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simpler manner, although according to the scheme that the non-fulfillment of
one wish signifies the fulfillment of another. I had one day explained to her
that the dream is a wish of fulfillment. The next day she brought me a dream
to the effect that she was traveling with her mother-in-law to their common
summer resort. Now I knew that she had struggled violently against spending
the summer in the neighborhood of her mother-in-law. I also knew that she
had luckily avoided her mother-in-law by renting an estate in a far-distant
country resort. Now the dream reversed this wished-for solution; was not this
in the flattest contradiction to my theory of wish-fulfillment in the dream?
Certainly, it was only necessary to draw the inferences from this dream in
order to get at its interpretation. According to this dream, I was in the wrong.
It was thus her wish that I should be in the wrong, and this wish the dream
showed her as fulfilled. But the wish that I should be in the wrong, which was
fulfilled in the theme of the country home, referred to a more serious matter.
At that time I had made up my mind, from the material furnished by her
analysis, that something of significance for her illness must have occurred at a
certain time in her life. She had denied it because it was not present in her
memory. We soon came to see that I was in the right. Her wish that I should
be in the wrong, which is transformed into the dream, thus corresponded to
the justifiable wish that those things, which at the time had only been
suspected, had never occurred at all. Without an analysis, and merely by
means of an assumption, I took the liberty of interpreting a little occurrence in
the case of a friend, who had been my colleague through the eight classes of
the Gymnasium. He once heard a lecture of mine delivered to a small
assemblage, on the novel subject of the dream as the fulfillment of a wish. He
went home, dreamt that he had lost all his suits—he was a lawyer—and then
complained to me about it. I took refuge in the evasion: “One can’t win all
one’s suits,” but I thought to myself: “If for eight years I sat as Primus on the
first bench, while he moved around somewhere in the middle of the class,
may he not naturally have had a wish from his boyhood days that I, too, might
for once completely disgrace myself?” In the same way another dream of a
more gloomy character was offered me by a female patient as a contradiction
to my theory of the wish-dream. The patient, a young girl, began as follows:
“You remember that my sister has now only one boy, Charles: she lost the
elder one, Otto, while I was still at her house. Otto was my favorite; it was I
who really brought him up. I like the other little fellow, too, but of course not
nearly as much as the dead one. Now I dreamt last night that I saw Charles
lying dead before me. He was lying in his little coffin, his hands folded: there
were candles all about, and, in short, it was just like the time of little Otto’s
death, which shocked me so profoundly. Now tell me, what does this mean?
You know me: am I really bad enough to wish my sister to lose the only child
she has left? Or does the dream mean that I wish Charles to be dead rather
47
zurĂĽck zum
Buch Dream Psychology"
Dream Psychology
- Titel
- Dream Psychology
- Autor
- Sigmund Freud
- Datum
- 1920
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 114
- Schlagwörter
- Neurology, Neurologie, Träume, Psycholgie, Traum
- Kategorien
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International
- Medizin
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Introduction 4
- Chapter 1: Dreams have a meaning 9
- Chapter 2: The Dream mechanism 20
- Chapter 3: Why the dream diguises the desire 34
- Chapter 4: Dream analysis 43
- Chapter 5: Sex in dreams 54
- Chapter 6: The Wish in dreams 67
- Chapter 7: The Function of the dream 79
- Chapter 8: The Primary and Secondary process - Regression 89
- Chapter 9: The Unconscious and Consciousness - Reality 104