The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud
II.
Another guileless dream of the same
patient, which in some respects is a pendant to the above. Her husband
asks her: "Oughtn't we to have the piano tuned?" She replies: "It's not
worth while, the hammers would have to be rebuffed as well." Again we
have the reproduction of an actual event of the preceding day. Her
husband had asked her such a question, and she had answered it in such
words. But what is the meaning of her dreaming it? She says of the piano
that it is a disgusting old box which has a bad tone; it belonged to her
husband before they were married, * etc., but the key to the true
solution lies in the phrase: It isn't worth while. This has its origin
in a call paid yesterday to a woman friend. She was asked to take off
her coat, but declined, saying: "Thanks, it isn't worth while, I must go
in a moment." At this point I recall that yesterday, during the
analysis, she suddenly took hold of her coat, of which a button had come
undone. It was as though she meant to say: "Please don't look in, it
isn't worth while." Thus box becomes chest, and the interpretation of
the dream leads to the years when she was growing out of her childhood,
when she began to be dissatisfied with her figure. It leads us back,
indeed, to earlier periods, if we take into consideration the disgusting
and the bad tone, and remember how often in allusions and in dreams the
two small hemispheres of the female body take the place- as a substitute
and an antithesis- of the large ones.
* A substitution by the opposite, as will
be clear after analysis.
Table of
Contents
THE MATERIAL AND SOURCES OF DREAMS
Recent and Indifferent Impressions in the Dream
Analysis
II.
III.
IV.
V.
Infantile Experiences as the Source of Dreams
I.
II.
III.
IV.
I.
II.
The Somatic Sources of Dreams
Typical Dreams
THE EMBARRASSMENT-DREAM OF NAKEDNESS
DREAMS OF THE DEATH OF BELOVED PERSONS
I.
II.
III.
IV.
The Examination-Dream