ABSTRACT

This book explains the use of dreams as a tool in psychotherapy to provide meaning, establish and maintain a therapeutic relationship, and thus enhance and progress treatment. Maintaining a focus on the synergy between dreams and relationship, it includes interviews with four eminent dream researchers and scholars: John S. Antrobus, G. William Domhoff, Mark J. Blechner, and J. Allan Hobson.

This book explores the synergistic qualities between dreams and relationships, and how that synergy generates biographically, professionally, and psychotherapeutically formative experiences. The book delineates the ways in which dreams provide a foundation for relating, provides a container (Bion, 1967/1993) for the unthought known (Bollas, 1987), creates meaning through relationships, and ultimately fosters dispersion of relational dynamics originating from the culture of the times and more. From a relational psychoanalytic perspective, this book describes the role of dreams in shaping our relational living.

This book provides a unique perspective that illustrates using yourself as a tool in relational establishment, preservation, and knowing. It is ideal for students working toward an understanding of the influence of intersubjective space in clinical interactions and clinicians looking for additional and alternate ways to connect with patients.

chapter 1|7 pages

Setting the context

Using dreams to enhance psychotherapy

chapter 2|9 pages

John S. Antrobus

Keep asking better questions and getting better answers

chapter 3|9 pages

G. William Domhoff

Sharing information

chapter 4|10 pages

Mark J. Blechner

Having the privilege of entering the lives of others

chapter 5|16 pages

J. Allan Hobson

Recognizing the person behind the scientific discovery

chapter 6|4 pages

Pulling it all together

Shaping lives through the synergistic quality of dreams and relationships