Using
dreams for his self analysis, Freud
discovered that previously unremembered
details from his childhood were recaptured
along with feelings and states of
mind which he had never met before.
He wrote of this period, “Some
sad secrets of life are being traced
back to their first roots; the humble
origins of much pride and precedence
are being laid bare. I am now experiencing
myself all the things that, as a third
party, I have witnessed going on in
my patients, days when I slink about
depressed because I have understood
nothing of the day’s dreams,
fantasies, or mood.”
Without this powerful and personal
experience of working with his dreams,
meeting emotions and fantasies welling
up from the unconscious, Freud would
not have so passionately believed
in his theories regarding dreams and
the unconscious.
Of course, like much of Freud’s
theories, he related dreams to sex.
One of his basic views of dreams was
that the purpose of dreams is to allow
us to satisfy in fantasies the instinctual
urges that society judges unacceptable
such as sexual practices. This was
partly the reason for the enormous
opposition and criticism that he met.
During the period of his early life,
only men were believed to have powerful
sexual urges. When Sigmund Freud showed
that repressed but obvious sexual
desires were equally at work in women
this created a social uproar. Perhaps
his second finding in regard to sexuality
surprised even him. During his analysis
of women patients, sexual advance
or assault by the woman’s father
was often revealed.
Sigmund Freud struggled with this,
wondering whether the assault was
memory of an actual event, or a psychic
reproduction of it. He eventually
came to the conclusion that hysterical
and neurotic behavior was often due
to the trauma caused by an early sexual
assault by the parent. Where there
was not evidence of physical assault,
then he saw the neurosis as due to
sexual conflict or a trauma caused
by some other event. This conflict
was often manifested through dreams.
This led to Freud being rejected by
university colleagues, fellow doctors,
and even by patients.
Another expert in the field of dreams
and dream interpretation was Carl
Jung. |