May 08, 2022
My Masters degree is in Counseling Psychology with an Emphasis in Depth Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute. The curriculum centers around the teachings of Carl Jung, a descendant of Sigmund Freud who was the first Psychoanalyst to make a connection between our dream lives and our conscious, emotional lives. In my training to become a Depth Psychotherapist, I learned the medicine of dream tending–not analysis or interpretation–and how to take deep dives with my clients to reveal messages from their unconscious. “The unconscious mind is a reservoir of feelings, thoughts, urges, and memories that are outside of our conscious awareness. The unconscious contains contents that are unacceptable or unpleasant, such as feelings of pain, anxiety, or conflict.” Pregnancy is an especially ripe time for activity in your psyche since you are undergoing the most drastic transformation you will ever undergo. “The psyche is the totality of the human mind, conscious and unconscious.”
What tracking dreams can help with during pregnancy
A pregnant person’s waking life is fraught with so much admin (e.g. doctor’s appointments, registry building, birth planning), that their dreams are probably not given enough heed. If you start to pay attention to them and record them, however, you’ll find your psyche working through so many feelings about your journey from maiden to mother. For example, ambivalence about motherhood is pretty socially and psychologically unacceptable, so these feelings often get relegated to your unfiltered unconscious mind and may show up in your dreams.How to track your dreams
“But I don’t remember my dreams.” That is the most common response I hear when I inquire about dreams with my clients. That said, you may remember your dreams more during pregnancy since you tend to be a lighter sleeper (e.g. having a difficult time getting comfortable and/or frequent trips to the bathroom). Here are some suggestions that may help you recall your dreams better so that they don’t just slip through your hands like sand:- Make it a habit
- Keep a dream journey handy
- Record dreams in present tense
- Use a progressive alarm clock
- Spend some time reflecting on the dream