The Psychology of Dreams<>On Line Since 2012

Jungian/Psychology Based [ GO ]

www.powerofdreams.net

Dream Forum
[Since 2005]
Myths-Dreams-Symbols    www.mydrsy.com    Since 1998
The Dream is to The Psyche

As the Immune System is to the body

Dream Analysis/Interpretation by Dream Analyst Gerald Gifford
Read: Methodology I Use in Analyzing Dreams,,,,,Based on Jungian Psychology
5000+ Dreams
    /a>
Interpreted
Please Support My
Rescue Kitty Fund

Click the Kitty

FREE INTERPRETATIONS: Please Provide Age/Gender For Proper Analysis.....Follow-up Response to Analysis Requested
By submitting your dream you have read & agree to our Disclaimer/Privacy Policy

The Dream Forum is Closed
Private Interpretations Available-E-Mail: mythsdreams@hotmail.com
Power of Dreams/MDS Dream Forum
Start a New Topic 
Author
Comment
View Entire Thread
Re: Dream about no confidence?

Thank you for that interpretation! It does make a lot of sense, I got sortof a rough idea but as I don't know a whole lot about meanings of things, it was hard for me to get a better idea. Honestly, I'm not sure why my parents were in the dream. We have an odd relationship right now, but it's a little rocky because they had been on the verge of splitting and I'd been pulled into the middle, and my mom recently OD'd and tried to... yeah.

Out of curiosity, do you know what it ususally means to not be able to walk in dreams? This happens a lot, but it's never in a specific type of dream. I just can't walk without falling, like my knees are too weak to hold my weight.

Age & Gender & Location {Required}: 21, Alaska, USA

Have You Posted Before? Date of Last Post {Use Search and Your Post Name to Help Find Last Post} Female

How Did You Find the Dream Forum? no

Re: Dream about no confidence?

Abby,
Not being able to walk without falling could also point to confidence and security issues. Not being able to make it on your own with out assistance would fit with not being able to walk without falling down. Take the metaphor of not being able to walk without falling and see where it fits in your life. Where have you failed or fallen while trying to move forward? Feelings of inadequacy would fit in that scenario, feeling you can not succeed/move forward on your won without failing/falling.

In your dream about your parents and your bf, the last part may have to do with fears of 'splitting up' with you filling your mother's role {feeling depressed/broken emotionally} and no matter how hard you try your bf {filling the role of your father} refuses to get back together. Is your personality a lot like your mother's? The second part of the dream does have a lot in common with your parent's situation does it not? Or insecurities in your relationship that may stem from your parent's impending breakup. Dreams reveal your deepest emotions and any unconscious fears {fears that have yet to become consciously known but have some control over your waking life} will be featured in your dream even though you may not realize how strong they are. As well as before becoming consciously aware of the unconscious motivations. Your childhood will have a lot to do with who you are today and if you develop complexes of insecurities/lack of confidence during those years they can and will unconsciously be a part of your personality. This gets into deeper issues but if you can learn to understand the motivations to why you do things in life in the present, and why you are who you are also, you can know not to give in to those unconscious motivations and avoid a lot of mistakes in life {and emotional pain}. Give some thought to this and see where it leads. let me know what you come up with.

Note. In my original response I stated I can only see along the periphery of a dream. That is true when i analyze a dream at the Dream Forum, knowing only your age and gender. If I or anyone trained in Jungian dream psyche were able to sit down and get to know all about you and your life I/they could interpret your dreams without a lot of difficulty. Dreams reflect your true self and emotional life and if i know about those personal things it is not hard to put the dream contents with your actual life. What happens when interpreting dreams is the unconscious {dream} reveals a lot the person/dreamer may not know or had given thought to. The truth is already within the unconscious bu consciously the dreamer does not know the truth, has forgotten it or has repressed it {because of the emotional energies involved}. Your reflection in a mirror is who you really are and the perception of who you think you are. So are dreams.

Jerry

Age & Gender & Location {Required}: 63 Space Coast, Fla.

Have You Posted Before? Date of Last Post {Use Search and Your Post Name to Help Find Last Post} Male

How Did You Find the Dream Forum? Host Dream Forum

Re: Dream about no confidence?

My therapist is really interested in dream interpretation, and she'd went through a few of them with me but they still didn't make any sense. And now she's gone for the winter so interpreting them myself can be very challenging. Unfortunately, the majority of these dreams are about intense insecurites and emotional fears, which is annoying to say the least. And hard to resolve.

I'd thought about getting some books about interpreting dreams but haven't found one worth getting. Do you have any suggestions?

Age & Gender & Location {Required}: 21, Alaska, USA

Have You Posted Before? Date of Last Post {Use Search and Your Post Name to Help Find Last Post} Female

How Did You Find the Dream Forum? no

Re: Dream about no confidence?

Abby,
I suggest you first read the materials at my website The Power of Dreams. This will provide you with the basic tools to understanding dreams. It is Jungian based, the psychological blueprint of how dreams function. For more in-depth resources my other dream website Myths-Dreams-Symbols has 500+ pages of materials about dreams and dream psychology. As materials to purchase a good place to start would be Marion Woodman's audio book Dreams: Language of the Soul {you can listen to a short preview of the audio at this site}. Woodman is a Jungian psychologist who has written several books on dreams and women's issues. In my opinion she is the 'authority' when it comes to dreams.

As for your analyst not being able to help you understand your dreams, and thus not understand your psychological self, my question is what dream theory does she us in her/his practice/ is it Jungian or Freudian? If it is Freudian then she/he doesn't possess the tools to adequately interpret dreams {in my humble opinion|. Having worked with dreams for 20+ years using Jungian psyche I know from experience that when I have enough personal information about a person, and then analyze their dreams, I can successfully provide the person with the information they need to understand their psychological condition. Every person. The major difference between Jungian and Freudian concepts is Freud believed dreams are attempting to censor unconscious information so to help the dreamer avoid the unpleasant energies {and thus help preserve sleep}. Jung on the other hand believed that dreams are attempting to inform the dreamer of the unconscious contents so to help them resolve emotional conflicts. When I use Jungian concepts my abilities to analyze and interpret dreams are successful. I have this Dream Forum {on line since 2005} that has more than 15,000 posts and many more thousands of comments that verify my abilities as well as Jung's dream philosophies {which without I could not properly interpret dreams}. What is even more amazing about interpreting dreams at this Forum is all I know about the dreamer is their age and gender {two vital requirements when interpreting dreams}. The success I have from that having only that information {and of course the posted dream contents} proves that when using even the basic, rudimentary concepts of Jungian psyche dreams can be successfully analyzed. The proof can be seen in the posted dreams, my interpretations and the responses to my an analysis. When I am provided even more information in follow up responses I am able to better pin point what the dream is trying to communicate. If I were able to sit down with the dreamer and learn all there is to know about their life {as an analyst would do} there is no doubt I could correctly find and explain to the dreamer what emotional conflicts the dream is attempting to communicate. By doing that the dreamer can begin to resolve those issues. Anyone with a Jungian education and a intuitive mind can interpret dreams successfully.

But there is a caveat to successfully using Jungian psyche, or any form of dream interpretation. The dreamer must be open to finding what their psychological condition is. Just as with alcoholic's anonymous {which by the way was inspired in its formation by a letter from Carl Jung to AA founder Bill Wilson} the person must want to 'get better'. Otherwise the unconscious will reflect the conscious attitude but with a vengeance and an ultimate self destruction will occur. On the other hand when a person opens up to the unconscious there is a path to healing because the dreamer knows what it is that is causing the emotional conflicts that prevent them from having a normal, happy life. Dreams are therapeutic {nature's tool}. Just as with the immune system for the body, dreams are the device for the 'psyche' that helps provide a healthy mind.

I applaud your desire to wanting to learn about dreams. It is not an easy road but if it catches your interest as it did mine back in 1992 it will change you in so many ways {prior to that I was a couch potato, football junkie who had little interest in the 'inner world'. I was 42 at the time. If you take time to better understand your dreams {and your true self} at the age of 21 you will have a life most people never experience. That is because you will understand there is another world beyond the exterior existence of material worth, obeying hat society wants you to do and being limited by the outer forces to 'knowing' more than the mind should know. And in the process of learning more about dreams you will learn to heal yourself, and protect yourself from future psychological conflicts. Such is the Power of Dreams.

Jerry

Age & Gender & Location {Required}: 63 Space Coast, Fla.

Have You Posted Before? Date of Last Post {Use Search and Your Post Name to Help Find Last Post} Male

How Did You Find the Dream Forum? Host Dream Forum

Re: Dream about no confidence?

Abby,
For more about Marion Woodman here is a Youtube interview with her and her approach to dreams.
Jungian Analyst Marion Woodman on her approach to therapy.


Jerry

Age & Gender & Location {Required}: 63 Space Coast, Fla.

Have You Posted Before? Date of Last Post {Use Search and Your Post Name to Help Find Last Post} Male

How Did You Find the Dream Forum? Host Dream Forum

Re: Dream about no confidence?

Thanks for all the info! I'll definitely check out your website. I didn't know there was that much of a difference between Freud and Jung (at this point I don't know much about them), but I am very interested in learning. I can see what my dreams are trying to tell me for the most part. The problem I'm having is FIXING that problem. That's where my therapist comes in, I suppose.
I've read a few books about mindfulness, but can't seem to wrap my head around it. Being at peace in my head is a lot harder that one would think. Partly because of the depression and anxiety (and I have yet to find a medication that can fix those things). My therapist says mindfulness helps both of those things but it seems impossible sometimes.

Age & Gender & Location {Required}: 21, Alaska, USA

Have You Posted Before? Date of Last Post {Use Search and Your Post Name to Help Find Last Post} Female

How Did You Find the Dream Forum? no


stats from 7-14-10 to the present