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I Often Dream of My Family's Death: What Does It Mean?
by Richard Wilkerson, Dream Educator
It disturbs many of us that our dream world ethics, morals and desires don't always match the ones in our waking life. We spend a lifetime building values that are meaningful to us, and then throw them all away in a dream. To paraphrase St. Augustine, "Thank God I'm not responsible for my dreams!"
But modern dream workers (as well as Freud, Jung and Adler) take a different tack and feel that we are aware in the back of our minds that we *are* dreaming, and we know the situation is really just a kind of play.
Dreamland, Adler said, is a kind of experimental place for us to try out new things. Jung saw dreamland as moving us into better futures. Freud felt that the lack of imaginary expression caused neurosis.
Just because we may find it expedient to kill in a dream has little or no bearing on our daytime ethics. Thus dreams are best not taken literally. The symbolic death of parents is an age old ritual we all continually go through. For example, I continually "place" new parents and critics and guides up in my life and then have to dismantle them later to continue growing. My father once told me in a dream that he wasn't my father. I know this isn't literally true, but symbolically I saw that his values no longer were functioning for me.
About the Author:
Richard Wilkerson is general editor for The Internet Dream E-zine, Electric Dreams, and director of DreamGate, the Internet Communications and Dream Education Center. He writes the Cyberphile column for the Association for the Study of Dreams Newsletter.
Revised 04/28/2009 by Marlene M. Maheu, Ph.D.


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