The preliminary conditions of this typical dream were as follows: A father had been watching day and night beside the sick-bed of his child. After the child died, he retired to rest in an adjoining room, but left the door ajar so that he could look from his room into the next, where the child's body lay surrounded by tall candles. An old man, who had been installed as a watcher, sat beside the body, murmuring prayers. After sleeping for a few hours the father dreamed that the child was standing by his bed, clasping his arm and crying reproachfully: "Father, don't you see that I am burning?" The father woke up and noticed a bright light coming from the adjoining room. Rushing in, he found that the old man had fallen asleep, and the sheets and one arm of the beloved body were burnt by a fallen candle.
The meaning of this affecting dream is simple enough, and the explanation given by the lecturer, as my patient reported it, was correct. The bright light shining through the open door on to the sleeper's eyes gave him the impression which he would have received had he been awake: namely, that a fire had been started near the corpse by a falling candle. It is quite possible that he had taken into his sleep his anxiety lest the aged watcher should not be equal to his task.
We can find nothing to change in this interpretation; we can only add that the content of the dream must be overdetermined, and that the speech of the child must have consisted of phrases which it had uttered while still alive, and which were associated with important events for the father. Perhaps the complaint, "I am burning," was associated with the fever from which the child died, and "Father, don't you see?" to some other affective occurrence unknown to us.
Now, when we have come to recognize that the dream has meaning, and can be fitted into the context of psychic events, it may be surprising that a dream should have occurred in circumstances which called for such an immediate waking. We shall then note that even this dream is not lacking in a wish-fulfilment. The dead child behaves as though alive; he warns his father himself; he comes to his father's bed and clasps his arm, as he probably did in the recollection from which the dream obtained the first part of the child's speech. It was for the sake of this wish- fulfilment that the father slept a moment longer. The dream was given precedence over waking reflection because it was able to show the child still living. If the father had waked first, and had then drawn the conclusion which led him into the adjoining room, he would have shortened the child's life by this one moment.
There can be no doubt about the peculiar features in this brief dream which engage our particular interest. So far, we have endeavoured mainly to ascertain wherein the secret meaning of the dream consists, how it is to be discovered, and what means the dream-work uses to conceal it. In other words, our greatest interest has hitherto been centered on the problems of interpretation. Now, however, we encounter a dream which is easily explained, and the meaning of which is without disguise; we note that nevertheless this dream preserves the essential characteristics which conspicuously differentiate a dream from our waking thoughts, and this difference demands an explanation. It is only when we have disposed of all the problems of interpretation that we feel how incomplete is our psychology of dreams.
But before we turn our attention
to this new path of investigation, let us stop and look back, and consider
whether we have not overlooked something important on our way hither. For
we must understand that the easy and comfortable part of our journey lies
behind us. Hitherto, all the paths that we have followed have led, if I
mistake not, to light, to explanation, and to full understanding; but from
the moment when we seek to penetrate more deeply into the psychic processes
in dreaming, all paths lead into darkness. It is quite impossible to explain
the dream as a psychic process, for to explain means to trace back to the
known, and as yet we have no psychological knowledge to which we can refer
such explanatory fundamentals as may be inferred from the psychological
investigation of dreams. On the contrary, we shall be compelled to advance
a number of new assumptions, which do little more than conjecture the structure
of the psychic apparatus and the play of the energies active in it; and
we shall have to be careful not to go too far beyond the simplest logical
construction, since otherwise its value will be doubtful. And even if we
should be unerring in our inferences, and take cognizance of all the logical
possibilities, we should still be in danger of arriving at a completely
mistaken result, owing to the probable incompleteness of the preliminary
statement of our elementary data. We shall not he able to arrive at any
conclusions as to the structure and function of the psychic instrument
from even the most careful investigation of dreams, or of any other isolated
activity; or, at all events, we shall not be able to confirm our conclusions.
To do this we shall have to collate such phenomena as the comparative study
of a whole series of psychic activities proves to be reliably constant.
So that the psychological assumptions which we base on the analysis of
the dream-processes will have to mark time, as it were, until they can
join up with the results of other investigations which, proceeding from
another starting-point, will seek to penetrate to the heart of the same
problem.
I propose, then, that we shall first of all turn our attention to a subject which brings us to a hitherto disregarded objection, which threatens to undermine the very foundation of our efforts at dream-interpretation. The objection has been made from more than one quarter that the dream which we wish to interpret is really unknown to us, or, to be more precise, that we have no guarantee that we know it as it really occurred.
What we recollect of the dream, and what we subject to our methods of interpretation, is, in the first place, mutilated by the unfaithfulness of our memory, which seems quite peculiarly incapable of retaining dreams, and which may have omitted precisely the most significant parts of their content. For when we try to consider our dreams attentively, we often have reason to complain that we have dreamed much than we remember; that unfortunately we know nothing more than this one fragment, and that our recollection of even this fragment seems to us strangely uncertain. Moreover, everything goes to prove that our memory reproduces the dream not only incompletely but also untruthfully, in a falsifying manner. As, on the one hand, we may doubt whether what we dreamed was really as disconnected as it is in our recollections, so on the other hand we may doubt whether a dream was really as coherent as our account of it; whether in our attempted reproduction we have not filled in the gaps which really existed, or those which are due to forgetfulness, with new and arbitrarily chosen material; whether we have not embellished the dream, rounded it off and corrected it, so that any conclusion as to its real content becomes impossible. Indeed, one writer (Spitta) * surmises that all that is orderly and coherent is really first put into the dream during the attempt to recall it. Thus we are in danger of being deprived of the very object whose value we have undertaken to determine.
* Similar views are expressed by Foucault and Tannery.
In all our dream-interpretations we have hitherto ignored these warnings. On the contrary, indeed, we have found that the smallest, most insignificant, and most uncertain components of the dream-content invited interpretations no less emphatically than those which were distinctly and certainly contained in the dream. In the dream of Irma's injection we read: "I quickly called in Dr. M," and we assumed that even this small addendum would not have got into the dream if it had not been susceptible of a special derivation. In this way we arrived at the history of that unfortunate patient to whose bedside I quickly called my older colleague. In the seemingly absurd dream which treated the difference between fifty-one and fifty-six as a quantity negligible the number fifty-one was mentioned repeatedly. Instead of regarding this as a matter of course, or a detail of indifferent value, we proceeded from this to a second train of thought in the latent dream-content, which led to the number fifty-one, and by following up this clue we arrived at the fears which proposed fifty-one years as the term of life in the sharpest opposition to a dominant train of thought which was boastfully lavish of the years. In the dream Non vixit I found, as an insignificant interpolation, that I had at first overlooked the sentence: As P does not understand him, Fl asks me, etc. The interpretation then coming to a standstill, I went back to these words, and I found through them the way to the infantile phantasy which appeared in the dream-thoughts as an intermediate point of junction. This came about by means of the poet's verses:
Selten habt ihr mich verstanden,
Selten auch verstand ich Euch,
Nur wenn wir im Kot uns fanden
So verstanden wir uns gleich! *
* Seldom have you understood me,
Seldom have I understood you,
But when we found ourselves in the mire,
We at once understood each
other!
Every analysis will afford evidence
of the fact that the most insignificant features of the dream are indispensable
to interpretation, and will show how the completion of the task is delayed
if we postpone our examination of them. We have given equal attention,
in the interpretation of dreams, to every nuance of verbal expression found
in them; indeed, whenever we are confronted by a senseless or insufficient
wording, as though we had failed to translate the dream into the proper
version, we have respected even these defects of expression. In brief,
what other writers have regarded as arbitrary improvisations, concocted
hastily to avoid confusion, we have treated like a sacred text. This contradiction
calls for explanation.
It would appear, without doing
any injustice to the writers in question, that the explanation is in our
favour. From the standpoint of our newly-acquired insight into the origin
of dreams, all contradictions are completely reconciled. It is true that
we distort the dream in our attempt to reproduce it; we once more find
therein what we have called the secondary and often misunderstanding elaboration
of the dream by the agency of normal thinking. But this distortion is itself
no more than a part of the elaboration to which the dream-thoughts are
constantly subjected as a result of the dream-censorship. Other writers
have here suspected or observed that part of the dream-distortion whose
work is manifest; but for us this is of little consequence, as we know
that a far more extensive work of distortion, not so easily apprehended,
has already taken the dream for its object from among the hidden dream-thoughts.
The only mistake of these writers consists in believing the modification
effected in the dream by its recollection and verbal expression to be arbitrary,
incapable of further solution, and consequently liable to lead us astray
in our cognition of the dream. They underestimate the determination of
the dream in the psyche. Here there is nothing arbitrary. It can be shown
that in all cases a second train of thought immediately takes over the
determination of the elements which have been left undetermined by the
first. For example, I wish quite arbitrarily to think of a number; but
this is not possible; the number that occurs to me is definitely and necessarily
determined by thoughts within me which may be quite foreign to my momentary
purpose. * The modifications which the dream undergoes in its revision
by the waking mind are just as little arbitrary. They preserve an associative
connection with the content, whose place they take, and serve to show us
the way to this content, which may itself be a substitute for yet another
content.
* Cf. The Psycho-pathology of Everday
Life.
In analysing the dreams of patients
I impose the following test of this assertion, and never without success.
If the first report of a dream seems not very comprehensible, I request
the dreamer to repeat it. This he rarely does in the same words. But the
passages in which the expression is modified are thereby made known to
me as the weak points of the dream's disguise; they are what the embroidered
emblem on Siegfried's raiment was to Hagen. These are the points from which
the analysis may start. The narrator has been admonished by my announcement
that I intend to take special pains to solve the dream, and immediately,
obedient to the urge of resistance, he protects the weak points of the
dream's disguise, replacing a treacherous expression by a less relevant
one. He thus calls my attention to the expressions which he has discarded.
From the efforts made to guard against the solution of the dream, I can
also draw conclusions about the care with which the raiment of the dream
has been woven.
The writers whom I have mentioned
are, however, less justified when they attribute so much importance to
the doubt with which our judgment approaches the relation of the dream.
For this doubt is not intellectually warranted; our memory can give no
guarantees, but nevertheless we are compelled to credit its statements
far more frequently than is objectively justifiable. Doubt concerning the
accurate reproduction of the dream, or of individual data of the dream,
is only another offshoot of the dream-censorship, that is, of resistance
to the emergence of the dream-thoughts into consciousness. This resistance
has not yet exhausted itself by the displacements and substitutions which
it has effected, so that it still clings, in the form of doubt, to what
has been allowed to emerge. We can recognize this doubt all the more readily
in that it is careful never to attack the intensive elements of the dream,
but only the weak and indistinct ones. But we already know that a transvaluation
of all the psychic values has taken place between the dream-thoughts and
the dream. The distortion has been made possible only by devaluation; it
constantly manifests itself in this way and sometimes contents itself therewith.
If doubt is added to the indistinctness of an element of the dream-content,
we may, following this indication, recognize in this element a direct offshoot
of one of the outlawed dream-thoughts. The state of affairs is like that
obtaining after a great revolution in one of the republics of antiquity
or the Renaissance. The once powerful, ruling families of the nobility
are now banished; all high posts are filled by upstarts; in the city itself
only the poorer and most powerless citizens, or the remoter followers of
the vanquished party, are tolerated. Even the latter do not enjoy the full
rights of citizenship. They are watched with suspicion. In our case, instead
of suspicion we have doubt. I must insist, therefore, that in the analysis
of a dream one must emancipate oneself from the whole scale of standards
of reliability; and if there is the slightest possibility that this or
that may have occurred in the dream, it should be treated as an absolute
certainty. Until one has decided to reject all respect for appearances
in tracing the dream-elements, the analysis will remain at a standstill.
Disregard of the element concerned has the psychic effect, in the person
analysed, that nothing in connection with the unwished ideas behind this
element will occur to him. This effect is really not self-evident; it would
be quite reasonable to say, "Whether this or that was contained in the
dream I do not know for certain; but the following ideas happen to occur
to me." But no one ever does say so; it is precisely the disturbing effect
of doubt in the analysis that permits it to be unmasked as an offshoot
and instrument of the psychic resistance. Psycho- analysis is justifiably
suspicions. One of its rules runs: Whatever disturbs the progress of the
work is a resistance. * -
* This peremptory statement: "Whatever
disturbs the progress of the work is a resistance" might easily be misunderstood.
It has, of course, the significance merely of a technical rule, a warning
for the analyst. It is not denied that during an analysis events may occur
which cannot be ascribed to the intention of the person analysed. The patient's
father may die in other ways than by being murdered by the patient, or
a war may break out and interrupt the analysis. But despite the obvious
exaggeration of the above statement there is still something new and useful
in it. Even if the disturbing event is real and independent of the patient,
the extent of the disturbing influence does often depend only on him, and
the resistance reveals itself unmistakably in the ready and immoderate
exploitation of such an opportunity. -
The forgetting of dreams, too,
remains inexplicible until we seek to explain it by the power of the psychic
censorship. The feeling that one has dreamed a great deal during the night
and has retained only a little of it may have yet another meaning in a
number of cases: it may perhaps mean that the dream-work has continued
in a perceptible manner throughout the night, but has left behind it only
one brief dream. There is, however, no possible doubt that a dream is progressively
forgotten on waking. One often forgets it in spite of a painful effort
to recover it. I believe, however, that just as one generally overestimates
the extent of this forgetting, so also one overestimates the lacunae in
our knowledge of the dream due to the gaps occurring in it. All the dream-content
that has been lost by forgetting can often be recovered by analysis; in
a number of cases, at all events, it is possible to discover from a single
remaining fragment, not the dream, of course- which, after all, is of no
importance- but the whole of the dream-thoughts. It requires a greater
expenditure of attention and self-suppression in the analysis; that is
all; but it shows that the forgetting of the dream is not innocent of hostile
intention. *
* As an example of the significance
of doubt and uncertainty in a dream with a simultaneous shrinking of the
dream-content to a single element, see my General Introduction to Psycho-Analysis
the dream of the sceptical lady patient, p. 492 below, the analysis of
which was successful, despite a short postponement. -
A convincing proof of the tendencious
nature of dream-forgetting- of the fact that it serves the resistance-
is obtained on analysis by investigating a preliminary stage of forgetting.
* It often happens that, in the midst of an interpretation, an omitted
fragment of the dream suddenly emerges which is described as having been
previously forgotten. This part of the dream that has been wrested from
forgetfulness is always the most important part. It lies on the shortest
path to the solution of the dream, and for that every reason it was most
exposed to the resistance. Among the examples of dreams that I have included
in the text of this treatise, it once happened that I had subsequently
to interpolate a fragment of dream-content. The dream is a dream of travel,
which revenges itself on two unamiable traveling companions; I have left
it almost entirely uninterpreted, as part of its content is obscene. The
part omitted reads: "I said, referring to a book of Schiller's: 'It is
from...' but corrected myself, as I realized my mistake: 'It is by...'
Whereupon the man remarked to his sister, 'Yes, he said it correctly.'"
*(2)
* Concerning the intention of forgetting
in general, see my The Psycho-pathology of Everyday Life.
*(2) Such corrections in the use
of foreign languages are not rare in dreams, but they are usually attributed
to foreigners. Maury (p. 143), while he was studying English, once dreamed
that he informed someone that he had called on him the day before in the
following words: "I called for you yesterday." The other answered correctly:
"You mean: I called on you yesterday."
Self-correction in dreams, which
to some writers seems so wonderful, does not really call for consideration.
But I will draw from my own memory an instance typical of verbal errors
in dreams. I was nineteen years of age when I visited England for the first
time, and I spent a day on the shore of the Irish Sea. Naturally enough,
I amused myself by picking up the marine animals left on the beach by the
tide, and I was just examining a starfish (the dream begins with Hollthurn-
Holothurian) when a pretty little girl came up to me and asked me: "Is
it a starfish? Is it alive?" I replied, "Yes, he is alive," but then felt
ashamed of my mistake, and repeated the sentence correctly. For the grammatical
mistake which I then made, the dream substitutes another which is quite
common among German people. "Das Buch ist von Schiller" is not to be translated
by "the book is from," but by "the book is by." That the dream-work accomplishes
this substitution, because the word from, owing to its consonance with
the German adjective fromm (pious, devout) makes a remarkable condensation
possible, should no longer surprise us after all that we have heard of
the intentions of the dream-work and its unscrupulous selection of means.
But what relation has this harmless recollection of the seashore to my
dream? It explains, by means of a very innocent example, that I have used
the word- the word denoting gender, or sex or the sexual (he)- in the wrong
place. This is surely one of the keys to the solution of the dream. Those
who have heard of the derivation of the book-title Matter and Motion (Moliere
in Le Malade Imaginaire: La Matiere est-elle laudable?- A Motion of the
bowels) will readily be able to supply the missing parts.
Moreover, I can prove conclusively,
by a demonstratio ad oculos, that the forgetting of the dream is in a large
measure the work of the resistance. A patient tells me that he has dreamed,
but that the dream has vanished without leaving a trace, as if nothing
had happened. We set to work, however; I come upon a resistance which I
explain to the patient; encouraging and urging him, I help him to become
reconciled to some disagreeable thought; and I have hardly succeeded in
doing so when he exclaims: "Now I can recall what I dreamed!" The same
resistance which that day disturbed him in the work of interpretation caused
him also to forget the dream. By overcoming this resistance I have brought
back the dream to his memory.
In the same way the patient, having
reached a certain part of the work, may recall a dream which occurred three,
four, or more days ago, and which has hitherto remained in oblivion. *
* Ernest Jones describes an analogous
case of frequent occurrence; during the analysis of one dream another dream
of the same night is often recalled which until then was not merely forgotten,
but was not even suspected.
Psycho-analytical experience has
furnished us with yet another proof of the fact that the forgetting of
dreams depends far more on the resistance than on the mutually alien character
of the waking and sleeping states, as some writers have believed it to
depend. It often happens to me, as well as to other analysts, and to patients
under treatment, that we are waked from sleep by a dream, as we say, and
that immediately thereafter, while in full possession of our mental faculties,
we begin to interpret the dream. Often in such cases I have not rested
until I have achieved a full understanding of the dream, and yet it has
happened that after waking I have forgotten the interpretation- work as
completely as I have forgotten the dream-content itself, though I have
been aware that I have dreamed and that I had interpreted the dream. The
dream has far more frequently taken the result of the interpretation with
it into forgetfulness than the intellectual faculty has succeeded in retaining
the dream in the memory. But between this work of interpretation and the
waking thoughts there is not that psychic abyss by which other writers
have sought to explain the forgetting of dreams. When Morton Prince objects
to my explanation of the forgetting of dreams on the ground that it is
only a special case of the amnesia of dissociated psychic states, and that
the impossibility of applying my explanation of this special amnesia to
other types of amnesia makes it valueless even for its immediate purpose,
he reminds the reader that in all his descriptions of such dissociated
states he has never attempted to discover the dynamic explanation underlying
these phenomena. For had he done so, he would surely have discovered that
repression (and the resistance produced thereby) is the cause not of these
dissociations merely, but also of the amnesia of their psychic content.
That dreams are as little forgotten
as other psychic acts, that even in their power of impressing themselves
on the memory they may fairly be compared with the other psychic performances,
was proved to me by an experiment which I was able to make while preparing
the manuscript of this book. I had preserved in my notes a great many dreams
of my own which, for one reason or another, I could not interpret, or,
at the time of dreaming them, could interpret only very imperfectly. In
order to obtain material to illustrate my assertion, I attempted to interpret
some of them a year or two later. In this attempt I was invariably successful;
indeed, I may say that the interpretation was effected more easily after
all this time than when the dreams were of recent occurrence. As a possible
explanation of this fact, I would suggest that I had overcome many of the
internal resistances which had disturbed me at the time of dreaming. In
such subsequent interpretations I have compared the old yield of dream-thoughts
with the present result, which has usually been more abundant, and I have
invariably found the old dream-thoughts unaltered among the present ones.
However, I soon recovered from my surprise when I reflected that I had
long been accustomed to interpret dreams of former years that had occasionally
been related to me by my patients as though they had been dreams of the
night before; by the same method, and with the same success. In the section
on anxiety-dreams I shall include two examples of such delayed dream-interpretations.
When I made this experiment for the first time I expected, not unreasonably,
that dreams would behave in this connection merely like neurotic symptoms.
For when I treat a psychoneurotic for instance, an hysterical patient,
by psychoanalysis, I am compelled to find explanations for the first symptoms
of the malady, which have long since disappeared, as well as for those
still existing symptoms which have brought the patient to me; and I find
the former problem easier to solve than the more exigent one of today.
In the Studies in Hysteria, * published as early as 1895, I was able to
give the explanation of a first hysterical attack which the patient, a
woman over forty years of age, had experienced in her fifteenth year. *(2)
* Studien uber Hysterie, Case II.
*(2) Dreams which have occurred
during the first years of childhood, and which have sometimes been retained
in the memory for decades with perfect sensorial freshness, are almost
always of great importance for the understanding of the development and
the neurosis of the dreamer. The analysis of them protects the physician
from errors and uncertainties which might confuse him even theoretically.
I will now make a few rather unsystematic
remarks relating to the interpretations of dreams, which will perhaps serve
as a guide to the reader who wishes to test my assertions by the analysis
of his own dreams.
He must not expect that it
will be a simple and easy matter to interpret his own dreams. Even the
observation of endoptic phenomena, and other sensations which are commonly
immune from attention, calls for practice, although this group of observations
is not opposed by any psychic motive. It is very much more difficult to
get hold of the unwished ideas. He who seeks to do so must fulfil the requirements
laid down in this treatise, and while following the rules here given, he
must endeavour to restrain all criticism, all preconceptions, and all affective
or intellectual bias in himself during the work of analysis. He must be
ever mindful of the precept which Claude Bernard held up to the experimenter
in the physiological laboratory: "Travailler comme une bete"- that is,
he must be as enduring as an animal, and also as disinterested in the results
of his work. He who will follow this advice will no longer find the task
a difficult one. The interpretation of a dream cannot always be accomplished
in one session; after following up a chain of associations you will often
feel that your working capacity is exhausted; the dream will not tell you
anything more that day; it is then best to break off, and to resume the
work the following day. Another portion of the dream-content then solicits
your attention, and you thus obtain access to a fresh stratum of the dream-thoughts.
One might call this the fractional interpretation of dreams.
It is most difficult to induce
the beginner in dream- interpretation to recognize the fact that his task
is not finished when he is in possession of a complete interpretation of
the dream which is both ingenious and coherent, and which gives particulars
of all the elements of the dream-content. Besides this, another interpretation,
an over-interpretation of the same dream, one which has escaped him, may
be possible. It is really not easy to form an idea of the wealth of trains
of unconscious thought striving for expression in our minds, or to credit
the adroitness displayed by the dream-work in killing- so to speak- seven
flies at one stroke, like the journeyman tailor in the fairy-tale, by means
of its ambiguous modes of expression. The reader will constantly be inclined
to reproach the author for a superfluous display of ingenuity, but anyone
who has had personal experience of dream-interpretation will know better
than to do so.
On the other hand, I cannot accept
the opinion, first expressed by H. Silberer, that every dream- or even
that many dreams, and certain groups of dreams- calls for two different
interpretations, between which there is even supposed to be a fixed relation.
One of these, which Silberer calls the psycho- analytic interpretation,
attributes to the dream any meaning you please, but in the main an infantile
sexual one. The other, the more important interpretation, which he calls
the anagogic interpretation, reveals the more serious and often profound
thoughts which the dream-work has used as its material. Silberer does not
prove this assertion by citing a number of dreams which he has analysed
in these two directions. I am obliged to object to this opinion on the
ground that it is contrary to facts. The majority of dreams require no
over-interpretation, and are especially insusceptible of an anagogic interpretation.
The influence of a tendency which seeks to veil the fundamental conditions
of dream-formation and divert our interest from its instinctual roots is
as evident in Silberer's theory as in other theoretical efforts of the
last few years. In a number of cases I can confirm Silberer's assertions;
but in these the analysis shows me that the dream-work was confronted with
the task of transforming a series of highly abstract thoughts, incapable
of direct representation, from waking life into a dream. The dream- work
attempted to accomplish this task by seizing upon another thought-material
which stood in loose and often allegorical relation to the abstract thoughts,
and thereby diminished the difficulty of representing them. The abstract
interpretation of a dream originating in this manner will be given by the
dreamer immediately, but the correct interpretation of the substituted
material can be obtained only by means of the familiar technique.
The question whether every dream can be interpreted is to be answered in the negative. One should not forget that in the work of interpretation one is opposed by the psychic forces that are responsible for the distortion of the dream. Whether one can master the inner resistances by one's intellectual interest, one's capacity for self-control, one's psychological knowledge, and one's experience in dream-interpretation depends on the relative strength of the opposing forces. It is always possible to make some progress; one can at all events go far enough to become convinced that a dream has meaning, and generally far enough to gain some idea of its meaning. It very often happens that a second dream enables us to confirm and continue the interpretation assumed for the first. A whole series of dreams, continuing for weeks or months, may have a common basis, and should therefore be interpreted as a continuity. In dreams that follow one another, we often observe that one dream takes as its central point something that is only alluded to in the periphery of the next dream, and conversely, so that even in their interpretations the two supplement each other. That different dreams of the same night are always to be treated, in the work of interpretation, as a whole, I have already shown by examples.
In the best interpreted dreams
we often have to leave one passage in obscurity because we observe during
the interpretation that we have here a tangle of dream-thoughts which cannot
be unravelled, and which furnishes no fresh contribution to the dream-content.
This, then, is the keystone of the dream, the point at which it ascends
into the unknown. For the dream-thoughts which we encounter during the
interpretation commonly have no termination, but run in all directions
into the net-like entanglement of our intellectual world. It is from some
denser part of this fabric that the dream-wish then arises, like the mushroom
from its mycelium.
Let us now return to the facts
of dream-forgetting. So far, of course, we have failed to draw any important
conclusion from them. When our waking life shows an unmistakable intention
to forget the dream which has been formed during the night, either as a
whole, immediately after waking, or little by little in the course of the
day, and when we recognize as the chief factor in this process of forgetting
the psychic resistance against the dream which has already done its best
to oppose the dream at night, the question then arises: What actually has
made the dream- formation possible against this resistance? Let us consider
the most striking case, in which the waking life has thrust the dream aside
as though it had never happened. If we take into consideration the play
of the psychic forces, we are compelled to assert that the dream would
never have come into existence had the resistance prevailed at night as
it did by day. We conclude, then, that the resistance loses some part of
its force during the night; we know that it has not been discontinued,
as we have demonstrated its share in the formation of dreams- namely, the
work of distortion. We have therefore to consider the possibility that
at night the resistance is merely diminished, and that dream- formation
becomes possible because of this slackening of the resistance; and we shall
readily understand that as it regains its full power on waking it immediately
thrusts aside what it was forced to admit while it was feeble. Descriptive
psychology teaches us that the chief determinant of dream-formation is
the dormant state of the psyche; and we may now add the following explanation:
The state of sleep makes dream-formation possible by reducing the endopsychic
censorship.
We are certainly tempted to look upon this as the only possible conclusion to be drawn from the facts of dream-forgetting, and to develop from this conclusion further deductions as to the comparative energy operative in the sleeping and waking states. But we shall stop here for the present. When we have penetrated a little farther into the psychology of dreams we shall find that the origin of dream-formation may be differently conceived. The resistance which tends to prevent the dream-thoughts from becoming conscious may perhaps be evaded without suffering reduction. It is also plausible that both the factors which favour dream-formation, the reduction as well as the evasion of the resistance, may be simultaneously made possible by the sleeping state. But we shall pause here, and resume the subject a little later.
We must now consider another series of objections against our procedure in dream-interpretation. For we proceed by dropping all the directing ideas which at other times control reflection, directing our attention to a single element of the dream, noting the involuntary thoughts that associate themselves with this element. We then take up the next component of the dream-content, and repeat the operation with this; and, regardless of the direction taken by the thoughts, we allow ourselves to be led onwards by them, rambling from one subject to another. At the same time, we harbour the confident hope that we may in the end, and without intervention on our part, come upon the dream- thoughts from which the dream originated. To this the critic may make the following objection: That we arrive somewhere if we start from a single element of the dream is not remarkable. Something can be associatively connected with every idea. The only thing that is remarkable is that one should succeed in hitting upon the dream-thoughts in this arbitrary and aimless excursion. It is probably a self-deception; the investigator follows the chain of associations from the one element which is taken up until he finds the chain breaking off, whereupon he takes up a second element; it is thus only natural that the originally unconfined associations should now become narrowed down. He has the former chain of associations still in mind, and will therefore in the analysis of the second dream-idea hit all the more readily upon single associations which have something in common with the associations of the first chain. He then imagines that he has found a thought which represents a point of junction between two of the dream-elements. As he allows himself all possible freedom of thought-connection, excepting only the transitions from one idea to another which occur in normal thinking, it is not difficult for him finally to concoct out of a series of intermediary thoughts, something which he calls the dream-thoughts; and without any guarantee, since they are otherwise unknown, he palms these off as the psychic equivalent of the dream. But all this is a purely arbitrary procedure, an ingenious-looking exploitation of chance, and anyone who will go to this useless trouble can in this way work out any desired interpretation for any dream whatever.
If such objections are really advanced against us, we may in defence refer to the impression produced by our dream- interpretations, the surprising connections with other dream- elements which appear while we are following up the individual ideas, and the improbability that anything which so perfectly covers and explains the dream as do our dream-interpretations could be achieved otherwise than by following previously established psychic connections. We might also point to the fact that the procedure in dream-interpretation is identical with the procedure followed in the resolution of hysterical symptoms, where the correctness of the method is attested by the emergence and disappearance of the symptoms- that is, where the interpretation of the text is confirmed by the interpolated illustrations. But we have no reason to avoid this problem- namely, how one can arrive at a pre-existent aim by following an arbitrarily and aimlessly maundering chain of thoughts- since we shall be able not to solve the problem, it is true, but to get rid of it entirely.
For it is demonstrably incorrect to state that we abandon ourselves to an aimless excursion of thought when, as in the interpretation of dreams, we renounce reflection and allow the involuntary ideas to come to the surface. It can be shown that we are able to reject only those directing ideas which are known to us, and that with the cessation of these the unknown- or, as we inexactly say, unconscious- directing ideas immediately exert their influence, and henceforth determine the flow of the involuntary ideas. Thinking without directing ideas cannot be ensured by any influence we ourselves exert on our own psychic life; neither do I know of any state of psychic derangement in which such a mode of thought establishes itself. * The psychiatrists have here far too prematurely relinquished the idea of the solidity of the psychic structure. I know that an unregulated stream of thoughts, devoid of directing ideas, can occur as little in the realm of hysteria and paranoia as in the formation or solution of dreams. Perhaps it does not occur at all in the endogenous psychic affections, and, according to the ingenious hypothesis of Lauret, even the deliria observed in confused psychic states have meaning and are incomprehensible to us only because of omissions. I have had the same conviction whenever I have had an opportunity of observing such states. The deliria are the work of a censorship which no longer makes any effort to conceal its sway, which, instead of lending its support to a revision that is no longer obnoxious to it, cancels regardlessly anything to which it objects, thus causing the remnant to appear disconnected. This censorship proceeds like the Russian censorship on the frontier, which allows only those foreign journals which have had certain passages blacked out to fall into the bands of the readers to be protected.
* Only recently has my attention been called to the fact that Ed. von Hartmann took the same view with regard to this psychologically important point: Incidental to the discussion of the role of the unconscious in artistic creation (Philos. d. Unbew., Vol. i, Sect. B., Chap. V) Eduard von Hartmann clearly enunciated the law of association of ideas which is directed by unconscious directing ideas, without however realizing the scope of this law. With him it was a question of demonstrating that "every combination of a sensuous idea when it is not left entirely to chance, but is directed to a definite end, is in need of help from the unconscious," and that the conscious interest in any particular thought-association is a stimulus for the unconscious to discover from among the numberless possible ideas the one which corresponds to the directing idea. "It is the unconscious that selects, and appropriately, in accordance with the aims of the interest: and this holds true for the associations in abstract thinking (as sensible representations and artistic combinations as well as for flashes of wit)." Hence, a limiting of the association of ideas to ideas that evoke and are evoked in the sense of pure association-psychology is untenable. Such a restriction "would be justified only if there were states in human life in which man was free not only from any conscious purpose, but also from the domination or cooperation of any unconscious interest, any passing mood. But such a state hardly ever comes to pass, for even if one leaves one's train of thought seemingly altogether to chance, or if one surrenders oneself entirely to the involuntary dreams of phantasy, yet always other leading interests, dominant feelings and moods prevail at one time rather than another, and these will always exert an influence on the association of ideas." (Philos. d. Unbew., IIe, Aufl. i. 246). In semi-conscious dreams there always appear only such ideas as correspond to the (unconscious) momentary main interest. By rendering prominent the feelings and moods over the free thought-series, the methodical procedure of psycho-analysis is thoroughly justified even from the standpoint of Hartmann's Psychology (N. E. Pohorilles, Internat. Zeitschrift. f. Ps. A., I, [1913], p. 605). Du Prel concludes from the fact that a name which we vainly try to recall suddenly occurs to the mind that there is an unconscious but none the less purposeful thinking, whose result then appears in consciousness (Philos. d. Mystik, p. 107).
The free play of ideas following any chain of associations may perhaps occur in cases of destructive organic affections of the brain. What, however, is taken to be such in the psychoneuroses may always be explained as the influence of the censorship on a series of thoughts which have been pushed into the foreground by the concealed directing ideas. * It has been considered an unmistakable sign of free association unencumbered by directing ideas if the emerging ideas (or images) appear to be connected by means of the so-called superficial associations- that is, by assonance, verbal ambiguity, and temporal coincidence, without inner relationship of meaning; in other words, if they are connected by all those associations which we allow ourselves to exploit in wit and playing upon words. This distinguishing mark holds good with associations which lead us from the elements of the dream-content to the intermediary thoughts, and from these to the dream-thoughts proper; in many analyses of dreams we have found surprising examples of this. In these no connection was too loose and no witticism too objectionable to serve as a bridge from one thought to another. But the correct understanding of such surprising tolerance is not far to seek. Whenever one psychic element is connected with another by an obnoxious and superficial association, there exists also a correct and more profound connection between the two, which succumbs to the resistance of the censorship.
* Jung has brilliantly corroborated this statement by analyses of dementia praecox. (Cf. The Psychology of Dementia Praecox, translated by A. A. Brill. Monograph Series, [Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases Publishing Co., New York].)
The correct explanation for the predominance of the superficial associations is the pressure of the censorship, and not the suppression of the directing ideas. Whenever the censorship renders the normal connective paths impassable, the superficial associations will replace the deeper ones in the representation. It is as though in a mountainous region a general interruption of traffic, for example an inundation, should render the broad highways impassable: traffic would then have to be maintained by steep and inconvenient tracks used at other times only by the hunter.
We can here distinguish two cases which, however, are essentially one. In the first case, the censorship is directed only against the connection of two thoughts which, being detached from one another, escape its opposition. The two thoughts then enter successively into consciousness; their connection remains concealed; but in its place there occurs to us a superficial connection between the two which would not otherwise have occurred to us, and which as a rule connects with another angle of the conceptual complex instead of that from which the suppressed but essential connection proceeds. Or, in the second case, both thoughts, owing to their content, succumb to the censorship; both then appear not in their correct form but in a modified, substituted form; and both substituted thoughts are so selected as to represent, by a superficial association, the essential relation which existed between those that they have replaced. Under the pressure of the censorship, the displacement of a normal and vital association by one superficial and apparently absurd has thus occurred in both cases.
Because we know of these displacements, we unhesitatingly rely upon even the superficial associations which occur in the course of dream-interpretation. *
* The same considerations naturally hold good of the case in which superficial associations are exposed in the dream-content, as, for example, in both the dreams reported by Maury (p. 50, pelerinage- pelletier- pelle, kilometer- kilograms- gilolo, Lobelia- Lopez- Lotto). I know from my work with neurotics what kind of reminiscence is prone to represent itself in this manner. It is the consultation of encyclopedias by which most people have satisfied their need of an explanation of the sexual mystery when obsessed by the curiosity of puberty.
The psycho-analysis of neurotics makes abundant use of the two principles: that with the abandonment of the conscious directing ideas the control over the flow of ideas is transferred to the concealed directing ideas; and that superficial associations are only a displacement-substitute for suppressed and more profound ones. Indeed, psycho-analysis makes these two principles the foundation-stones of its technique. When I request a patient to dismiss all reflection, and to report to me whatever comes into his mind, I firmly cling to the assumption that he will not be able to drop the directing idea of the treatment, and I feel justified in concluding that what he reports, even though it may seem to be quite ingenuous and arbitrary, has some connection with his morbid state. Another directing idea of which the patient has no suspicion is my own personality. The full appreciation, as well as the detailed proof of both these explanations, belongs to the description of the psycho-analytic technique as a therapeutic method. We have here reached one of the junctions, so to speak, at which we purposely drop the subject of dream-interpretation. *
* The above statements, which when written sounded very improbable, have since been corroborated and applied experimentally by Jung and his pupils in the Diagnostiche Assoziationsstudien.
Of all the objections raised, only
one is justified and still remains to be met; namely, that we ought not
to ascribe all the associations of the interpretation-work to the nocturnal
dream- work. By interpretation in the waking state we are actually opening
a path running back from the dream-elements to the dream- thoughts. The
dream-work has followed the contrary direction, and it is not at all probable
that these paths are equally passable in opposite directions. On the contrary,
it appears that during the day, by means of new thought-connections, we
sink shafts that strike the intermediary thoughts and the dream-thoughts
now in this place, now in that. We can see how the recent thought- material
of the day forces its way into the interpretation- series, and how the
additional resistance which has appeared since the night probably compels
it to make new and further detours. But the number and form of the collaterals
which we thus contrive during the day are, psychologically speaking, indifferent,
so long as they point the way to the dream-thoughts which we are seeking.
