The most authoritative and comprehensive book available on dreams and dreaming. Enter the fascinating world of dreams, their mysteries, their meanings: to dream of a bird flying freely represents hopes and aspirations; to dream of winter means a time in life that is not fruitful; to be visited by someone in a dream can mean that there is information, warmth, or love available; to be searching in a dream is an attempt to find an answer to a problem. These are just a few of the 10,000 dream images and interpretations contained in this volume, a book that can bring insight, clarification, and guidance.
Doyenne of dream interpretation Pamela Ball has followed up her internationally successful 10,000 Dreams Interpreted with this magnificent new volume.
The Complete Dream Book uses the interpretation of 28,000 actual dreams from contemporary dreamers, just like you, to help you access the substance and meaning of your own dreams.
The insights related to the specific symbols in this extensive guide are the keys to creativity, growth, and understanding.
A record of the writer's actual dreams is populated by characters from his novels.
This guide shows how to remember dreams, interpret them, and how to deal with problem dreams such as nightmares. It contains a dream theme section and a dream thesaurus.
What do your dreams really mean...for your love life? The Complete Dream Book of Love and Relationships is a groundbreaking guidebook for using what's already in your head to understand your heart.
Revealing how dreams influence such things as memory, health, and relationships, a guide to making positive changes by identifying dream messages also explains how to reconnect with departed loved ones through dreams.
The Complete A to Z Dictionary of Dreams: Be Your Own Dream Expert also contains background information on dreams and dreaming, answering questions such as: What is a dream? Why do we dream? How do I remember my dreams?
When psychiatrist and dream scholar Dr. Elena Burroughs discovers a pattern of dreams that predicts an imminent financial collapse, she reluctantly teams up with a skeptical scientist in an attempt to avert catastrophe.
Even more revisionist was Jung. Once a disciple and close friend of Freud, Jung developed a distinctly different point of view about psychoanalysis and about dreams. As we did with Freud, we shall only sketch some of his ideas.