ABSTRACT

This monograph focuses on a systemic approach to dream interpretation and the unique importance of the initial dream. The first dream reported in a psychoanalytic therapy session poignantly encapsulates the major issues that the patient brings to the treatment. These dreams 'herald' the trajectory of the treatment and can be interpreted in the service of psychodynamic diagnosis and prognosis.The book melds aspects of Jungian dream analysis, with neo-Freudian analytic thought, current neurobiological concepts, and Buddhist psychology, to yield a rich and powerful understanding of how dreams symbolize the multifaceted aspects of the psyche. Multiple examples of initial dreams are discussed in detail, with suggestions for how they can inform the analytic stance and serve as objects for analysis over the course of a treatment.

part 1|62 pages

Dreams

chapter One|6 pages

Introduction

chapter Two|34 pages

Dreams in Theory

chapter Three|13 pages

Dreams in Practice

chapter Four|7 pages

Approaching the Dream

part 2|83 pages

Herald Dreams

chapter Five|8 pages

The Centrality of Dreams

chapter Six|13 pages

Chains

chapter Seven|8 pages

The Cook

chapter Eight|11 pages

Bombs Away

chapter Nine|10 pages

Shadowlands

chapter Ten|7 pages

My Big Fat Greek Wedding

chapter Eleven|7 pages

The Reptilian Brain

chapter Twelve|9 pages

Out of Control

chapter Thirteen|5 pages

Dreams in Supervision

chapter Fourteen|3 pages

Conclusion