Sigmund
Freud: The Interpretation of Dreams
Despite the widely-recognized failure
of Freudian psychotherapy to heal disturbed people effectively
and the rejection of many of his major theories Freud remains
one of the most influential figures of the 20th century. Freud's
basic insight that our minds preserve memories and emotions
which are not always consciously available to us has transformed
the way humanity views itself ever since. Freud said that
there had been three great humiliations in human history:
Galileo's discovery that we were not the center of the universe,
Darwin's discovery that we were not the crown of creation,
and his own discovery that we are not in control of our own
minds. The tendency of modern people to trace their problems
to childhood traumas or other repressed emotions begins with
Freud. One of Freud's more important discoveries is that emotions
buried in the unconscious surface in disguised form during
dreaming, and that the remembered fragments of dreams can
help uncover the buried feelings. Whether the mechanism is
exactly as Freud describes it, many people have derived insights
into themselves from studying their dreams, and most modern
people consider dreams emotionally significant, unlike our
ancestors who often saw them either as divine portents or
as the bizarre side-effects of indigestion. Freud argues that
dreams are wish-fulfillments, and will ultimately argue that
those wishes are the result of repressed or frustrated sexual
desires. The anxiety surrounding these desires turns some
dreams into nightmares.
Explain what Freud means by "dreams
of convenience."
Dreams are not comparable to the spontaneous
sounds made by a musical instrument struck rather by some
external force than by the hand of a performer; they are not
meaningless, not absurd, they do not imply that one portion
of our stockpile of ideas sleeps while another begins to awaken.
They are a completely valid psychological phenomenon, specifically
the fulfillment of wishes; they can be classified in the continuity
of comprehensible waking mental states; they are constructed
through highly complicated intellectual activity.
But as soon as we delight in this discovery,
a flood of questions assails us. If, according to dream analysis,
the dream represents a fulfilled wish, what creates the astonishing
and strange form in which this wish-fullfillment is expressed?
What transformation have the dream thoughts undergone to shape
the manifest dream which we remember when awake? Through what
means has this transformation taken place? What is the source
of the material which has been reworked into the dream? Where
do the many peculiarities which we notice in dream thoughts
come from, for instance that they may be mutually contradictory?
Can a dream tell us so mething new about our inner psychological
processes? Can its content correct the opinions that we have
held during our waking hours?
I suggest that we set these questions
aside for the moment and follow one particular path further.
We have learned that a dream represents a fulfilled wish.
Our next concern will be to discover whether this is a universal
characteristic of dreams. . . We must leave open the possibility
that the meaning may not be the same in every dream. Our first
dream was a wish fulfillment; but perhaps another will prove
to be a fulfilled fear; a third might contain a reflex; a
fourth may simply reproduce a memory. Are there other wish-dreams?
Or perhaps nothing but wish-dreams exist.
It is easy to demonstrate that dreams
often have the character of blatant wish-fullfillments; so
much so that one wonders why the language of dreams was not
understood long ago. For instance, there is a dream that I
can experience at will, experimentally, as it were. When I
eat sardines, olives, or other strongly salted foods in the
evening, I am awakened in the night by thirst. But the awaking
is always preceded by a dream with the same content: I gulp
the water down; and it tastes delicious to me as only a cool
drink can when one is dying of thirst; and then I wake up
and really have to drink. The cause of this simple dream is
the thirst which I feel when I awaken. This feeling causes
the desire to drink, and the dream shows me this desire fulfilled.
It thereby serves a function which I can easily guess. I am
a good sleeper, unaccustomed to being awakened by any need.
If I can slake my thirst by dreaming that I am drinking, I
don't need to wake up in order to be satisfied. Thus this
is a convenience dream. The dream is substituted for action,
as so often in life.
Recently this same dream occurred in
a somewhat modified form. I had become thirsty even before
sleeping and drained the glass of water which was standing
on the nightstand next to my bed. A few hours later during
the night I had a new attack of thirst which was more inconvenient.
In order to get some water I would have had to get up and
take the glass standing on my wife's nightstand. I dreamed
therefore that my wife gave me a drink out of a vessel. This
vessel was an Etruscan funerary urn which I had brought back
from a trip to Italy and had since given away. However, the
water in it tasted so salty (plainly because of the ashes)
that I had to wake up. It is easy to see how neatly this dream
arranged matters; since it its only aim was wish-fulfillment,
it could be completely egotistical. A love of convenience
is not really compatible with consideration for others. The
introduction of the funerary urn is probably another wish-fulfillment;
I was sorry that I didn't own the vessel any more--just as
the water glass beside my wife was inaccessible. The urn also
fit the growing salty taste which I knew would force me to
wake up.
I very commonly had such dreams of
convenience in my youth. Always used to working deep into
the night, it was always difficult for me to wake up early.
I used to dream then that I was out of bed and standing in
front of the washstand. Eventually I had to recognize that
I was not up, but meanwhile I had slept some more. The same
lazy dream in a particularly witty form was told to me by
one of my colleagues who evidently shared my sleepyheadedness.
The landlady he rented rooms near the hospitals from had strong
instructions to wake him up at the right time every morning;
but she had a difficult time carrying out these orders. One
morning he was sleeping especially sweetly. The woman called
into the room, "Mr. Pepi, get up. You have to go to the
hospital. " At that point the sleeper dreamed that he
was lying in a bed in a room in the hospital, on which was
a placard which read "Pepi H., medical student, age 22."
Dreaming, he said to himself, "Since I am already in
the hospital, I don't have to go there," so he turned
over and slept on. Thus he openly confessed the cause of his
dream.
It is just as easy to discover wish-fulfillment
in some other dreams that I have collected from normal people.
A friend who knows my dream theory and had shared it with
his wife said to me one day, "I must tell you that my
wife dreamed yesterday that she had her period. You know what
that means." Certainly I knew; since the young woman
had dreamed that she had her period, it meant that her period
had not come. I could well believe that she would liked to
have enjoyed her freedom a little longer before beginning
the burdens of motherhood. It was a clever way of announcing
the onset of her pregnancy. Another friend writes me that
his wife recently dreamed that she noticed drops of milk on
her blouse front. This is always a sign of pregnancy, but
not a first pregnancy; the young mother wanted to have more
milk for the second child than she had had for the first.
. . .
These examples will perhaps be enough
to show that dreams which can only be understood as wish-fullfillments,
and which clearly reveal their content, occur often and under
manifold circumstances. These mostly short and simple dreams
stand out pleasantly in contrast with the confused and overly
complex dream compositions which have mostly absorbed the
attention of writers. . . .
We recognize that we might have gotten
at the understanding of the concealed meaning of dreams by
the shortest path if we had simply followed common ways of
speaking. Proverbs indeed sometimes speak dismissively of
dreams; people think they are being properly scientific when
they say, "Dreams are froth." But in common usage
dreams are predominantly the fulfillers of dreams. We cry
out, delighted, "I would never have imagined such a thing
even in my wildest dreams" when we find that reality
has surpassed our expectations. . . .
There still remain anxiety dreams (1)
as a special subdivision of dreams with a painful content
whose interpretation as wish- fulfillment dreams will be most
unwillingly accepted by the unenlightened. However, I can
deal briefly with anxiety dreams here; they do not represent
another aspect of the problems posed by dreams; rather it
is a matter of understanding above all neurotic anxiety. The
anxiety that we feel in dreams is only apparently explained
by the dream's content. When we try to discover the meaning
of a dream's content, we note that the anxiety felt in a dream
is no better explained by its content than the anxiety felt
in a phobia (2) is explained by the mental image which induces
the phobia. For instance, is it quite true that one may fall
out of a window, and therefore one may reasonably exert a
certain amount of caution around a window; but this does not
explain why in its phobic form the fear is so powerful and
the sufferer pursued by the fear far beyond its cause. The
same explanation is valid for phobias as for anxiety dreams.
The anxiety is in both cases only loose ly linked to the association,
and actually derives from another source.
Since dream anxiety is intimately related
to neurotic anxiety is must explain the first by reference
to the second. In a short publication on anxiety neurosis
. . . I argued that neurotic anxiety derives from sexual life,
and is the expression of unsatisfied desire which has been
diverted from its goal. This formula has since then been proven
valid. It enables us now to say that the sexual content of
anxiety dreams is the result of transformation of sexual desire.
(1) Nightmares
(2) Irrational fear.
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