Tag
jung
9 entries on I Had This Dream connect to jung. They are listed below, organized by kind.
Articles
- Active Imagination vs. Dreaming: Two Doors to the Same Room Jung's technique of active imagination, how it differs from dreaming, how it complements dreamwork, and a step-by-step method for trying it. With cited primary sources and cautions.
- Anima and Animus in Dreams: The Soul's Other Side What Jung meant by anima and animus, how they appear in dreams, the four classical stages of each, and a contemporary reading that is less rigidly bound to heteronormative gender. With cited sources.
- Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious: A Field Guide An introductory field guide to Jung's archetypes — Self, Shadow, Anima/Animus, Persona, Mother, Father, Child, Trickster, Hero, Wise Old Man — what each is, how each appears in dreams, and how they fit together. With cited sources.
- East vs. West: Dream Interpretation Across Traditions How dream interpretation differs across major traditions — Vedic, Sufi, Indigenous, Greek, Jungian, contemporary cognitive — and what they share. A comparative essay with cited sources.
- Jung vs. Freud on Dreams: What They Agreed On, and Where They Split The real disagreement between Jung and Freud about dreams — wish-fulfillment vs. compensation, personal vs. collective unconscious, free association vs. amplification — explained without caricature, with cited sources.
- Jungian Dream Interpretation: A Practical Guide to the Self How Carl Jung approached dreams — compensatory function, archetypes, the shadow, anima/animus, and the path of individuation. With cited primary sources and a practical method you can use tonight.
- Shadow Work Through Dreams: A Practical Guide How to use dreams for shadow work — Jung's account of the shadow archetype, recognizing shadow figures, integrating rather than fighting them, and the long arc of shadow integration. With cited sources and a method.
- Dream Symbols Across Cultures: A Comparative Lens (Without Diluting Meaning) How water, snake, mother-imagery, and sun recur in Freudian depth psychology, Jungian archetypes, Vedic texts, Islamic oneirocriticism, antiquity, and Indigenous traditions — plus a disciplined way to compare without flattening traditions.
- The Self, the Mandala, and Dreams: Jung's Most Numinous Pattern Carl Jung's archetype of the Self — neither ego nor 'yourself' colloquially — and how spontaneous mandalas, circles, quarternities, and reconciling symbols appear in dreams on the path of individuation. Cited to CW 9 Part I & *Man and His Symbols*, with sober cautions.