
“The task consists in integrating the unconscious, in bringing together “conscious” and “unconscious.”
I have called this the individuation process.”
— Jung, CW5
Jungian Analysis and Dream Work
To integrate the unconscious, one must give the unconscious a hearing. Jungian Analysis is the vessel where Analyst and client listen to the unconscious, through dream work. It is almost like contemplating together on a dream, because “The dream is a little hidden door in the innermost and most secret recesses of the soul…” (CW 10). It is the via regia (the royal road) to the unconscious. Dreams contain energies in the forms of the inner figures, who are parts of the individual that have been forgotten, rejected or neglected, energies that free the individual from the ego’s narrow existence. The dream knows what the ego does not know. “…they are always a little bit ahead of the dreamer’s consciousness.” If the person understands the message of the dream, it will be an experience he or she will never forget and will value more than anything else, a treasure that can never be attained from ego consciousness alone.
It is as if there is someone who is giving us a true picture of ourselves, who gives us the answers we are looking for. The ego must participate. The work cannot be left alone to the dream maker, or the dream itself. “The more you work on your dreams and the unconscious, and honor it, the more you understand it and it understands you.” (Marion Woodman). The more you work on your dreams, the dreams respond with more dreams. It becomes a relationship, a deep inner conversation.
Having a dream journal is very helpful. I suggest that dreams are written by hand, any dream that comes in the night. One must show up and create a sacred space, be a scribe, or pupil, meditate on the dream images, allow other images to come and feel the dream. Look at each figure and symbol the dream has produced, and ground them in ones life in the here and now. There are many kinds of dreams. There are complementary dreams, or compensatory, as well as archetypal dreams. There are also dreams that may sometimes announce a certain situation, or a dream about a past that has been hidden from the dreamer. One must take heed. If we ignore our dreams, or have an attitude of “oh it’s only a dream” then it is as if we have ignored the self that wants so much to live, and wants so much to give us life.
Individuation is the life that belongs to the individual, and has to be lived. “It is that one becomes what one is. That one accomplishes ones destiny.”
— Jung CW 2