Questions and Answers on
Dreaming
Patricia Garfield, Ph.D., President of ASD
January 4, 1999
Answers to interview questions from Jennifer:
Q1: What inspired you to study dreams?
A: I was inspired to work with dreams by my mother when I was a teenager
younger that you are now. She was reading books by Freud and Jung, and discussing their
ideas at the dinner table. I was a vivid dreamer and became curious to know if their ideas
were true, so I tried them out with my own dreams.
Q2: How long have you been interested in dreams?
A: Ive been interested in dreams since I was fourteen; Im
now 64, so thats 50 years.
Q3: Do you record your dreams? Is it easier to interpret your
dreams if they have been recorded?
A: Yes, I record my dreams, and have done so for 50 years. I believe
its much easier to work with a written dream, since we lose so much important detail
when we rely on memory alone.
Q4: Why do people have dreams?
A: No one is really sure why we dream. There are many theories. The
current thought is that dreaming somehow helps the process of memory. I think dreams are a
kind of problem-solving device that is useful every day.
Q5: What state of sleep do you have to be in to
have a dream?
A: Again, theres no clear-cut answer. At first people believed
that one had to be in REM to dream, and this is the most typical dream stage. But now we
know that dreaming can take place in non-REM stages, and sometimes people dream as they
are drifting off to sleep or waking up. Its a more complex picture than we first
thought.
Q6: Is there a limit as to how many dreams a person can have in
one night?
A: Most people who recall dreams easily remember three to five dreams a
night, but people who have trained themselves to observe their mental imagery as they fall
asleep have counted more dreams. We probably dream all the time were asleep, just as
we think all the time the brain is functional while awake.
Q7: Do people dream every night?
A: Usually people dream every night. But some drugs inhibit dreaming,
and one man with a brain wound has been shown not to dream at all.
Q8: Do you recommend any particular book on interpreting dreams?
A: Of course, I recommend my own books,
Creative Dreaming, and the five others that Ive written (Pathway to Ecstasy: The Way
of the Dream Mandala; Your Childs Dreams, Womens Bodies, Womens Dreams;
The Healing Power of Dreams; The Dream Messenger: How Dreams of the Departed Bring Healing
Gifts) but there are many good ones. Check with your local library.
Q9: Who inspired you the most in your study of dreams?
A: Originally, my mother inspired me most in my study of dreams.
Q10: Has there ever been a dream that you could not offer any
explanation to?
A: Yes, there are dreams whose explanation is not apparent immediately.
Dreams are very rich in imagery. Some of the most interesting are those that take many
years to fully understand.
Q11: What is most difficult in the study of dreams?
A: The very vastness of the material makes dream study difficult. Every
night new data emerges. Its hard to cope with such massive amounts of
material, even with computers, although they help.
Q12: Are dreams a widely researched topic?
A: Dream research has been active since 1953 when rapid eye movements
(REM) were discovered.
Q13: Do you find your research to be enjoyable?
A: Yes, I greatly enjoy exploring dreamsits like an
incompletely mapped continent.
Q14: Do sleep positions have anything to do with your dreams?
A: Were not sure how much sleep positions have to do with
dreaming. Many people find, however, that they can recall dreams better if they lie in the
position in which they originally had the dream. After you remember any dreams in the
position in which you awake, its useful to roll gently into another sleep position
you use. Youll often recall additional dreams then.
Q15: Do your surroundings have anything to do with how you
dream?
A: Yes, our surroundings influence our dreams, but do not determine them
entirely. If the sleeping place is hot or cold, if there are sounds in the
environment, or smells, these are often woven into the content of the dream. But one
person who is sleeping in a cold room my dream of being trapped in a snowstorm, while
another person may dream of winning an ice-skating contest. The cold becomes part of the
dream, but the dreamers fears and hopes determine the plot of the dream.
Q16: Do people mail you often with dream inquiries?
A: Yes, I get a lot of mail from people all over the world who have read
my books and want to share their dream experiences. You probably know about the
Association for the Study of Dreams, an international group who share our interests. You
may want to join, or attend their annual conference. The next one is in Santa Cruz,
California, in July 1999, and in the year 2000, the meeting will be in Washington, D.C.
You can get more information by calling [703]242-8888 or at our website: www.asdreams.org
Q17: What about all these weird dreams? [Oct 1, 1999]
Thanks for describing three of your weird dreams for me.
Strange dreams are usually pictures of some feeling we have had in the
waking state. For instance, on the days you dream about being the last one in a long
lunch line that goes all the way to China, you may have felt that you were not getting the
attention and other nourishing things (represented by the image of food in your dream)
that you would have like to have had. The dream pictures are a way of expressing
your frustration in this case.
When you dream about having so much homework that it would take years to
finish, and that when you get to school you find it's all wrong, or you'd get in trouble
and get bad grades and get sent to summer school to catch up, the dream probably comes
when you are feeling overwhelmed with all the new work you have to do and it feels
impossible to manage it. Your dream is saying
"All I have to do feels like too much!"
In reference to your dreams about millions of spiders, there was probably
something that happened in the few days before the dream that made you feel a little bit
afraid (kind of like the way that you feel about spiders). When you dream about
millions of them, the dream is saying "Things feel too scary at the moment."
Everyone has weird dreams sometimes. They are dramatic pictures of how we feel about
things. I'm glad you have good dreams, too--these often represent our hopes and
wishes.
Good luck with your project, and happy dreams to you.
Patricia Garfield,
Ph.D.
President, The
Association for the Study of Dreams