To: K-list 
Recieved: 2003/07/26  17:48  
Subject: RE: [K-list] Dream wars and Jung 
From: R
  
On 2003/07/26  17:48, R posted thus to the K-list: 
  
 
Hey there everyone, 
 
Most of my dream conflicts were with things like winged gargoyles, shuffling 
unseen creatures from behind me, fanged water creatures with huge eyes 
feeding on shipwrecked people.  Some were only icy cold blasts of air that 
surrounded me, sometimes lifting me into the air and throwing me around. 
After meeting Jim I have found that the entities took on a human form only 
powerfully magical and elusive.  All of these could very well be aspects of 
myself projected to my unconscious from my subconscious mind.  For instance 
just the fear of not wanting to see one usually woke me.  I can see how 
these all coalesce.  I do feel that in facing them as a warrior and not an 
analyst, would help the healing begin at a more primal level and therefore 
deeper, base level allowing a solid psychological healing?  I try to 
experience first and then analyze second. 
I don't really know of these things I am an electrical technician by trade. 
:o) 
 
Rodney 
 
-----Original Message----- 
From: K-list-bounces AT_NOSPAM kundalini-gateway.org 
[mailto:K-list-bounces AT_NOSPAM kundalini-gateway.org]On Behalf Of Blue Pearl 
Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2003 1:29 PM 
To: K-list AT_NOSPAM kundalini-gateway.org 
Subject: Re: [K-list] Dream wars and Jung 
 
 
**please remember to delete most of email you are responding to, before 
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Dear Susan, List, 
 
SAC wrote: 
> Let them kill and destroy you. 
 
It is quite interesting how many different views on 
these topic coexist. Both extremes - defend and 
surrender - are comprehensible represented. Your 
view seems to be more Jung oriented and is a very 
promising one for me. 
 
Quote from: http://www.crhsc.umontreal.ca/dreams/znm.htm : 
-+-+-+-+ 
Jung believed that nightmares, like most other types of dreams, serve a 
compensatory function. If people became too flippant or perfunctory in 
their conscious attitude, then a dream could enhance the situation and 
compensate for that waking state in a way that produced a nightmare 
(Jung, 1930, p. 205). Similarly, nightmares could "shock" a dreamer in 
order to impart messages difficult for that person to accept. Traumatic 
nightmares, however, are not viewed in Jungian dream theory as being 
compensatory because they are largely unrelated to the dreamer's 
conscious attitude and "conscious assimilation of the fragment [of the 
psyche] reproduced by the dream does not . . . put an end to the 
disturbance which determined the dreams" (Jung, cited in Mattoon, 1978, 
p.142). 
-+-+-+-+ 
 
Thanks for your post. I will try to integrate that when entering the 
next evil battlefield ;-) 
 
L&L, 
Lars 
 
 
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