Want this question answered?
No, dreams can express deeply held emotions, memories of the distant past, and many other things. Dreams use symbolic language, and they are about the dreamer. Dreams can also reflect observations noticed by the subconscious mind but overlooked by the conscious mind.
Foretold in the Language of Dreams was created on 2002-08-19.
Allegory is a literary technique, not a characteristic of dreams, but dreams can be symbolic. The symbolism is, however, often difficult to interpret.
mind,dreams,balance,awareness,thoughts,living to the fullest
He hopes to find the cause of the beginning of the universe
Transcendence, intoxication, disorientation, dreams of love, otherworldliness, answer to the problem at hand
To stand up and get his own coffee
Stephen Catalano has written: 'Children's dreams in clinical practice' 'Developmental differences in the dream content of normal and emotionally disturbed adolescents' -- subject(s): Dreams, Mentally ill children
Our waking experiences happen with the conscious mind. Dreams are messages to the conscious mind from the subconscious mind and is related in the picture language, the universal language of mind also referred to as language of the soul, during sleep. By learning this language and interpreting your dreams you can see how you are doing as a thinker. Dreams will normally relate to the previous day's experiences.
The subconscious mind draws on a multitude of images when generating dreams. The characters in mythology are rich in symbolic meaning, and might be considered "ready made" images for dreams.
no, i do not think that it could happen.Additional information:The only harm bad dreams could cause would be emotional and mental stress in a person who does not understand that dreams are symbolic reflections of the dreamer's own life.
There are various schools of psychoanalysis, each with its own view of the function of dreams. Some people regard dreams as nothing more than "day residue," leftover impressions of the day that the mind is processing. However, in the theory of the great psychoanalyst C. G. Jung, the dream is first and foremost a symbolic statement of the dreamer's life situation and psychological state. Often the symbols of a dream will provide some guidance for the dreamer's problems. Although the public strongly leans toward the idea that dreams foretell the future, most dreams are probably not precognitive. However, it cannot be denied that some dreams do "come true." However, we can only know that after the fact (as when the event you dreamed of actually happens). Therefore, it's more reasonable to treat dreams as symbolic.