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Paperback Tracks in the Wilderness Book

ISBN: 0385315295

ISBN13: 9780385315296

Tracks in the Wilderness

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Format: Paperback

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People in every culture of the world--while dreaming--are convinced that they are awake and surrounded by an absolutely real world.??Renowned Jungian analyst Robert Bosnak has also found that... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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A masterful perspective on dream interpretation

Tracking the Dream Story Sometimes the most simple, obvious statement contains the most profound truth. Case in point: A dream is a story. It1s a simple idea, almost obvious when you think about it. Dreams have the drama of powerful stories. Have you ever wondered why, if dreams are supposed to be 3messages2, that they usually come in the form of stories, rather than in the form of explanations or instructions? I1m sure you1ve wished, 3If my dreams are trying to get a message across to me, why don1t they do it more directly?2 Have you ever considered that, maybe, the story is the most direct method? We all enjoy stories. We respond to them more directly than we do to dry, intellectual explanations. We are now just beginning to understand, in a dry intellectual, scientific way, how people understand stories and grasp their meaning. Responding to stories is so natural, we never wondered how we do it. Carl Jung pointed out the dramatic structure of dreams and began the study of how stories affect us. Edgar Cayce used the theme of the dream1s story as a basis of his dream interpretations. That method is now a cornerstone of modern dream interpretation. If story is such an important way of learning, it would seem natural to teach about dreams by telling stories about them. Of all the dream experts I know, the one who does the best job of this style of teaching is Robert Bosnak. A Jungian analyst originally from the Netherlands, Bosnak first came to national attention with his book, Dreaming with an AIDS Patient. In this book (that became the basis for a stage play), he told us the story of his involvement with a person who was very much alive as well as terminally ill. At the same time he taught us a lot about dreams and dreamwork, using both his patients and his own dreams. In an earlier book, titled, A Little Course on Dreams, he told us stories about himself and his patients to illustrate the life of dreams and the attempts to find meaning in them. Bosnak1s latest book, Tracks in the Wilderness of Dreams (Delacorte Press), is a story within a story, and an important new contribution to dream interpretation. At one level, the story is about his visit to Australia where he exchanges professional trade secrets with Aborigenee healers. At another level, it is Bosnak1s own story of his dreams helping him reconcile with his father1s death. Within these two personal accounts we learn how to work with dreams in the Bosnak mode. An important dimension of his creative style of dreamwork is attending to the emotional atmosphere of a dream. Much of the value of a dream is in revealing emotional realities normally hidden from the dreamer. Bosnak illustrates how the emotional atmosphere in a dream story is a psychic field in which others can participate. Yet I1ve found that the story doesn1t even have to be told for its emotional field to have communicative power. Eleven years ago in this magazine (Sept/Oct, 1985), I described an exciting new dime
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