a dream almost certainly refers to some part of you - an instinctive force, perhaps - and the dream will be telling you either that this part of you (e.g. guilt-feelings or inferiority complex) ought to die, because its effects are wholly negative; or that it is a valuable but repressed part of yourself that you must now bring to life, to rectify an imbalance in your personality.

 

Reference: Eric Ackroyd

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Death, Dream Dictionary Death, Meaning of dreams about Death, Dream Interpretation Death, Dream Analysis Death, Dreaming of Death

 

Death, Dying, Ded, Fears of dying, Fear, Fears, Dream motif, Dead person, Message, Old self, Guilt-feelings, Guilt, Guilty, Negative self programming, Attachments, Habits, Ambitions, Values, Goals, Attachment, Habit, Ambition, Value, Goal, Real self, Anxiety about dying, Great rewards, Self-acceptance, New values, Living person, Partner, Parent, Sibling, Resentment, Independent, Independency, Haunt, Haunting, Advise, Help, Dead people, Relationship, Forgive, Forgiveness, Peace, Healing, Masculinity, Femininity, Anima animus, Anima, Animus, Dead animal, Animal, Animals, Instinctive force, Inferiority complex, Inferiority, Imbalance, Repressed part of yourself, Imbalance in personality

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dream Interpretations Dictionary - Hands

 

Dream Interpretation Hands

The hand is a symbol of "action", control, activity and power. If you are looking at your hands in the dream, make sure your dealings are honest. Clean hands symbolize honest friends. If you wriggle your hands, it reflects your worries and suffers caused by conflicts and demands of others. Burning your hands denotes that people envy you, or you got burnt recently. If you hold your hands in front of your eyes: you need to be more tolerant and forgive someone for mistake. A missing or crippled arm indicates a difficulty in taking actions. If you look at your dirty hands, it is a warning to beware of false friends and dishonest people.

 

Source: Dream-Land, http://www.dream-land.info

 

(See also: Dream Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Hands, Meaning of Dreams about Hands, Dream Interpretation Hands)

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dream Interpretations Dictionary - Arrow

 

Dream Interpretation Arrow

Any weapon type can be considered as a phallic symbol. Arrows stand for the rays of life and it is also a phallic symbol. If you see an arrow in your dream, it means that current arguments and conflicts are partially your fault. If you are shooting an arrow, be aware that you are going to be the target, and because of your behaviour you may lose a close friend. If you got hit by an arrow: there is a breakdown or disaster on the horizon. An arrow pointed in a certain direction could be a pointer where you need to go in your professional or personal life.

 

Source: Dream-Land, http://www.dream-land.info

 

(See also: Dream Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Arrow, Meaning of Dreams about Arrow, Dream Interpretation Arrow)

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Numbers

Numbers Dream Symbols

 

One Dream Symbols:

Unity, oneness (conscious and unconscious integrated).

 

Two Dream Symbols:

The number two may be a symbol for conflict: for example, between two parts of yourself (which may be represented in the dream by yourself Dream Symbols:

the dream ego and an adversary, or by hostile brothers, sisters, twins).

(2) Two may also symbolize a union or partnership: for example, of conscious and unconscious or masculine and feminine elements in the psyche. Such union or partnership is always fruitful and creative. (In Indian philosophy one is an arid number; two male and female can create. A Hindu god is always represented as two-in-one, a union of male and female).

 

Three Dream Symbols:

The number three may symbolize completeness and fulfillment; or anything that may contribute to your personal fulfillment for example, the resolving of conflict between two opposing psychic forces.

(2) Jung says three may signify that something is nearly but not quite complete; or that what is lacking in you can be supplied only by some part of your unconscious elf that you find too frightening to acknowledge and use (Even God, he says, is not quite complete without the Devil).

 

Four Dream Symbols:

Wholeness; the completely integrated human psyche.

 

Five Dream Symbols:

Five is a number for change (being the next number after four, five is starting over again).

 

Six Dream Symbols:

May be number for completeness. Six is a multiple of three (same as three). (2) May symbolize conflict.

 

Seven Dream Symbols:

is also a number for completeness.

(2) The number seven may also signal time for change as in the 'seven year itch".

(3) Sixes and sevens, of course may symbolize conflict.

 

Eight Dream Symbols:

has the same significance as four, of which it is a multiple: wholeness; the completely integrated human psyche.

(2) It also symbolizes infinity or eternity; or the endless cycle of death and rebirth.

 

Nine Dream Symbols:

The number nine is a symbol of completeness, may represent personal fulfillment (in Greek mythology the number nine symbolizes the Goddess, the highest personal fulfillment of the feminine psyche).

 

Ten Dream Symbols:

one and zero; the same as one.{see 432 for more info on the number nine}

 

All other numbers are either a multiple of numbers already listed, therefore, having the same meaning, or, can be added together to get a number already listed (example, 117 = nine). Look at the personal significance of any number in a dream for its relationship.

 

The story of the crow determining the number of people entering and leaving a barn is a possible link to the origin of numbers within the psyche of all of Nature's life. The crow (which the farmer wanted to get rid of and which had taken up residence in his barn) could recognize the number of people entering and leaving the barn and knew when all were gone and could re-enter the barn safely. He could do this up to the number of four people. After that, the fifth and beyond, he saw as "many" and when five went into the barn and only four left, he could not determine beyond the number four, thus the fifth person did him in.

 

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Numbers, Dream Dictionary Numbers, Meaning of dreams about Numbers, Dream Interpretation Numbers, Dream Analysis Numbers, Dreaming of Numbers

 

Numbers, Number, Unity, Oneness, One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six, Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, One - number, Two - number, Three - number, Four - number, Five - number, Six - number, Seven - number, Eight - number, Nine - number, Ten - number, Jung, Jungian

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dream Interpretation Dictionary - Twins

 

Twins

If your dream entails giving birth to twins, or if you are dreaming about baby twins, please see " birth ". Twins in astrology represent opposites, and we may use this symbolism to explain our dream. The twins could suggest a duality in thoughts, ideas, feelings, or states of consciousness. The details of the dream will give you a clue to whether or not these varying aspects are in harmony or in conflict with each other. The twins could also represent the balance that is extremely important to our emotional and psychological health. Old dream interpretation books say that dreaming about adult twins foretells of "double trouble followed by double joy."

 

Source: Dream Lover Incorporated, http://www.dreamloverinc.com

 

(See also: Dream Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Twins, Meaning of Dreams about Twins, Dream Interpretation Twins)

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Childhood Recollections

Childhood Recollections

 

{1} Many dreams repeat or allude to childhhood experiences and impressions. Nearly all such dreams have a therapeutic purpose, giving us a clearer view of ourselves, perhaps showing us some attitude or pattern of behaviour that has been with us since childhood, and perhaps, even showing us the original cause of it.

Unfulfilled instinctual desires provide the energy for many of our dreams, and the fact that an instinctive desire remains unfulfilled may be connected with the traumatic experience in childhood. That experience has probably been repressed because it was traumatic - causing guilt, anxiety, fear of punishment. See Repression Your dreams may, therefore, be helping you to uncover the source of these blockages which inhibit the free flow of the natural forces within you.

 

{2} Recurring dreams may represent soem psychic disturbance or problem that orginated in chilhood. Here are some examples:

Dream of being naked may sometimes represent recollections of, and perhaps longing for, the paradise of childhood when one walked around unclothed without embarrassment. {Sometimes these dreams, as Freud said, express a deisre for someone of the opposite sex to present himself/herself in the nude, and stem from sexual frustration}.

 

Dreams of flying or falling may derive from childhood enjoyment of swings and see-saws. They may express straightforward yearnings for the remembered joy of childhood, but they may also reflect one's problematic adult life. A problem is not a thing; rather, it is a relationship - for example, a relationship of conflict either between your external circumstances and your inner wishes {in which case the solution consists in either removing yourself from the circumstances or modifying your wishes} or between one part of your psyche and another {in which case the solution is to integrate the part that has been neglected}.

 

Dreams of failure stem from childhood fears of disapproval from parents. However, the fact that your dreams contain these recollections suggests that you have programmed yourself for anxiety. If so, begin by loving the child that is still within you: reassure it, tell it that everything is all right and that there is no such thing as failure where there is love.

 

{3} Dreams which contain recollections of yourself as a free and happy child may indicate a desire to find your true self. The child is then a symbol of the complete and permanent inner freedom and joy which are enjoyed only when you have become acquainted with all the forces within you - both conscious and unconscious - and have established harmonious relationships among them.

 

{4} The child may represent the primitive psyche {see Archetypes}which your conscious ego needs to get acquainted if wholeness is to be achieved. This primitive psyche is the mind of humankind in its infancy, before the development of self-consciousness and reasoning. This original awarenes is stil within us, but buried in the unconscious.

 

Reference: Eric Ackroyd

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Childhood Recollections, Dream Dictionary Childhood Recollections, Meaning of dreams about Childhood Recollections, Dream Interpretation Childhood Recollections, Dream Analysis Childhood Recollections, Dreaming of Childhood Recollections

 

Childhood Recollections, Child, Childhood Recollections, Childhood, Instinctual desires, Recurring dreams, Being naked, Flying, Falling, Failure, Childhood fears, Disapproval, Recollections, Primitive psyche, Siblings, Brother, Sister, Parents, Memories, Past, Child, Children, Baby, Infant, Memory, Memories, Past

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Children

Children Dream Symbols:

If the child in your dream is you as a child, the significance of the dream may have to do with a childhood experience.

The child may be a symbol of your true self, That which is essentially you and which you are capable of unfolding. The fact that your real self is represented by a child suggests that your true self is a a beautiful unspoilt product of Nature; that is worthy of unreserved love; and that it needs the nourishment of your love if it is to grow.

 

The child may represent the transcendent nature of the self; it is much more than just your conscious ego or your present image of yourself; it holds together the opposites that are within you, "head" and "heart", extroversion and introversion, masculine and feminine.

The child may represent a new beginning, a new development in your psyche - a new attitude to life, a new set of values, a new reconciliation of previously conflicting forces.

 

There is in all of us a child - our emotional self - that often needs reassurance, to be told that all is well and there is no cause for fear, or anger, or guilt, and that love makes all things good and dissolves all pain. At the same time the child sometimes needs to be chided and corrected if it is eventually to - as it should - grow up.

 

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Children, Dream Dictionary Children, Meaning of dreams about Children, Dream Interpretation Children, Dream Analysis Children, Dreaming of Children

 

Children, Child, You as a child, Childhood, Childhood experience, True self, Unfolding, Nature, Love, Nourishment, Transcendent nature of the self, Self, Opposites, Head, Heart, Extroversion, Introversion, Masculine, Feminine, New beginning, New development, New life, Psyche, New values, Values, Emotional self, Reassurance, Fear, Anger, Guilt, Grow up

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Why do I keep dreaming the same thing over and over?

Dream FAQ Dictionary: Why do I keep dreaming the same thing over and over?

 

Why do I keep dreaming the same thing over and over?

A. Recurrent dreams are a sign of thoughts that occupy the dreamermuch, consciously or unconsciously. Such thoughts have influence onthe dreams and they are often remembered better than "random" dreamssince you somewhat know of their importance. Sometimes those dreamsare unpleasant, a sign or symbol of some conflict situation that youstill have to overcome. Ask yourself what the dream signifies -probably you can interpret it better than anybody else, since you arethe one who knows yourself best.

 

Of course, there are also nice recurring dreams. Some people buildtheir own dream world which they explore, meeting friends there etc.Some claim they are in fact entering a different world (cf. sections 4and 5), others attribute this to remembrances of old dreams creatingnew ones. At first, it's up to yourself to believe a reason oranother. For either one, probably the most important thing is that youagain - take these dreams as valuable for looking at yourself.

 

Source: http://www.faqs.org/faqs/dreams-faq

 

(See also: Reccuring Dreams, Dream Interpretation FAQ, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Meaning of Dreams)

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Death

Dead/Death - the end of something, with a new beginning i.e., leaving an old job for a new one; death in a dream rarely means a real death.

 

More on Dead/Death

If the dead person is someone you actually knew it may mean you should take notice of what he or she said or did, or what happened to him or her. The person is not coming back to "haunt" you but to advise you or to help you. In actuality, this person is a part of your own psyche, taking the form of the dead person. Such encounters may help you to fulfil a long desired relationship, or put something right. For example, you may learn to forgive the person {or yourself}and as a consequence get peace and healing for yourself.

 

 If a deceased partner or parent appears in dreams, the above may apply. Bear in mind that the dead do live - inside us; and that it is important to realize when this is a healthy and life-enhancing thing and when it is purely negative, stunting your own personal growth. If it is the latter, resolve to have it out with the dead person the next time he or she appears in a dream

 

 If the dead person in the dream is actually a living person - and especially if that person is your partner or sibling - the dream may be expressing unconscious resentment towards that person, or a desire to be independent. Feelings toward someone close are often ambivalent {simultaneous conflicting feelings toward that person}: love or respect mixed with fear or hatred or resentment or jealousy. The usual conscious response to such a dream will be anxiety, and you will feel anxiety in the dream itself.

 

The dead person may be you. If so consider the following possibilities:What is being expressed in the dream may be your own anxiety about dying. Death is inevitable {an old Islamic proverb: when the angel of death approaches it is horrific, when it reaches you it is bliss}, and facing up to the fact may bring great rewards: self-acceptance; new values; a broadening of one's personality, compensating for past omissions or lopsidedness and utilizing hitherto neglected personal resources. This would be especially applicable if you are in the second half of life.

 

The message may be that your old self needs to be left behind. This may mean that you must stop carrying around with you the crippling burden of your past {irrational guilt-feelings and martyrdom complex, or any other negative self-programming}; and, instead, you must open yourself to what the present moment is offering. Alternatively, the "old self" may be old attachments, habits, ambitions, values, goals; in which case the dream is telling you that the only way forward for you lies through giving these up and looking deeper within yourself for better values, etc. {where "better" means more in tune with your real self}.

 

{Primitive rites of passage, as described in mythological symbolism as well as in dreams, which mark transitional stages in a person's life - birth, initiation into adulthood, marriage and career, death - all contain death-and-rebirth symbolism and express a recognition that the development of new attitudes more appropriate to one's new stage in life {the death and resurrection of Jesus is a metaphor for such death and resurrection stages in the individual life}. The symbolic death of the initiate in these rites may also be seen as a descent of the conscious ego into the unconscious: it is the unconscious {and the compensating knowledge that it holds} that provides the means for new growth - rebirth.

 

It is just possible that, if your own death features repeatedly in dreams, it is an expression of an unconscious wish for death. Freud speculated in "Beyond the Pleasure Principle" that there might be, in everyone, just two controlling basic drives: one towards life and love and pleasure {Eros}, and the other towards death {'thanatos"}. This is highly controversial {as is much of Freud's theories}, but it is indisputable that many people display strong masochistic tendency.

 

Are you compelled to repeat painful experiences? Do you tend to interpret what other people say as a criticism of yourself? If so, you may be suffering from repressed guilt-feelings and an unconscious urge to punish yourself - which sometimes take the form of a fate-neurosis and/or a wish {unconscious, as in your dream} to see yourself dead. If you feel this applies to you, talk to a friend about it or consult a psychotherapist. See Suicide

 

A wish for death may be a retreat from life's problems and pains, or a response to a sense of failure. If this applies to you, bear in mind, first, that a very sensitive person may also be burdened with an over-severe conscience {the product perhaps, of having a stern father or a sin-and-guilt religious upbringing}. In that case, see the previous paragraph. Secondly, what makes a thing a problem is usually one's attitude towards it. For example, suppose you have been made redundant {repeat mistakes over and over}. If your reaction is to see this as a punishment, see previous paragraph. If you see it as a failure, try to change your attitude or perspective by asking what creative purpose may be being served by your redundancy; perhaps, for instance, the demolishing of an inadequate or false self-image in order to make way for the construction of one that corresponds more closely to your individual ground-plan or "destiny".

 

 If the gender of the dead person is stressed, the meaning may be that your masculinity/femininity or your animus/anima needs reviving.

 

 a dead animal in a dream almost certainly refers to some part of you - an instinctive force, perhaps - and the dream will be telling you either that this part of you {e.g. guilt-feelings or inferiority complex} ought to die, because its effects are wholly negative; or that it is a valuable but repressed part of you that you must now bring to life, to rectify an imbalance in your personality.

 

 

From dream moods

Death To dream about the death of a loved one, suggests that you are lacking a certain aspect or quality that the loved one embodies. Ask yourself what makes this person special or what do you like about him. It is that very quality that you are lacking in your own relationship or circumstances. Alternatively, it indicates that whatever that person represents has no part in your own life

 

From iVillage

Dreaming about death is very common and it can be interpreted in many different ways. Death is usually a symbol of some type of closure or end. It implies an end to one thing and a beginning of another. Death dreams usually have positive symbolism. If you are the dead person in your dream, it could imply that you would like to leave all of your worries and struggles behind and begin anew. Dreaming about someone that you care about may express your fear about losing them. Dreaming that one of your parents died may express fear of loss, but it also may be an unconscious valve through which you release anger and other negative feelings. In some cultures dreaming about death and dying is a very good omen that represents longevity and prosperity.

 

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Death, Dream Dictionary Death, Meaning of dreams about Death, Dream Interpretation Death, Dream Analysis Death, Dreaming of Death

 

Death, Dead, Death, End of something, New beginning, Dying, Dead person, Deceased partner, Deceased parent, Dead partner, Dead parent, Dead mother, Dead father, Haunt, Haunting, Advise, Relationship, Forgive, Forgiveness, Peace, Healing, Personal growth, Unconscious resentment, Resentment, Love, Respect, Self-acceptance, Self-programming, Message, Guilt-feelings, Martyrdom complex, Guilt, Guilty, Martyrdom, Old self, Old attachments, Habits, Ambitions, Values, Goals, Rites of passage, Mythological symbolism, Mythological, - birth, Initiation into adulthood, Marriage, Career, Resurrection, Resurrection of Jesus, Jesus, Christ, Rebirth, Rebirth symbolism, Development, Symbolic death, Initiate, Rites, Rite, Freud, Freudian, Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Eros, Thanatos, Love, Pleasure, Love and pleasure, Freud's theories, Masochistic tendency, Masochism, Criticism, Psychotherapist, Painful experiences, Masculinity, Femininity, Animus, Anima, Dead animal

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Child

Child

And Childhood Recollections

 

{1} If the child in your dream is you as a child, the significance of the dream may have to do with a childhood experience. But don't be too ready to understand it this way {see Childhood Recollections at bottom}.

 

{2} The child may be a symbol of your true self, that which is essentially you and which you are capable of unfolding. That fact that your real self is represented by a child suggests that your true self is a beautiful unspoilt product of Nature; that it is worthy of unreserved love; and that it needs the nourishment of your love if it is to grow and unfold all its loveliness.

 

{3} If the child has some divine aura {e.g. if it is the Christ-child}, waht is symbolized is as in {2} above. The aura represents the transcendent nature of the self: it is much more than your conscious ego or your present image of yourself; it holds together the opposites that are within you {e.g. conscious and unconscious aspects, "head" - intellect and "heart" - intuitiveness and compassionate giving, extroversion and introversion, masculine and feminine}, and it is your ultimate goal and fulfillment.

 

{4} The child may represent {the possibility of} a new beginning, a new development in your psyche - a new attitude to life, a new set of values, a new balance of your psychic forces, a new reconcilation of previously conflicting forces. The child in you is the growing-point in you.

 

{5} There is a child in all of us - our emotional self - that often needs reassurance, to be told that all is well and there is no cause for fear, or anger, or guilt, and that love makes all things good and dissolves all pain. At the same time the child sometimes needs to be chided and corrected if it is eventually to - as it should - grow up.

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Child, Dream Dictionary Child, Meaning of dreams about Child, Dream Interpretation Child, Dream Analysis Child, Dreaming of Child

 

Child, Childhood Recollections, Christ-child, Aura, New beginning, New development, Emotional self, Fear, Anger, Guilt

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dream Interpretation Dictionary - Falling Dream

Falling : Dream Interpretation Dictionary - Falling Dream

 

Falling Dream

Q: I often dream that I am falling. I’ve heard this type of dream reflects feelings of insecurity — and I certainly have those, since I’m worried my partner will leave me. To gain more insight from my dreams, what should I look for?

 

A: You’re correct in thinking that dreams of falling reflect feelings of insecurity. Such dreams might be prompted by a sense of failure or impending failure in a love relationship.

 

Dreams, of course, have a logic all their own, and can be quite disturbing. But they reflect our wishes and conflicts, and can be a tremendous source of information.Being naked.

Clothes conceal. Without them, you’re exposed. So this dream symbolizes feelings of shame or vulnerability. Whether or not you are hiding something, you might be feeling that people can see through you. Or you might fear showing your true feelings in a relationship.

 

Source:  Dr. Gail Saltz, http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4961404/

 

(See also: Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation Falling, Dream Dictionary Falling)

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dream Interpretation - Sex, Sexual Dreams

 

Sex, Sexual Dreams

Dreams of sex and looking for sexual meaning in dreams is something of a pastime for dream interpreters. Often, you don't have to look very far. Sexual content, feelings of love, flirtation, attraction and nocturnal rendezvous are often very explicit in dreams.

 

Sexual meaning has long been a first path of inquiry in dream interpretation. This is due, in part, to the significant contributions of Sigmund Freud to the area of dream interpretation. However, interpreting the sexual content of dreams can be difficult. University studies reveal significant differences in how men and women dream about sex. However, when all is said and done, almost everyone is 'doing it' in dreamland.

 

How much?

Sex during dreaming is reported as a topic of at least 12 per cent of male dreams and four per cent of female dreams. This discrepancy is generally consistent with our waking sex drives, with men doing much more thinking about the topic than women. (It is said that men think about sex far more than 12 per cent of their waking lives, though.) In his book Finding the Meaning in Dreams, G. William Dumhoff reveals some interesting data about the manifestation of sex in dreams:

 

Men

Participating 93%

Watching 7%

 

Women

Participating 68%

Watching 32%

 

This table indicates that women often separate themselves from what is going on in the dream sexually, whereas men see themselves as participants. This can be significant to understanding why it is more common for men - particularly boys - to have orgasms in the dream state than it is for women. It also reveals the conflict that many women feel about the good-girl/bad-girl taboo.

 

Aside from overt sexual activities in dreams, the question of sexual images and symbols as they occur in dreams is important. Because sexuality is often cloaked in a heavy shroud of secrecy, either through childhood or throughout life, the subconscious is prone to represent sex in a variety of ways visually. Freud, in his theory of the sexually driven personality, contributed much to this line of thought.

 

Source: iVillage, http://www.ivillage.co.uk

 

(See also: Dream Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Sex, Sexual Dreams, Meaning of Dreams about Sex, Sexual Dreams, Dream Interpretation Sex, Sexual Dreams)

 

Dream Symbol Conflict: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Child

Child

And Childhood Recollections

 

{1} If the child in your dream is you as a child, the significance of the dream may have to do with a childhood experience. But don't be too ready to understand it this way {see Childhood Recollections at bottom}.

 

{2} The child may be a symbol of your true self, that which is essentially you and which you are capable of unfolding. That fact that your real self is represented by a child suggests that your true self is a beautiful unspoilt product of Nature; that it is worthy of unreserved love; and that it needs the nourishment of your love if it is to grow and unfold all its loveliness.

 

{3} If the child has some divine aura {e.g. if it is the Christ-child}, waht is symbolized is as in {2} above. The aura represents the transcendent nature of the self: it is much more than your conscious ego or your present image of yourself; it holds together the opposites that are within you {e.g. conscious and unconscious aspects, "head" - intellect and "heart" - intuitiveness and compassionate giving, extroversion and introversion, masculine and feminine}, and it is your ultimate goal and fulfillment.

 

{4} The child may represent {the possibility of} a new beginning, a new development in your psyche - a new attitude to life, a new set of values, a new balance of your psychic forces, a new reconcilation of previously conflicting forces. The child in you is the growing-point in you.

 

{5} There is a child in all of us - our emotional self - that often needs reassurance, to be told that all is well and there is no cause for fear, or anger, or guilt, and that love makes all things good and dissolves all pain. At the same time the child sometimes needs to be chided and corrected if it is eventually to - as it should - grow up.

 

Childhood Recollections

{1} Many dreams repeat or allude to childhhood experiences and impressions. Nearly all such dreams have a therapeutic purpose, giving us a clearer view of ourselves, perhaps showing us some attitude or pattern of behaviour that has been with us since childhood, and perhaps, even showing us the original cause of it.

Unfulfilled instinctual desires provide the energy for many of our dreams, and the fact that an instinctive desire remains unfulfilled may be connected with the traumatic experience in childhood. That experience has probably been repressed because it was traumatic - causing guilt, anxiety, fear of punishment. See Repression Your dreams may, therefore, be helping you to uncover the source of these blockages which inhibit the free flow of the natural forces within you.

 

{2} Recurring dreams may represent soem psychic disturbance or problem that orginated in chilhood. Here are some examples:

Dream of being naked may sometimes represent recollections of, and perhaps longing for, the paradise of childhood when one walked around unclothed without embarrassment. {Sometimes these dreams, as Freud said, express a deisre for someone of the opposite sex to present himself/herself in the nude, and stem from sexual frustration}.

 

Dreams of flying or falling may derive from childhood enjoyment of swings and see-saws. They may express straightforward yearnings for the remembered joy of childhood, but they may also reflect one's problematic adult life. A problem is not a thing; rather, it is a relationship - for example, a relationship of conflict either between your external circumstances and your inner wishes {in which case the solution consists in either removing yourself from the circumstances or modifying your wishes} or between one part of your psyche and another {in which case the solution is to integrate the part that has been neglected}.

 

Dreams of failure stem from childhood fears of disapproval from parents. However, the fact that your dreams contain these recollections suggests that you have programmed yourself for anxiety. If so, begin by loving the child that is still within you: reassure it, tell it that everything is all right and that there is no such thing as failure where there is love.

 

{3} Dreams which contain recollections of yourself as a free and happy child may indicate a desire to find your true self. The child is then a symbol of the complete and permanent inner freedom and joy which are enjoyed only when you have become acquainted with all the forces within you - both conscious and unconscious - and have established harmonious relationships among them.

 

{4} The child may represent the primitive psyche {see Archetypes}which your conscious ego needs to get acquainted if wholeness is to be achieved. This primitive psyche is the mind of humankind in its infancy, before the development of self-consciousness and reasoning. This original awarenes is stil within us, but buried in the unconscious.

 

Reference: Eric Ackroyd

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Child, Dream Dictionary Child, Meaning of dreams about Child, Dream Interpretation Child, Dream Analysis Child, Dreaming of Child

 

Child, Child, Children, Baby, Infant, Childhood Recollections, Childhood, Instinctual desires, Recurring dreams, Being naked, Flying, Falling, Failure, Childhood fears, Disapproval, Recollections, Primitive psyche, Family, Siblings, Brother, Sister, Parents, Memories, Past

 




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