VII. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF
THE DREAM PROCESSES (continued)
D. Waking Caused by Dreams -- The Function of Dreams -- The Anxiety Dream
Now that we know that throughout the night the preconscious is
orientated to the wish to sleep, we can follow the dream-process
with proper understanding. But let us first summarize what we
already know about this process. We have seen that day-residues
are left over from the waking activity of the mind, residues from
which it has not been possible to withdraw all cathexis. Either
one of the unconscious wishes has been aroused through the waking
activity during the day or it so happens that the two coincide;
we have already discussed the multifarious possibilities. Either
already during the day or only on the establishment of the state
of sleep the unconscious wish has made its way to the day-
residues, and has effected a transference to them. Thus there
arises a wish transferred to recent material; or the suppressed
recent wish is revived by a reinforcement from the unconscious.
This wish now endeavours to make its way to consciousness along
the normal path of the thought processes, through the
preconscious, to which indeed it belongs by virtue of one of its
constituent elements. It is, however, confronted by the
censorship which still subsists, and to whose influence it soon
succumbs. It now takes on the distortion for which the way has
already been paved by the transference to recent material. So far
it is on the way to becoming something resembling an obsession, a
delusion, or the like, i.e., a thought reinforced by a
transference, and distorted in expression owing to the
censorship. But its further progress is now checked by the state
of sleep of the preconscious; this system has presumably
protected itself against invasion by diminishing its excitations.
The dream-process, therefore, takes the regressive course, which
is just opened up by the peculiarity of the sleeping state, and
in so doing follows the attraction exerted on it by memory-
groups, which are, in part only, themselves present as visual
cathexis, not as translations into the symbols of the later
systems. On its way to regression it acquires representability.
The subject of compression will be discussed later. The dream-
process has by this time covered the second part of its contorted
course. The first part threads its way progressively from the
unconscious scenes or phantasies to the preconscious, while the
second part struggles back from the boundary of the censorship to
the tract of the perceptions. But when the dream-process becomes
a perception-content, it has, so to speak, eluded the obstacle
set up in the Pcs by the censorship and the sleeping state. It
succeeds in drawing attention to itself, and in being remarked by
consciousness. For consciousness, which for us means a sense-
organ for the apprehension of psychic qualities, can be excited
in waking life from two sources: firstly, from the periphery of
the whole apparatus, the perceptive system; and secondly, from
the excitations of pleasure and pain which emerge as the sole
psychic qualities yielded by the transpositions of energy in the
interior of the apparatus. All other processes in the Psi-
systems, even those in the preconscious, are devoid of all
psychic quality, and are therefore not objects of consciousness,
inasmuch as they do not provide either pleasure or pain for its
perception. We shall have to assume that these releases of
pleasure and pain automatically regulate the course of the
cathectic processes. But in order to make possible more delicate
performances, it subsequently proved necessary to render the flow
of ideas more independent of pain-signals. To accomplish this,
the Pcs system needed qualities of its own which could attract
consciousness, and most probably received them through the
connection of the preconscious processes with the memory-system
of speech-symbols, which was not devoid of quality. Through the
qualities of this system, consciousness, hitherto only a sense-
organ for perceptions, now becomes also a sense-organ for a part
of our thought-processes. There are now, as it were, two sensory
surfaces, one turned toward perception and the other toward the
preconscious thought-processes.
I must assume that the sensory surface of consciousness which is
turned to the preconscious is rendered far more unexcitable by
sleep than the surface turned toward the P-system. The giving up
of interest in the nocturnal thought-process is, of course, an
appropriate procedure. Nothing is to happen in thought; the
preconscious wants to sleep. But once the dream becomes
perception, it is capable of exciting consciousness through the
qualities now gained. The sensory excitation performs what is in
fact its function; namely, it directs a part of the cathectic
energy available in the Pcs to the exciting cause in the form of
attention. We must therefore admit that the dream always has a
waking effect- that is, it calls into activity part of the
quiescent energy of the Pcs. Under the influence of this energy,
it now undergoes the process which we have described as secondary
elaboration with a view to coherence and comprehensibility. This
means that the dream is treated by this energy like any other
perception-content; it is subjected to the same anticipatory
ideas as far, at least, as the material allows. As far as this
third part of the dream-process has any direction, this is once
more progressive.
To avoid misunderstanding, it will not be amiss to say a few
words as to the temporal characteristics of these dream-
processes. In a very interesting discussion, evidently suggested
by Maury's puzzling guillotine dream, Goblot tries to demonstrate
that a dream takes up no other time than the transition period
between sleeping and waking. The process of waking up requires
time; during this time the dream occurs. It is supposed that the
final picture of the dream is so vivid that it forces the dreamer
to wake; in reality it is so vivid only because when it appears
the dreamer is already very near waking. "Un reve, c'est un
reveil qui commence." *
* A dream is the beginning of wakening.
It has already been pointed out by Dugas that Goblot, in order to
generalize his theory, was forced to ignore a great many facts.
There are also dreams from which we do not awaken; for example,
many dreams in which we dream that we dream. From our knowledge
of the dream-work, we can by no means admit that it extends only
over the period of waking. On the contrary, we must consider it
probable that the first part of the dream-work is already begun
during the day, when we are still under the domination of the
preconscious. The second phase of the dream-work, viz., the
alteration by the censorship, the attraction exercised by
unconscious scenes, and the penetration to perception, continues
probably all through the night, and accordingly we may always be
correct when we report a feeling that we have been dreaming all
night, even although we cannot say what we have dreamed. I do not
however, think that it is necessary to assume that up to the time
of becoming conscious the dream-processes really follow the
temporal sequence which we have described; viz., that there is
first the transferred dream-wish, then the process of distortion
due to the censorship, and then the change of direction to
regression, etc. We were obliged to construct such a sequence for
the sake of description; in reality, however, it is probably
rather a question of simultaneously trying this path and that,
and of the excitation fluctuating to and fro, until finally,
because it has attained the most apposite concentration, one
particular grouping remains in the field. Certain personal
experiences even incline me to believe that the dream-work often
requires more than one day and one night to produce its result,
in which case the extraordinary art manifested in the
construction of the dream is shorn of its miraculous character.
In my opinion, even the regard for the comprehensibility of the
dream as a perceptual event may exert its influence before the
dream attracts consciousness to itself. From this point, however,
the process is accelerated, since the dream is henceforth
subjected to the same treatment as any other perception. It is
like fire works, which require hours for their preparation and
then flare up in a moment.
Through the dream-work, the dream-process now either gains
sufficient intensity to attract consciousness to itself and to
arouse the preconscious (quite independently of the time or
profundity of sleep), or its intensity is insufficient, and it
must wait in readiness until attion, becoming more alert
immediately before waking, meets it half-way. Most dreams seem to
operate with relatively slight psychic intensities, for they wait
for the process of waking. This, then, explains the fact that as
a rule we perceive something dreamed if we are suddenly roused
from a deep sleep. Here, as well as in spontaneous waking, our
first glance lights upon the perception-content created by the
dream-work, while the next falls on that provided by the outer
world.
But of greater theoretical interest are those dreams which are
capable of waking us in the midst of our sleep. We may bear in
mind the purposefulness which can be demonstrated in all other
cases, and ask ourselves why the dream, that is, the unconscious
wish, is granted the power to disturb our sleep, i.e., the
fulfilment of the preconscious wish. The explanation is probably
to be found in certain relations of energy which we do not yet
understand. If we did so, we should probably find that the
freedom given to the dream and the expenditure upon it of a
certain detached attention represent a saving of energy as
against the alternative case of the unconscious having to be held
in check at night just as it is during the day. As experience
shows, dreaming, even if it interrupts our sleep several times a
night, still remains compatible with sleep. We wake up for a
moment, and immediately fall asleep again. It is like driving off
a fly in our sleep; we awake ad hoc. When we fall asleep again we
have removed the cause of disturbance. The familiar examples of
the sleep of wet-nurses, etc., show that the fulfilment of the
wish to sleep is quite compatible with the maintenance of a
certain amount of attention in a given direction.
But we must here take note of an objection which is based on a
greater knowledge of the unconscious processes. We have ourselves
described the unconscious wishes as always active, whilst
nevertheless asserting that in the daytime they are not strong
enough to make themselves perceptible. But when the state of
sleep supervenes, and the unconscious wish has shown its power to
form a dream, and with it to awaken the preconscious, why does
this power lapse after cognizance has been taken of the dream?
Would it not seem more probable that the dream should continually
renew itself, like the disturbing fly which, when driven away,
takes pleasure in returning again and again? What justification
have we for our assertion that the dream removes the disturbance
to sleep?
It is quite true that the unconscious wishes are always active.
They represent paths which are always practicable, whenever a
quantum of excitation makes use of them. It is indeed an
outstanding peculiarity of the unconscious processes that they
are indestructible. Nothing can be brought to an end in the
unconscious; nothing is past or forgotten. This is impressed upon
us emphatically in the study of the neuroses, and especially of
hysteria. The unconscious path of thought which leads to the
discharge through an attack is forthwith passable again when
there is a sufficient accumulation of excitation. The
mortification suffered thirty years ago operates, after having
gained access to the unconscious sources of affect, during all
these thirty years as though it were a recent experience.
Whenever its memory is touched, it revives, and shows itself to
be cathected with excitation which procures a motor discharge for
itself in an attack. It is precisely here that psychotherapy must
intervene, its task being to ensure that the unconscious
processes are settled and forgotten. Indeed, the fading of
memories and the weak affect of impressions which are no longer
recent, which we are apt to take as self-evident, and to explain
as a primary effect of time on our psychic memory-residues, are
in reality secondary changes brought about by laborious work. It
is the preconscious that accomplishes this work; and the only
course which psychotherapy can pursue is to bring the Ucs under
the dominion of the Pcs.
There are, therefore, two possible issues for any single
unconscious excitation-process. Either it is left to itself, in
which case it ultimately breaks through somewhere and secures, on
this one occasion, a discharge for its excitation into motility,
or it succumbs to the influence of the preconscious, and through
this its excitation becomes bound instead of being discharged. It
is the latter case that occurs in the dream-process. The cathexis
from the Pcs which goes to meet the dream once this has attained
to perception, because it has been drawn thither by the
excitation of consciousness, binds the unconscious excitation of
the dream and renders it harmless as a disturber of sleep. When
the dreamer wakes up for a moment, he has really chased away the
fly that threatened to disturb his sleep. We may now begin to
suspect that it is really more expedient and economical to give
way to the unconscious wish, to leave clear its path to
regression so that and it may form a dream, and then to bind and
dispose of this dream by means of a small outlay of preconscious
work, than to hold the unconscious in check throughout the whole
period of sleep. It was, indeed, to be expected that the dream,
even if originally it was not a purposeful process, would have
seized upon some definite function in the play of forces of the
psychic life. We now see what this function is. The dream has
taken over the task of bringing the excitation of the Ucs, which
had been left free, back under the domination of the
preconscious; it thus discharges the excitation of the Ucs, acts
as a safety-valve for the latter, and at the same time, by a
slight outlay of waking activity, secures the sleep of the
preconscious. Thus, like the other psychic formations of its
group, the dream offers itself as a compromise, serving both
systems simultaneously, by fulfilling the wishes of both, in so
far as they are mutually compatible. A glance at Robert's
"elimination theory" will show that we must agree with this
author on his main point, namely, the determination of the
function of dreams, though we differ from him in our general
presuppositions and in our estimation of the dream-process. * -
* Is this the only function which we can attribute to dreams? I
know of no other. A. Maeder, to be sure, has endeavoured to claim
for the dream yet other secondary functions. He started from the
just observation that many dreams contain attempts to provide
solutions of conflicts, which are afterwards actually carried
through. They thus behave like preparatory practice for waking
activities. He therefore drew a parallel between dreaming and the
play of animals and children, which is to be conceived as a
training of the inherited instincts, and a preparation for their
later serious activity, thus setting up a fonction ludique for
the dream. A little while before Maeder, Alfred Adler likewise
emphasized the function of thinking ahead in the dream. (An
analysis which I published in 1905 contained a dream which may be
conceived as a resolution-dream, which was repeated night after
night until it was realized.)
But an obvious reflection must show us that this secondary
function of the dream has no claim to recognition within the
framework of any dream-interpretation. Thinking ahead, making
resolutions, sketching out attempted solutions which can then
perhaps be realized in waking life- these and many more
performances are functions of the unconscious and preconscious
activities of the mind which continue as day-residues in the
sleeping state, and can then combine with an unconscious wish to
form a dream (chapter VII., C.). The function of thinking ahead
in the dream is thus rather a function of preconscious waking
thought, the result of which may be disclosed to us by the
analysis of dreams or other phenomena. After the dream has so
long been fused with its manifest content, one must now guard
against confusing it with the latent dream-thoughts.
The above qualification- in so far as the two wishes are mutually
compatible- contains a suggestion that there may be cases in
which the function of the dream fails. The dream-process is, to
begin with, admitted as a wish-fulfilment of the unconscious, but
if this attempted wish-fulfilment disturbs the preconscious so
profoundly that the latter can no longer maintain its state of
rest, the dream has broken the compromise, and has failed to
perform the second part of its task. It is then at once broken
off, and replaced by complete awakening. But even here it is not
really the fault of the dream if, though at other times the
guardian, it has now to appear as the disturber of sleep, nor
need this prejudice us against its averred purposive character.
This is not the only instance in the organism in which a
contrivance that is usually to the purpose becomes inappropriate
and disturbing so soon as something is altered in the conditions
which engender it; the disturbance, then, at all events serves
the new purpose of indicating the change, and of bringing into
play against it the means of adjustment of the organism. Here, of
course, I am thinking of the anxiety-dream, and lest it should
seem that I try to evade this witness against the theory of wish-
fulfilment whenever I encounter it, I will at least give some
indications as to the explanation of the anxiety-dream.
That a psychic process which develops anxiety may still be a wish-
fulfilment has long ceased to imply any contradiction for us. We
may explain this occurrence by the fact that the wish belongs to
one system (the Ucs), whereas the other system (the Pcs) has
rejected and suppressed it. * The subjection of the Ucs by the
Pcs is not thoroughgoing even in perfect psychic health; the
extent of this suppression indicates the degree of our psychic
normality. Neurotic symptoms indicate to us that the two systems
are in mutual conflict; the symptoms are the result of a
compromise in this conflict, and they temporarily put an end to
it. On the one hand, they afford the Ucs a way out for the
discharge of its excitation- they serve it as a kind of sally-
gate- while, on the other hand, they give the Pcs the possibility
of dominating the Ucs in some degree. It is instructive to
consider, for example, the significance of a hysterical phobia,
or of agoraphobia. A neurotic is said to be incapable of crossing
the street alone, and this we should rightly call a symptom. Let
someone now remove this symptom by constraining him to this
action which he deems himself incapable of performing. The result
will be an attack of anxiety, just as an attack of anxiety in the
street has often been the exciting cause of the establishment of
an agoraphobia. We thus learn that the symptom has been
constituted in order to prevent the anxiety from breaking out.
The phobia is thrown up before the anxiety like a frontier
fortress.
* General Introduction to Psycho-Analysis, p. 534 below.
We cannot enlarge further on this subject unless we examine the
role of the affects in these processes, which can only be done
here imperfectly. We will therefore affirm the proposition that
the principal reason why the suppression of the Ucs becomes
necessary is that, if the movement of ideas in the Ucs were
allowed to run its course, it would develop an affect which
originally had the character of pleasure, but which, since the
process of repression, bears the character of pain. The aim, as
well as the result, of the suppression is to prevent the
development of this pain. The suppression extends to the idea-
content of the Ucs, because the liberation of pain might emanate
from this idea-content. We here take as our basis a quite
definite assumption as to the nature of the development of
affect. This is regarded as a motor or secretory function, the
key to the innervation of which is to be found in the ideas of
the Ucs. Through the domination of the Pcs these ideas are as it
were strangled, that is, inhibited from sending out the impulse
that would develop the affect. The danger which arises, if
cathexis by the Pcs ceases, thus consists in the fact that the
unconscious excitations would liberate an affect that- in
consequence of the repression that has previously occurred- could
only be felt as pain or anxiety.
This danger is released if the dream-process is allowed to have
its own way. The conditions for its realization are that
repressions shall have occurred, and that the suppressed wish-
impulses can become sufficiently strong. They, therefore, fall
entirely outside the psychological framework of dream-formation.
Were it not for the fact that our theme is connected by just one
factor with the theme of the development of anxiety, namely, by
the setting free of the Ucs during sleep, I could refrain from
the discussion of the anxiety-dream altogether, and thus avoid
all the obscurities involved in it.
The theory of the anxiety-dream belongs, as I have already
repeatedly stated, to the psychology of the neuroses. I might
further add that anxiety in dreams is an anxiety-problem and not
a dream-problem. Having once exhibited the point of contact of
the psychology of the neuroses with the theme of the dream-
process, we have nothing further to do with it. There is only one
thing left which I can do. Since I have asserted that neurotic
anxiety has its origin in sexual sources, I can subject anxiety-
dreams to analysis in order to demonstrate the sexual material in
their dream-thoughts.
For good reasons, I refrain from citing any of the examples so
abundantly placed at my disposal by neurotic patients, and prefer
to give some anxiety-dreams of children.
Personally, I have had no real anxiety-dream for decades, but I
do recall one from my seventh or eighth year which I subjected to
interpretation some thirty years later. The dream was very vivid,
and showed me my beloved mother, with a peculiarly calm, sleeping
countenance, carried into the room and laid on the bed by two (or
three) persons with birds' beaks. I awoke crying and screaming,
and disturbed my parents' sleep. The peculiarly draped,
excessively tall figures with beaks I had taken from the
illustrations of Philippson's Bible; I believe they represented
deities with the heads of sparrowhawks from an Egyptian tomb-
relief. The analysis yielded, however, also the recollection of a
house-porter's boy, who used to play with us children on a meadow
in front of the house; I might add that his name was Philip. It
seemed to me then that I first heard from this boy the vulgar
word signifying sexual intercourse, which is replaced among
educated persons by the Latin word coitus, but which the dream
plainly enough indicates by the choice of the birds' heads. I
must have guessed the sexual significance of the word from the
look of my worldly-wise teacher. My mother's expression in the
dream was copied from the countenance of my grandfather, whom I
had seen a few days before his death snoring in a state of coma.
The interpretation of the secondary elaboration in the dream must
therefore have been that my mother was dying; the tomb-relief,
too, agrees with this. I awoke with this anxiety, and could not
calm myself until I had waked my parents. I remember that I
suddenly became calm when I saw my mother; it was as though I had
needed the assurance: then she was not dead. But this secondary
interpretation of the dream had only taken place when the
influence of the developed anxiety was already at work. I was not
in a state of anxiety because I had dreamt that my mother was
dying; I interpreted the dream in this manner in the preconscious
elaboration because I was already under the domination of the
anxiety. The latter, however, could be traced back, through the
repression to a dark, plainly sexual craving, which had found
appropriate expression in the visual content of the dream.
A man twenty-seven years of age, who had been seriously ill for a
year, had repeatedly dreamed, between the ages of eleven and
thirteen, dreams attended with great anxiety, to the effect that
a man with a hatchet was running after him; he wanted to run
away, but seemed to be paralysed, and could not move from the
spot. This may be taken as a good and typical example of a very
common anxiety-dream, free from any suspicion of a sexual
meaning. In the analysis, the dreamer first thought of a story
told him by his uncle (chronologically later than the dream),
viz., that he was attacked at night in the street by a suspicious-
looking individual; and he concluded from this association that
he might have heard of a similar episode at the time of the
dream. In association with the hatchet, he recalled that during
this period of his life he once hurt his hand with a hatchet
while chopping wood. This immediately reminded him of his
relations with his younger brother, whom he used to maltreat and
knock down. He recalled, in particular, one occasion when he hit
his brother's head with his boot and made it bleed, and his
mother said: "I'm afraid he will kill him one day." While he
seemed to be thus held by the theme of violence, a memory from
his ninth year suddenly emerged. His parents had come home late
and had gone to bed, whilst he was pretending to be asleep. He
soon heard panting, and other sounds that seemed to him
mysterious, and he could also guess the position of his parents
in bed. His further thoughts showed that he had established an
analogy between this relation between his parents and his own
relation to his younger brother. He subsumed what was happening
between his parents under the notion of "an act of violence and a
fight." The fact that he had frequently noticed blood in his
mother's bed corroborated this conception.
That the sexual intercourse of adults appears strange and
alarming to children who observe it, and arouses anxiety in them,
is, I may say, a fact established by everyday experience. I have
explained this anxiety on the ground that we have here a sexual
excitation which is not mastered by the child's understanding,
and which probably also encounters repulsion because their
parents are involved, and is therefore transformed into anxiety.
At a still earlier period of life the sexual impulse towards the
parent of opposite sex does not yet suffer repression, but as we
have seen (chapter V., D.) expresses itself freely.
For the night terrors with hallucinations (pavor nocturnus) so
frequent in children I should without hesitation offer the same
explanation. These, too, can only be due to misunderstood and
rejected sexual impulses which, if recorded, would probably show
a temporal periodicity, since an intensification of sexual libido
may equally be produced by accidentally exciting impressions and
by spontaneous periodic processes of development.
I have not the necessary observational material for the full
demonstration of this explanation. * On the other hand,
pediatrists seem to lack the point of view which alone makes
intelligible the whole series of phenomena, both from the somatic
and from the psychic side. To illustrate by a comical example how
closely, if one is made blind by the blinkers of medical
mythology, one may pass by the understanding of such cases, I
will cite a case which I found in a thesis on pavor nocturnus
(Debacker, 1881, p. 66).
* This material has since been provided in abundance by the
literature of psycho-analysis.
A boy of thirteen, in delicate health, began to be anxious and
dreamy; his sleep became uneasy, and once almost every week it
was interrupted by an acute attack of anxiety with
hallucinations. The memory of these dreams was always very
distinct. Thus he was able to relate that the devil had shouted
at him: "Now we have you, now we have you!" and then there was a
smell of pitch and brimstone, and the fire burned his skin. From
this dream he woke in terror; at first he could not cry out; then
his voice came back to him, and he was distinctly heard to say:
"No, no, not me; I haven't done anything," or: "Please, don't; I
will never do it again!" At other times he said: "Albert has
never done that!" Later he avoided undressing, "because the fire
attacked him only when he was undressed." In the midst of these
evil dreams, which were endangering his health, he was sent into
the country, where he recovered in the course of eighteen months.
At the age of fifteen he confessed one day: "Je n'osais pas
l'avouer, mais j'eprouvais continuellement des picotements et des
surexcitations aux parties; * a la fin, cela m'enervait tant que
plusieurs fois j'ai pense me jeter par la fenetre du dortoir."
*(2)
* The emphasis [on 'parties'] is my own, though the meaning is
plain enough without it.
*(2) I did not dare admit it, but I continually felt tinglings
and overexcitements of the parts; at the end, it wearied me so
much that several times I thought to throw myself from the
dormitory window.
It is, of course, not difficult to guess: 1. That the boy had
practised masturbation in former years, that he had probably
denied it, and was threatened with severe punishment for his bad
habit (His confession: Je ne le ferai plus; * his denial: Albert
n'a jamais fait ca.) *(2) 2. That, under the advancing pressure
of puberty, the temptation to masturbate was re-awakened through
the titillation of the genitals. 3. That now, however, there
arose within him a struggle for repression, which suppressed the
libido and transformed it into anxiety, and that this anxiety now
gathered up the punishments with which he was originally
threatened.
* I will not do it again.
*(2) Albert never did that.
Let us, on the other hand, see what conclusions were drawn by the
author (p. 69):
"1. It is clear from this observation that the influence of
puberty may produce in a boy of delicate health a condition of
extreme weakness, and that this may lead to a very marked
cerebral anaemia. *
* The italics ['very marked cerebral anaemia.'] are mine.
"2. This cerebral anaemia produces an alteration of character,
demono-maniacal hallucinations, and very violent nocturnal, and
perhaps also diurnal, states of anxiety.
"3. The demonomania and the self-reproaches of the boy can be
traced to the influences of a religious education which had acted
upon him as a child.
"4. All manifestations disappeared as a result of a lengthy
sojourn in the country, bodily exercise, and the return of
physical strength after the termination of puberty.
"5. Possibly an influence predisposing to the development of the
boy's cerebral state may be attributed to heredity and to the
father's former syphilis."
Then finally come the concluding remarks: "Nous avons fait entrer
cette observation dans le cadre delires apyretiques d'inanition,
car c'est a l'ischemie cerebrale que nous rattachons cet etat
particulier." *
* We put this case in the file of apyretic delirias of inanition,
for it is to cerebral anaemia that we attach this particular
state.
Table of
Contents
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE DREAM PROCESSES
The Forgetting of Dreams
Regression
The Wish-Fulfilment
Waking Caused by Dreams -- The Function of
Dreams -- The Anxiety Dream
The Primary and Secondary Processes. Repression
The Unconscious
and Consciousness. Reality