The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud
CHAPTER 1, Section D
D. Why Dreams Are Forgotten After Waking
That a dream fades away in the morning is
proverbial. It is, indeed, possible to recall it. For we know the dream,
of course, only by recalling it after waking; but we very often believe
that we remember it incompletely, that during the night there was more
of it than we remember. We may observe how the memory of a dream which
in the morning was still vivid fades in the course of the day, leaving
only a few trifling remnants. We are often aware that we have been
dreaming, but we do not know of what we have dreamed; and we are so well
used to this fact- that the dream is liable to be forgotten- that we do
not reject as absurd the possibility that we may have been dreaming even
when, in the morning, we know nothing either of the content of the dream
or of the fact that we have dreamed. On the other hand, it often happens
that dreams manifest an extraordinary power of maintaining themselves in
the memory. I have had occasion to analyse, with my patients, dreams
which occurred to them twenty-five years or more previously, and I can
remember a dream of my own which is divided from the present day by at
least thirty-seven years, and yet has lost nothing of its freshness in
my memory. All this is very remarkable, and for the present
incomprehensible.
The forgetting of dreams is treated in
the most detailed manner by Strumpell. This forgetting is evidently a
complex phenomenon; for Strumpell attributes it not to a single cause,
but to quite a number of causes.
In the first place, all those factors
which induce forgetfulness in the waking state determine also the
forgetting of dreams. In the waking state we commonly very soon forget a
great many sensations and perceptions because they are too slight to
remember, and because they are charged with only a slight amount of
emotional feeling. This is true also of many dream-images; they are
forgotten because they are too weak, while the stronger images in their
neighbourhood are remembered. However, the factor of intensity is in
itself not the only determinant of the preservation of dream-images;
Strumpell, as well as other authors (Calkins), admits that dream-images
are often rapidly forgotten although they are known to have been vivid,
whereas, among those that are retained in the memory, there are many
that are very shadowy and unmeaning. Besides, in the waking state one is
wont to forget rather easily things that have happened only once, and to
remember more readily things which occur repeatedly. But most
dream-images are unique experiences, * and this peculiarity would
contribute towards the forgetting of all dreams equally. Of much greater
significance is a third cause of forgetting. In order that feelings,
representations, ideas and the like should attain a certain degree of
memorability, it is important that they should not remain isolated, but
that they should enter into connections and associations of an
appropriate nature. If the words of a verse of poetry are taken and
mixed together, it will be very difficult to remember them. "Properly
placed, in a significant sequence, one word helps another, and the
whole, making sense, remains and is easily and lastingly fixed in the
memory. Contradictions, as a rule, are retained with just as much
difficulty and just as rarely as things that are confused and
disorderly." Now dreams, in most cases, lack sense and order.
Dream-compositions, by their very nature, are insusceptible of being
remembered, and they are forgotten because as a rule they fall to pieces
the very next moment. To be sure, these conclusions are not entirely
consistent with Radestock's observation (p. 168), that we most readily
retain just those dreams which are most peculiar.
* Periodically recurrent dreams have been
observed repeatedly. Compare the collection made by Chabaneix.
According to Strumpell, other factors,
deriving from the relation of the dream to the waking state, are even
more effective in causing us to forget our dreams. The forgetfulness of
dreams manifested by the waking consciousness is evidently merely the
counterpart of the fact already mentioned, namely, that the dream hardly
ever takes over an orderly series of memories from the waking state, but
only certain details of these memories, which it removes from the
habitual psychic connections in which they are remembered in the waking
state. The dream-composition, therefore, has no place in the community
of the psychic series which fill the mind. It lacks all mnemonic aids.
"In this manner the dream-structure rises, as it were, from the soil of
our psychic life, and floats in psychic space like a cloud in the sky,
quickly dispelled by the first breath of reawakening life" (p. 87). This
situation is accentuated by the fact that on waking the attention is
immediately besieged by the inrushing world of sensation, so that very
few dream-images are capable of withstanding its force. They fade away
before the impressions of the new day like the stars before the light of
the sun.
Finally, we should remember that the fact
that most people take but little interest in their dreams is conducive
to the forgetting of dreams. Anyone who for some time applies himself to
the investigation of dreams, and takes a special interest in them,
usually dreams more during that period than at any other; he remembers
his dreams more easily and more frequently.
Two other reasons for the forgetting of
dreams, which Bonatelli (cited by Benini) adds to those adduced by
Strumpell, have already been included in those enumerated above; namely,
(1) that the difference of the general sensation in the sleeping and the
waking state is unfavourable to mutual reproduction, and (2) that the
different arrangement of the material in the dream makes the dream
untranslatable, so to speak, for the waking consciousness.
It is therefore all the more remarkable,
as Strumpell himself observes, that, in spite of all these reasons for
forgetting the dream, so many dreams are retained in the memory. The
continual efforts of those who have written on the subject to formulate
laws for the remembering of dreams amount to an admission that here,
too, there is something puzzling and unexplained. Certain peculiarities
relating to the remembering of dreams have attracted particular
attention of late; for example, the fact that the dream which is
believed to be forgotten in the morning may be recalled in the course of
the day on the occasion of some perception which accidentally touches
the forgotten content of the dream (Radestock, Tissie). But the whole
recollection of dreams is open to an objection which is calculated
greatly to depreciate its value in critical eyes. One may doubt whether
our memory, which omits so much from the dream, does not falsify what it
retains.
This doubt as to the exactness of the
reproduction of dreams is expressed by Strumpell when he says: "It may
therefore easily happen that the waking consciousness involuntarily
interpolates a great many things in the recollection of the dream; one
imagines that one has dreamt all sorts of things which the actual dream
did not contain."
Jessen (p. 547) expresses himself in very
decided terms:
"Moreover, we must not lose sight of the
fact, hitherto little heeded, that in the investigation and
interpretation of coherent and logical dreams we almost always take
liberties with the truth when we recall a dream to memory. Unconsciously
and unintentionally we fill up the gaps and supplement the dream-images.
Rarely, and perhaps never, has a connected dream been as connected as it
appears to us in memory. Even the most truth-loving person can hardly
relate a dream without exaggerating and embellishing it in some degree.
The human mind so greatly tends to perceive everything in a connected
form that it intentionally supplies the missing links in any dream which
is in some degree incoherent."
The observations of V. Eggers, though of
course independently conceived, read almost like a translation of
Jessen's words:
"...L'observation des reves a ses
difficultes speciales et le seul moyen d'eviter toute erreur en pareille
matiere est de confier au papier sans le moindre retard ce que l'on
vient d'eprouver et de remarquer; sinon, l'oubli vient vite ou total ou
partiel; l'oubli total est sans gravite; mais l'oubli partiel est
perfide: car si l'on se met ensuite a raconter ce que l'on n'a pas
oublie, on est expose a completer par imagination les fragments
incoherents et disjoints fourni par la memoire... on devient artiste a
son insu, et le recit, periodiquement repete s'impose a la creance de
son auteur, qui, de bonne foi, le presente comme un fait authentique,
dument etabli selon les bonnes methodes...." *
* ...The observation of dreams has its
special difficulties, and the only way to avoid all error in such matter
is to put on paper without the least delay what has just been
experienced and noticed; otherwise, totally or partially the dream is
quickly forgotten; total forgetting is without seriousness; but partial
forgetting is treacherous: for, if one then starts to recount what has
not been forgotten, one is likely to supplement from the imagination the
incoherent and disjointed fragments provided by the memory....
unconsciously one becomes an artist, and the story, repeated from time
to time, imposes itself on the belief of its author, who, in good faith,
tells it as authentic fact, regularly established according to proper
methods....
Similarly Spitta, who seems to think that
it is only in the attempt to reproduce the dream that we bring order and
arrangement into loosely associated dream-elements- "turning
juxtaposition into concatenation; that is, adding the process of logical
connection which is absent in the dream."
Since we can test the reliability of our
memory only by objective means, and since such a test is impossible in
the case of dreams, which are our own personal experience, and for which
we know no other source than our memory, what value do our recollections
of our dreams possess?
Table of
Contents
THE SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE OF DREAM-PROBLEMS (UP
TO 1900)
The Relation of the Dream to the Waking State
The Material of Dreams- Memory in Dreams
Dream-Stimuli and Sources
External sensory stimuli
Internal (subjective) sensory stimuli
Internal (organic) physical stimuli
Psychic sources of excitation
Why Dreams Are Forgotten After Waking
The Psychological Peculiarities of Dreams
The Ethical Sense in Dreams
Dream-Theories and the Function of the Dream
The Relation between Dreams and Mental
Diseases
ADDENDUM 1909
ADDENDUM 1914