The Variety of Dream Experience: Expanding Our Ways of Working with Dreams, Second EditionMontague Ullman, Claire Limmer State University of New York Press, 12/08/1999 - 280 páginas The versatility of dreams—their intrinsic creativity and their healing potential—extends beyond their clinical usefulness. This versatility comes to life in the way this book's contributors have succeeded in extending dream work into the public domain—the home, the church, and the educational arena. The various perspectives include literature, creative writing, cultural anthropology, the priesthood, political science, computer science, history, psychosomatic medicine, and individual and group psychotherapy. Taken together they illustrate the far-reaching value of understanding our dreams and how much they can tell us about ourselves. In this second edition of The Variety of Dream Experience, chapters have been updated and significant changes have been made in the way the group process is structured, making it easier to master and more effective in its application. Three new chapters have been added: one that discusses the importance of dream work in the training of pastoral counselors, another on how the experiential dream group process can be integrated into group psychotherapy, and a third on how the principles and rationale of the dream group process can be of help in individual therapy. Two other chapters have been substantially expanded: one on the role social forces play in the shaping of the dream, and the other on a very moving account of the role a dream played in working through an abusive relationship. |
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Resultados 1-5 de 63
Página x
... feel safe as he or she moves along this private path back into the intimate domain of the psyche , and second , to be helped to see what the dream images may be revealing that are difficult for the dreamer to see alone . I refer to the ...
... feel safe as he or she moves along this private path back into the intimate domain of the psyche , and second , to be helped to see what the dream images may be revealing that are difficult for the dreamer to see alone . I refer to the ...
Página xi
... feel comfortable for his wak- ing ego . He is there to learn to use the dream itself as a healing instrument . The ability to do this depends on how secure he is made to feel by the way the group process is structured ; this , in turn ...
... feel comfortable for his wak- ing ego . He is there to learn to use the dream itself as a healing instrument . The ability to do this depends on how secure he is made to feel by the way the group process is structured ; this , in turn ...
Página xii
... feel that mental health professionals have an important role in the extension of dream work into the community . Sweden offers a model in this respect . Since working intensively with such professionals there for over ten years , I have ...
... feel that mental health professionals have an important role in the extension of dream work into the community . Sweden offers a model in this respect . Since working intensively with such professionals there for over ten years , I have ...
Página 5
... do when we are awake . There is another feature of dreaming consciousness that makes the remembered dream so useful an instrument for getting to know who we really are and what we really feel . I refer The Experiential Dream Group 5.
... do when we are awake . There is another feature of dreaming consciousness that makes the remembered dream so useful an instrument for getting to know who we really are and what we really feel . I refer The Experiential Dream Group 5.
Página 6
... feel . I refer to the intrinsic honesty with which events are registered in the imagery we create . We are completely alone while dreaming . With no one looking over our shoulder it is as if we risk taking an honest look at ourselves ...
... feel . I refer to the intrinsic honesty with which events are registered in the imagery we create . We are completely alone while dreaming . With no one looking over our shoulder it is as if we risk taking an honest look at ourselves ...
Índice
3 | |
After the Dream is Over | 31 |
A Mothers Dream Group | 49 |
Linking Cultural | 65 |
Dream Reflection and Creative Writing | 91 |
The Dream in a College Classroom | 117 |
Dreams as Social Intelligence | 141 |
From Abram | 161 |
Steps toward | 185 |
APPLICATIONS IN PSYCHOLOGY | 199 |
A Personal | 215 |
Clinical Work with Dreams | 235 |
Dreams and Society | 255 |
Contributors | 275 |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
The Variety of Dream Experience: Expanding Our Ways of Working with Dreams ... Montague Ullman,Claire Limmer Pré-visualização limitada - 1999 |
The Variety of Dream Experience: Expanding Our Ways of Working with Dreams ... Montague Ullman,Claire Limmer Pré-visualização limitada - 1999 |
The Variety of Dream Experience: Expanding Our Ways of Working with Dreams Montague Ullman,Claire Limmer Visualização de excertos - 1987 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Abram alexithymia analytic analytic setting anthropologists appreciate asked aspects become chapter Church of Sweden collective unconscious communication connection consciousness context creative cultural denotes described dream image dream interpretation dream reflection dream sharing dream work movement dream workers dreamwork E. B. White emotional ence experienced experiential dream group explore expressed feel felt fieldwork Foulkes Gothenburg group dream group members group process healing help the dreamer human imagery important individual inner insight interest in dreams interpretation involved issues language learning lives look lucid dreaming manifest content meaning metaphor Montague Ullman mother occur offer one's orchestrating organ ourselves pastoral counseling perspective play psychoanalytic psychosomatic psychotherapy question refers relationship response role seminar sense sharing significance skills social society stage structure struggle student symbols therapist therapy things thoughts tion unconscious unconscious communication understanding vision waking words writing Yahweh York Zimmerman