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To find a dream image,
click on the letter of the alphabet below to take you to the right
set of entries.
A
- B - C -
D - E
F
- G - H -
I - J
K
- L - M -
N - O
P
- Q - R -
S - T
U
- V - W -
X - Y -
Z

IMPORTANT -
IMPORTANT - IMPORTANT
I have taken many years to arrive at the possible
meaning of each dream symbol. But the written descriptions are a
lot more helpful if you add something to what is said. You need to
add a little time and effort to place what is said in connection
with your everyday life. For instance, in the entry on ABANDONED,
the description suggests the dream might be saying you are feeling
uncared for or insecure. Take time to consider if you can
recognise those feelings in your thoughts or emotions in waking
life. If you can, talk or write out when such feelings first
appeared in your life. Record in some way what part they play in
your relationships or decisions. Define how they influence you.
Particularly allow any feelings or ideas to surface that you have
about them. This is the real way to discover the enormous
information dreams hold in them, and the enormous potential for
change they offer you. Remember that just as words have different
meanings because of context in a sentence, so dream images gain
significance from context also. It might help if the read the
features Introduction to
Dreams .
Your own associations are of great importance also.
This is because your dream images are created out of your personal
experiences, resposes to and feelings about things. A simple way
to arrive at some of your own associations is to write down the
word describing the image. Supposing the image word is 'train' -
you might immediately say, "Hate trains. don't like
travelling on them or meeting the people on them." So your
dream train could depict a way of getting about in your life that
you don't like because it confronts you with people. In this way
build up your own dream dictionary of your dream images. Don't
forget to keep a record of them for future reference.

IMPORTANT INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO
USE THE INTERPRETER
To make the interpreter of reasonable length, key words have
been given as often as possible. Thus one may read aggressiveness,
self opinionation, dislike of criticism. In such cases, each word
stands for a separate possible meaning of the dream symbol.
As many meanings as possible have been given for each symbol.
These include everyday speech associations, sexual meanings,
meanings suggested by the symbols shape and function, and
its religious, philosophical and psychological significance.
Therefore, in attempting to understand your own dream, you must
decide for yourself which, if any, of these meanings really fit
the symbol as it appears; and whether it makes sense to
you, describes something you can really understand and is not just
a jumble of words.
This is exactly the same as in everyday speech, where one word,
such as dog, can mean very different things in different
sentences. A hot-dog is not a growling dog, nor is it dog eared or
even a dog-end. So context in a dream, is what gives you the
specific meaning, just as it does in language.
I recommend reading the feature
Gaining Insight into Your Dreams
before using the dream dictionary.
Your Dream Symbols
I hope you realise that no symbol in any dream can
be given one meaning. We cannot simply say that a house
stands for yourself, a river for the flow of life, a baby for the
infant self, etc. Not only do symbols change their meaning
according to the way each dream uses them, but also, personal
associations determine the symbols meaning. Because of this,
no person other than yourself can really interpret a dream. The
most they can do is to suggest a meaning that can then either be
confirmed or denied from your own personal experience.
Therefore, the descriptions that accompany the
symbols are suggestions. They must be pondered over to see whether
they really do make your dream, and your own self, clear to you.
In most cases, what is said will only be half the truth, a
fraction of the meaning the dream implies. It may give but a hint.
If it does only that, then I shall consider all the work of
description worth while. It has often been the tiny hints other
people have given in their analysis of symbols, that have helped
me to at last unlock the truth in my own dreams.
The Dream Interpreter is taken from my first book
on dreams - Do
You Dream, written in 1971. It had a
fairly large dream dictionary at the end of the book. I have
revised this to bring it up to date. It is not as large and
extensive as the dictionary in Dream
Dictionary. But it is big and well worked out
from a lot of research on my part.

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