Emotions and Mood in Dreams
There is a level of human experience which is typified by
intense emotional and physical response to life. Such emotions and
bodily drives may remain almost entirely unconscious until touched
by exploring your dream content in the right setting, or by being
revealed by dramatic events in your life. When such feelings and
bodily movements arise, as they do in dreams, we may be amazed at
their power and clarity. See: processing
dreams; movements during sleep.
We are all unconsciously aware of how emotions and mood flow
into physical movement and actions as well as influencing our
personal response to life. We recognise how someone who is
vivacious is expressing lively emotions. Similarly someone who is
depressed physically is obviously withdrawn emotionally. In fact
emotions are not only what energises us, but also what can pull us
down, cause us to withdraw or give up. The feelings we have about
people and events are also sensors telling us how we are
responding, what frightens us, what excites us. So any means used
to deaden emotions also deadens these sensors.
It is now well known that emotions can have very destructive
effects on the body, as in grief and anxiety. Also the healing
effects of laughter and pleasure are equally marked. Dreams help
us see how our moods and emotions are influencing our health and
general responsiveness in life.
If we take away the images and events occurring in a dream and
simply look to see what feelings or emotions are evident, the
dream is often more understandable than if we try to interpret the
symbols. Feelings in dreams are nearly always undistorted. We
therefore do not need to interpret them, simply to recognise them
and see if we can recognise where they occur in waking life.
The images in a dream may be the way we unconsciously
pictorialise our flux of feelings and the play of internal energy
flows. For instance love or sexual drive can give rise to physical
movement - as in sexual intercourse. Repression of sex or love
also represses such physical movements, leading to tension and
conflict, which might be presented in the drama of a dream.
Example: I was with my wife, walking along a street, on
holiday with her. But I felt awful tension. It was the sort of
stress I feel when I have turned off my sexual flow - as I have
at the moment. Brian V.
Brian can easily see the connection between the dream feelings
and his everyday life. Making such connections may take practice.
But the situation could as easily be expressed as a dream image of
a blocked river. The underlying feelings would then be less easy
to grasp.
Example: I was in a very ancient crumbling building,
confronted by a large stone door, deeply engraved with many
designs and creatures. I began to open the door and felt high
feelings of anxiety. I realised this was an initiation and I
must calm my feelings in order to pass beyond the door. i.e. if
I were controlled by my feelings I would run away. Derek
F.
How we meet the emotions in our dreams illustrates our habitual
method of dealing with them. The feelings of anxiety in Dereks
dream were met and moved beyond, but this is unusual. This is
because most of us change our direction as soon as there is a hint
of fear. The amount of nicotine and alcohol human beings consume
suggests how poorly we meet anxiety, considering that both these
drugs inhibit feelings, and thereby deaden anxiety. Going beyond
fear or pain is an initiation which opens doors for us. We might
now apply for the job; ask for the date; raise the issue; express
the creativity; make the journey abroad, which anxiety previously
kept us from. We see this in the next example.
Example: I had a ring on my marriage finger. It was a
thin band of gold. I woke up frightened. Angela LBC.
Angela is not married and feels obvious anxiety about the
commitment.
Dreams give us a safe area to express emotions which might be
difficult or dangerous to release socially. Anger in a dream may
be expressing what we failed to discharge in a waking encounter,
or it might be our habitual response. It may also be directed
against oneself, causing illness or tension.
Dreams also contain many positive emotions. Sometimes they
present a new aspect of feeling which is life enhancing. In the
example below the dreamer overcomes the feeling of defeat and
death, and in imagery expresses a sense of rebirth.
Example: While heavily pregnant 11 years ago I dreamt I and
thousands of Japanese-like soldiers had been at war and lost.
Our punishment was beheading. Not wanting to see my comrades
killed I went to the front. I felt the cold blade hit my neck,
then was dead, outside my body. Dressed in golden armour with a
lion symbol I told my comrades they outnumbered the enemy. They
won and took my baby from my dead body. BMW - Southport.
Some feeling states in a dream are subtle, and may be more
evident in terms of the symbols than the feelings. A grey drear
environment suggests depression and lack of pleasure. A sunny
light environment with flowers and colour shows pleasure and good
feelings. A country landscape depicts quite a different feeling
state to a smoky busy city street. We can define these for
ourselves using the techniques described under
processing dreams.
Whatever feelings or emotions we meet in our dreams, many of
them are bound to be habitual responses we have to life. Where
these habits are negative we can begin to change them by working
with the dream images as described in Can
I alter the dream to find greater satisfaction?.

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