02/19/2026
At the very least, engaging dream interpretation begins to cultivate an inner life.
It slowly shifts us from an outer orientation, where algorithms and social conditioning unconsciously tell us who we are and what is possible, back toward the depth of possibility of what we can actualize from a sense of inner authority.
The practice is a turn inward.
Dream work invites a different kind of authority. Not authority imposed from the outside, but inner authority, rooted in psyche, instinct, imagination, and lived experience.
As Jung observed,
“The more consciousness is influenced by prejudices, errors, fantasies, and infantile wishes, the more the already existing gap widens into a neurotic dissociation and leads to a more or less artificial life, far removed from healthy instincts, nature, and truth.”
As Jung also wrote,
“The general function of dreams is to restore psychological balance. They compensate for one sidedness and quietly work to reestablish total psychic equilibrium.”
Through a methodical dream interpretation process, we begin to move away from outer demands, environmental pressures, and conditioned illusions, and toward a more authentic life because we are reading the intentionality of the Self. This work helps loosen our attachment to unexamined ideas, inflated opinions, and the one sidedness of consciousness that is often influenced by repressed aspects of the unconscious. It also calls us to confront the enemy within, so it is not unconsciously projected onto an enemy without, a dynamic that is subtle, pervasive, and deeply implicated in our current sense of division. As Jung famously said, “Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”