Dreams from the Jungian coaching point of view – by Avi Goren Bar – Facebook Live
I would like to thank you for participating in the Jan. 4th live stream Facebook on dreams and for sharing your Dreams.
This was a significant contribution to the event!
We were fortunate to have 90 participants from different countries and you enabled me to share my knowledge in dream work in a coaching process.
As you know I have been practicing dream analysis for many years and this experience enables me to integrate a dream message, to decipher images and symbols and access archetypal wisdom to the client.
Here are the basic principles a coach should keep in mind when approaching a coahcee’s dream:
1. The dream derives from the client’s unconscious and should be taken as a gift brought to coaching. As such, it is granting great opportunity to comprehend the client’s unconscious decisions.
2. The more you investigate with your client the details of the dream , the more you both will understand the dream’s message. Do take the dream’s details as pieces of a whole puzzle which you wish to assemble.
3. There are Macro dreams, “Big dreams” which refer to existential issues the client is preoccupied with, and there are micro dreams which elaborate conscious daily dilemmas.
4. Do respect your choachee’s dreams with respect and containment, approach them with curiosity and try to grasp the ,message in the dream.
We have a long session on dreams on our Jungian coaching international program starts on 12th of February 2021 – Do not miss early bird registration: https://jungiancoachingschool.com/int…
Stein (1998), a well-known Jungian, writes that “dreams are made out of these unconscious images, the complexes”. Samuels, who wrote The Post-Jungians, tells us (1985) that in relating to dreams, “Jung’s disagreement with Freud was over the question of manifest and latent dream content, Jung looked at dreams content as psychic facts”.
The myth is the tribe’s dream, while the dream is the individual’s myth, said Jung.
Sometimes during a coaching process, the coachee will bring to a meeting a dream he recalls. A dream in Jungian coaching can be taken as a gift because it is a spontaneous unconscious content, serving as a transcendent function and practically can convey a message, give direction and advise.
Our unconscious is connected to the collective unconscious, and is an autonomous creative reservoir of drives, ideas, symbols and images which strives to actualize itself through dreams, arts and acts.
Von Franz (Jung’s favorite disciple) and Boa (1988), in their outstanding book, “The Way of the Dream” say:” Each one of the thousands of dreams we have during our lifetime is unique.
Some seem straightforward while others are complex, but all dreams are spontaneous and unpredictable.” (p. 40). In Jungian terms, one devotes to a ‘dream work’, meaning, trying to decipher the hidden message which the dream holds for the coachee.
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