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Dream Theories You May Have
Missed
While the names most people associate with dream
theory and the interpretation of dreams are those of
Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, there are a number of lesser known but
nevertheless important figures in the world of dream research and dream
interpretation. Two of the most important of these are Alfred Adler and
Frederick Perls, and they are the focus of this article.
Alfred Adler (1870-1937)
What made Alfred Adler so special
to the world of dream interpretation was his belief that dreams should be used to understand and solve the problems experienced
in the waking world. Adler believed that by bringing dreams into the
waking world, the dreamer could solve the problems experienced in the
daytime world. He believed that people could use resources from their
dreams and use them to solve waking problems.
While Sigmund Freud believed that
repressed sexual impulses where behind all types of behavior, Adler
believed that motivation and drive were the responsible parties. In
addition, Adler did not believe that conscious actions and behavior were
ruled and dictated by the unconscious. Unlike Freud, Alfred Adler believed
that people were motivated to do the things they do by their striving for
perfection. For this reason, Adler believed that feelings of inferiority
or inadequacy were strong actors on behavior.
When it came to dreams,
Alfred Adler thought that they were a path toward the true thoughts,
actions and emotions of the dreamer. For instance, to Adler,
dreams were a way for dreamers to clearly see their aggressive desires and
impulses. To Adler, dreams were a way to overcompensate for perceived
shortcomings in the waking world.
One example of this
overcompensation is the dream about a boss. The dreamer who is scared to
stand up to an overbearing boss in real life may dream that he or she
lashes out and tells of his or her boss in a dream. This dream can be seen
as a socially acceptable, yet still satisfying, way of getting revenge on
an overbearing authority figure.
Frederick Perls (1893-1970)
Frederick Perls is
best known as the inventor of Gestalt therapy. The focus of Gestalt
therapy is to allow patients to fill their emotional void so that they are
able to become whole. To Perls, dreams contained the rejected and disowned
parts of the self. Therefore, in Perls dream interpretation theory, every
person and every item in the dream represented an aspect of the dreamer's
self.
Perls rejected the theory of
dreams popularized by Carl Jung. Carl Jung believed that the images in
dreams were part of a universal symbolic language. Perls rejected this
archetypal explanation of dream imagery in favor of his own theory that
the objects in dreams were representations of the self. To Perls, each
dream is unique only to the person who dreamed it, and there were no
universal archetypal images to draw on.
Perls also felt that it was
important to retell the dream in the present tense in order to understand
and discover the part of the dreamer that is being disowned or
disavowed. In addition, Perls felt it important to verbalize the
feelings engendered by each part of the dream, even those feelings stirred
by inanimate objects. Perls felt that by looking at things from a
different perspective the dreamer could understand feelings that he or she
had overlooked.
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