VI
THE WISH IN DREAMS
That the dream should be nothing but a wish-fulfillment surely seemed strange
to us all—and that not alone because of the contradictions offered by the
anxiety dream.
After learning from the first analytical explanations that the dream conceals
sense and psychic validity, we could hardly expect so simple a determination of
this sense. According to the correct but concise definition of Aristotle, the
dream is a continuation of thinking in sleep (in so far as one sleeps).
Considering that during the day our thoughts produce such a diversity of psychic
acts—judgments, conclusions, contradictions, expectations, intentions,
&c.—why should our sleeping thoughts be forced to confine themselves to the
production of wishes? Are there not, on the contrary, many dreams that present a
different psychic act in dream form, e.g., a solicitude, and is not the
very transparent father's dream mentioned above of just such a nature? From the
gleam of light falling into his eyes while asleep the father draws the solicitous conclusion that a candle has been upset and may
have set fire to the corpse; he transforms this conclusion into a dream by
investing it with a senseful situation enacted in the present tense. What part
is played in this dream by the wish-fulfillment, and which are we to suspect—the
predominance of the thought continued from, the waking state or of the thought
incited by the new sensory impression?
All these considerations are just, and force us to enter more deeply into the
part played by the wish-fulfillment in the dream, and into the significance of
the waking thoughts continued in sleep.
It is in fact the wish-fulfillment that has already induced us to separate
dreams into two groups. We have found some dreams that were plainly
wish-fulfillments; and others in which wish-fulfillment could not be recognized,
and was frequently concealed by every available means. In this latter class of
dreams we recognized the influence of the dream censor. The undisguised wish
dreams were chiefly found in children, yet fleeting open-hearted wish dreams
seemed (I purposely emphasize this word) to occur also in adults.
We may now ask whence the wish fulfilled in the dream originates. But to what
opposition or to what diversity do we refer this "whence"? I think it is to the opposition between conscious daily life and a
psychic activity remaining unconscious which can only make itself noticeable
during the night. I thus find a threefold possibility for the origin of a wish.
Firstly, it may have been incited during the day, and owing to external
circumstances failed to find gratification, there is thus left for the night an
acknowledged but unfulfilled wish. Secondly, it may come to the surface during
the day but be rejected, leaving an unfulfilled but suppressed wish. Or,
thirdly, it may have no relation to daily life, and belong to those wishes that
originate during the night from the suppression. If we now follow our scheme of
the psychic apparatus, we can localize a wish of the first order in the system
Forec. We may assume that a wish of the second order has been forced back from
the Forec. system into the Unc. system, where alone, if anywhere, it can
maintain itself; while a wish-feeling of the third order we consider altogether
incapable of leaving the Unc. system. This brings up the question whether wishes
arising from these different sources possess the same value for the dream, and
whether they have the same power to incite a dream.
On reviewing the dreams which we have at our disposal for answering this
question, we are at once moved to add as a fourth source of the dream-wish the actual wish incitements arising during the night, such as
thirst and sexual desire. It then becomes evident that the source of the
dream-wish does not affect its capacity to incite a dream. That a wish
suppressed during the day asserts itself in the dream can be shown by a great
many examples. I shall mention a very simple example of this class. A somewhat
sarcastic young lady, whose younger friend has become engaged to be married, is
asked throughout the day by her acquaintances whether she knows and what she
thinks of the fiancé. She answers with unqualified praise, thereby silencing her
own judgment, as she would prefer to tell the truth, namely, that he is an
ordinary person. The following night she dreams that the same question is put to
her, and that she replies with the formula: "In case of subsequent orders it
will suffice to mention the number." Finally, we have learned from numerous
analyses that the wish in all dreams that have been subject to distortion has
been derived from the unconscious, and has been unable to come to perception in
the waking state. Thus it would appear that all wishes are of the same value and
force for the dream formation.
I am at present unable to prove that the state of affairs is really
different, but I am strongly inclined to assume a more stringent determination
of the dream-wish. Children's dreams leave no doubt that an
unfulfilled wish of the day may be the instigator of the dream. But we must not
forget that it is, after all, the wish of a child, that it is a wish-feeling of
infantile strength only. I have a strong doubt whether an unfulfilled wish from
the day would suffice to create a dream in an adult. It would rather seem that
as we learn to control our impulses by intellectual activity, we more and more
reject as vain the formation or retention of such intense wishes as are natural
to childhood. In this, indeed, there may be individual variations; some retain
the infantile type of psychic processes longer than others. The differences are
here the same as those found in the gradual decline of the originally distinct
visual imagination.
In general, however, I am of the opinion that unfulfilled wishes of the day
are insufficient to produce a dream in adults. I readily admit that the wish
instigators originating in conscious like contribute towards the incitement of
dreams, but that is probably all. The dream would not originate if the
foreconscious wish were not reinforced from another source.
That source is the unconscious. I believe that the conscious wish is a
dream inciter only if it succeeds in arousing a similar unconscious wish which
reinforces it. Following the suggestions obtained
through the psychoanalysis of the neuroses, I believe that these unconscious
wishes are always active and ready for expression whenever they find an
opportunity to unite themselves with an emotion from conscious life, and that
they transfer their greater intensity to the lesser intensity of the latter.1
It may therefore seem that the conscious wish alone has been realized in a
dream; but a slight peculiarity in the formation of this dream will put us on
the track of the powerful helper from the unconscious. These ever active and, as
it were, immortal wishes from the unconscious recall the legendary Titans who
from time immemorial have borne the ponderous mountains which were once rolled
upon them by the victorious gods, and which even now quiver from time to time
from the convulsions of their mighty limbs; I say that these wishes found in the
repression are of themselves of an infantile origin, as we have learned from the
psychological investigation of the neuroses. I should like,
therefore, to withdraw the opinion previously expressed that it is unimportant
whence the dream-wish originates, and replace it by another, as follows: The
wish manifested in the dream must be an infantile one. In the adult it
originates in the Unc., while in the child, where no separation and censor as
yet exist between Forec. and Unc., or where these are only in the process of
formation, it is an unfulfilled and unrepressed wish from the waking state. I am
aware that this conception cannot be generally demonstrated, but I maintain
nevertheless that it can be frequently demonstrated, even when it was not
suspected, and that it cannot be generally refuted.
The wish-feelings which remain from the conscious waking state are,
therefore, relegated to the background in the dream formation. In the dream
content I shall attribute to them only the part attributed to the material of
actual sensations during sleep. If I now take into account those other psychic
instigations remaining from the waking state which are not wishes, I shall only
adhere to the line mapped out for me by this train of thought. We may succeed in
provisionally terminating the sum of energy of our waking thoughts by deciding
to go to sleep. He is a good sleeper who can do this;
Napoleon I. is reputed to have been a model of this sort. But we do not always
succeed in accomplishing it, or in accomplishing it perfectly. Unsolved
problems, harassing cares, overwhelming impressions continue the thinking
activity even during sleep, maintaining psychic processes in the system which we
have termed the foreconscious. These mental processes continuing into sleep may
be divided into the following groups: 1, That which has not been terminated
during the day owing to casual prevention; 2, that which has been left
unfinished by temporary paralysis of our mental power, i.e. the unsolved;
3, that which has been rejected and suppressed during the day. This unites with
a powerful group (4) formed by that which has been excited in our Unc. during
the day by the work of the foreconscious. Finally, we may add group (5)
consisting of the indifferent and hence unsettled impressions of the day.
We should not underrate the psychic intensities introduced into sleep by
these remnants of waking life, especially those emanating from the group of the
unsolved. These excitations surely continue to strive for expression during the
night, and we may assume with equal certainty that the sleeping state renders
impossible the usual continuation of the excitement in the foreconscious and the
termination of the excitement by its becoming conscious. As
far as we can normally become conscious of our mental processes, even during the
night, in so far we are not asleep. I shall not venture to state what change is
produced in the Forec. system by the sleeping state, but there is no doubt that
the psychological character of sleep is essentially due to the change of energy
in this very system, which also dominates the approach to motility, which is
paralyzed during sleep. In contradistinction to this, there seems to be nothing
in the psychology of the dream to warrant the assumption that sleep produces any
but secondary changes in the conditions of the Unc. system. Hence, for the
nocturnal excitation in the Force, there remains no other path than that
followed by the wish excitements from the Unc. This excitation must seek
reinforcement from the Unc., and follow the detours of the unconscious
excitations. But what is the relation of the foreconscious day remnants to the
dream? There is no doubt that they penetrate abundantly into the dream, that
they utilize the dream content to obtrude themselves upon consciousness even
during the night; indeed, they occasionally even dominate the dream content, and
impel it to continue the work of the day; it is also certain that the day
remnants may just as well have any other character as that
of wishes; but it is highly instructive and even decisive for the theory of
wish-fulfillment to see what conditions they must comply with in order to be
received into the dream.
Let us pick out one of the dreams cited above as examples, e.g., the
dream in which my friend Otto seems to show the symptoms of Basedow's disease.
My friend Otto's appearance occasioned me some concern during the day, and this
worry, like everything else referring to this person, affected me. I may also
assume that these feelings followed me into sleep. I was probably bent on
finding out what was the matter with him. In the night my worry found expression
in the dream which I have reported, the content of which was not only senseless,
but failed to show any wish-fulfillment. But I began to investigate for the
source of this incongruous expression of the solicitude felt during the day, and
analysis revealed the connection. I identified my friend Otto with a certain
Baron L. and myself with a Professor R. There was only one explanation for my
being impelled to select just this substitution for the day thought. I must have
always been prepared in the Unc. to identify myself with Professor R., as it
meant the realization of one of the immortal infantile wishes, viz. that of
becoming great. Repulsive ideas respecting my friend, that
would certainly have been repudiated in a waking state, took advantage of the
opportunity to creep into the dream, but the worry of the day likewise found
some form of expression through a substitution in the dream content. The day
thought, which was no wish in itself but rather a worry, had in some way to find
a connection with the infantile now unconscious and suppressed wish, which then
allowed it, though already properly prepared, to "originate" for consciousness.
The more dominating this worry, the stronger must be the connection to be
established; between the contents of the wish and that of the worry there need
be no connection, nor was there one in any of our examples.
We can now sharply define the significance of the unconscious wish for the
dream. It may be admitted that there is a whole class of dreams in which the
incitement originates preponderatingly or even exclusively from the remnants of
daily life; and I believe that even my cherished desire to become at some future
time a "professor extraordinarius" would have allowed me to slumber undisturbed
that night had not my worry about my friend's health been still active. But this
worry alone would not have produced a dream; the motive power needed by the
dream had to be contributed by a wish, and it was the
affair of the worriment to procure for itself such wish as a motive power of the
dream. To speak figuratively, it is quite possible that a day thought plays the
part of the contractor (entrepreneur) in the dream. But it is known that
no matter what idea the contractor may have in mind, and how desirous he may be
of putting it into operation, he can do nothing without capital; he must depend
upon a capitalist to defray the necessary expenses, and this capitalist, who
supplies the psychic expenditure for the dream is invariably and indisputably
a wish from the unconscious, no matter what the nature of the waking
thought may be.
In other cases the capitalist himself is the contractor for the dream; this,
indeed, seems to be the more usual case. An unconscious wish is produced by the
day's work, which in turn creates the dream. The dream processes, moreover, run
parallel with all the other possibilities of the economic relationship used here
as an illustration. Thus, the entrepreneur may contribute some capital himself,
or several entrepreneurs may seek the aid of the same capitalist, or several
capitalists may jointly supply the capital required by the entrepreneur. Thus
there are dreams produced by more than one dream-wish, and many similar
variations which may readily be passed over and are of no
further interest to us. What we have left unfinished in this discussion of the
dream-wish we shall be able to develop later.
The "tertium comparationis" in the comparisons just employed—i.e. the
sum placed at our free disposal in proper allotment—admits of still finer
application for the illustration of the dream structure. We can recognize in
most dreams a center especially supplied with perceptible intensity. This is
regularly the direct representation of the wish-fulfillment; for, if we undo the
displacements of the dream-work by a process of retrogression, we find that the
psychic intensity of the elements in the dream thoughts is replaced by the
perceptible intensity of the elements in the dream content. The elements
adjoining the wish-fulfillment have frequently nothing to do with its sense, but
prove to be descendants of painful thoughts which oppose the wish. But, owing to
their frequently artificial connection with the central element, they have
acquired sufficient intensity to enable them to come to expression. Thus, the
force of expression of the wish-fulfillment is diffused over a certain sphere of
association, within which it raises to expression all elements, including those
that are in themselves impotent. In dreams having several
strong wishes we can readily separate from one another the spheres of the
individual wish-fulfillments; the gaps in the dream likewise can often be
explained as boundary zones.
Although the foregoing remarks have considerably limited the significance of
the day remnants for the dream, it will nevertheless be worth our while to give
them some attention. For they must be a necessary ingredient in the formation of
the dream, inasmuch as experience reveals the surprising fact that every dream
shows in its content a connection with some impression of a recent day, often of
the most indifferent kind. So far we have failed to see any necessity for this
addition to the dream mixture. This necessity appears only when we follow
closely the part played by the unconscious wish, and then seek information in
the psychology of the neuroses. We thus learn that the unconscious idea, as
such, is altogether incapable of entering into the foreconscious, and that it
can exert an influence there only by uniting with a harmless idea already
belonging to the foreconscious, to which it transfers its intensity and under
which it allows itself to be concealed. This is the fact of transference which
furnishes an explanation for so many surprising occurrences in the psychic life
of neurotics.
The idea from the foreconscious which thus obtains an
unmerited abundance of intensity may be left unchanged by the transference, or
it may have forced upon it a modification from the content of the transferring
idea. I trust the reader will pardon my fondness for comparisons from daily
life, but I feel tempted to say that the relations existing for the repressed
idea are similar to the situations existing in Austria for the American dentist,
who is forbidden to practise unless he gets permission from a regular physician
to use his name on the public signboard and thus cover the legal requirements.
Moreover, just as it is naturally not the busiest physicians who form such
alliances with dental practitioners, so in the psychic life only such
foreconscious or conscious ideas are chosen to cover a repressed idea as have
not themselves attracted much of the attention which is operative in the
foreconscious. The unconscious entangles with its connections preferentially
either those impressions and ideas of the foreconscious which have been left
unnoticed as indifferent, or those that have soon been deprived of this
attention through rejection. It is a familiar fact from the association studies
confirmed by every experience, that ideas which have formed intimate connections
in one direction assume an almost negative attitude to whole groups of new connections. I once tried from this principle to
develop a theory for hysterical paralysis.
If we assume that the same need for the transference of the repressed ideas
which we have learned to know from the analysis of the neuroses makes its
influence felt in the dream as well, we can at once explain two riddles of the
dream, viz. that every dream analysis shows an interweaving of a recent
impression, and that this recent element is frequently of the most indifferent
character. We may add what we have already learned elsewhere, that these recent
and indifferent elements come so frequently into the dream content as a
substitute for the most deep-lying of the dream thoughts, for the further reason
that they have least to fear from the resisting censor. But while this freedom
from censorship explains only the preference for trivial elements, the constant
presence of recent elements points to the fact that there is a need for
transference. Both groups of impressions satisfy the demand of the repression
for material still free from associations, the indifferent ones because they
have offered no inducement for extensive associations, and the recent ones
because they have had insufficient time to form such associations.
We thus see that the day remnants, among which we may now include the
indifferent impressions when they participate in the dream
formation, not only borrow from the Unc. the motive power at the disposal of the
repressed wish, but also offer to the unconscious something indispensable,
namely, the attachment necessary to the transference. If we here attempted to
penetrate more deeply into the psychic processes, we should first have to throw
more light on the play of emotions between the foreconscious and the
unconscious, to which, indeed, we are urged by the study of the psychoneuroses,
whereas the dream itself offers no assistance in this respect.
Just one further remark about the day remnants. There is no doubt that they
are the actual disturbers of sleep, and not the dream, which, on the contrary,
strives to guard sleep. But we shall return to this point later.
We have so far discussed the dream-wish, we have traced it to the sphere of
the Unc., and analyzed its relations to the day remnants, which in turn may be
either wishes, psychic emotions of any other kind, or simply recent impressions.
We have thus made room for any claims that may be made for the importance of
conscious thought activity in dream formations in all its variations. Relying
upon our thought series, it would not be at all impossible for us to explain
even those extreme cases in which the dream as a continuer
of the day work brings to a happy conclusion and unsolved problem possess an
example, the analysis of which might reveal the infantile or repressed wish
source furnishing such alliance and successful strengthening of the efforts of
the foreconscious activity. But we have not come one step nearer a solution of
the riddle: Why can the unconscious furnish the motive power for the
wish-fulfillment only during sleep? The answer to this question must throw light
on the psychic nature of wishes; and it will be given with the aid of the
diagram of the psychic apparatus.
We do not doubt that even this apparatus attained its present perfection
through a long course of development. Let us attempt to restore it as it existed
in an early phase of its activity. From assumptions, to be confirmed elsewhere,
we know that at first the apparatus strove to keep as free from excitement as
possible, and in its first formation, therefore, the scheme took the form of a
reflex apparatus, which enabled it promptly to discharge through the motor
tracts any sensible stimulus reaching it from without. But this simple function
was disturbed by the wants of life, which likewise furnish the impulse for the
further development of the apparatus. The wants of life
first manifested themselves to it in the form of the great physical needs. The
excitement aroused by the inner want seeks an outlet in motility, which may be
designated as "inner changes" or as an "expression of the emotions." The hungry
child cries or fidgets helplessly, but its situation remains unchanged; for the
excitation proceeding from an inner want requires, not a momentary outbreak, but
a force working continuously. A change can occur only if in some way a feeling
of gratification is experienced—which in the case of the child must be through
outside help—in order to remove the inner excitement. An essential constituent
of this experience is the appearance of a certain perception (of food in our
example), the memory picture of which thereafter remains associated with the
memory trace of the excitation of want.
Thanks to the established connection, there results at the next appearance of
this want a psychic feeling which revives the memory picture of the former
perception, and thus recalls the former perception itself, i.e. it
actually re-establishes the situation of the first gratification. We call such a
feeling a wish; the reappearance of the perception constitutes the
wish-fulfillment, and the full revival of the perception by the want excitement
constitutes the shortest road to the wish-fulfillment. We
may assume a primitive condition of the psychic apparatus in which this road is
really followed, i.e. where the wishing merges into an hallucination,
This first psychic activity therefore aims at an identity of perception,
i.e. it aims at a repetition of that perception which is connected with
the fulfillment of the want.
This primitive mental activity must have been modified by bitter practical
experience into a more expedient secondary activity. The establishment of the
identity perception on the short regressive road within the apparatus does not
in another respect carry with it the result which inevitably follows the revival
of the same perception from without. The gratification does not take place, and
the want continues. In order to equalize the internal with the external sum of
energy, the former must be continually maintained, just as actually happens in
the hallucinatory psychoses and in the deliriums of hunger which exhaust their
psychic capacity in clinging to the object desired. In order to make more
appropriate use of the psychic force, it becomes necessary to inhibit the full
regression so as to prevent it from extending beyond the image of memory, whence
it can select other paths leading ultimately to the establishment of the desired
identity from the outer world. This inhibition and
consequent deviation from the excitation becomes the task of a second system
which dominates the voluntary motility, i.e. through whose activity the
expenditure of motility is now devoted to previously recalled purposes. But this
entire complicated mental activity which works its way from the memory picture
to the establishment of the perception identity from the outer world merely
represents a detour which has been forced upon the wish-fulfillment by
experience.2
Thinking is indeed nothing but the equivalent of the hallucinatory wish; and if
the dream be called a wish-fulfillment this becomes self-evident, as nothing but
a wish can impel our psychic apparatus to activity. The dream, which in
fulfilling its wishes follows the short regressive path, thereby preserves for
us only an example of the primary form of the psychic apparatus which has been
abandoned as inexpedient. What once ruled in the waking state when the psychic
life was still young and unfit seems to have been banished into the sleeping
state, just as we see again in the nursery the bow and arrow, the discarded
primitive weapons of grown-up humanity. The dream is a fragment of the
abandoned psychic life of the child. In the psychoses
these modes of operation of the psychic apparatus, which are normally suppressed
in the waking state, reassert themselves, and then betray their inability to
satisfy our wants in the outer world.
The unconscious wish-feelings evidently strive to assert themselves during
the day also, and the fact of transference and the psychoses teach us that they
endeavor to penetrate to consciousness and dominate motility by the road leading
through the system of the foreconscious. It is, therefore, the censor lying
between the Unc. and the Forec., the assumption of which is forced upon us by
the dream, that we have to recognize and honor as the guardian of our psychic
health. But is it not carelessness on the part of this guardian to diminish its
vigilance during the night and to allow the suppressed emotions of the Unc. to
come to expression, thus again making possible the hallucinatory regression? I
think not, for when the critical guardian goes to rest—and we have proof that
his slumber is not profound—he takes care to close the gate to motility. No
matter what feelings from the otherwise inhibited Unc. may roam about on the
scene, they need not be interfered with; they remain harmless because they are
unable to put in motion the motor apparatus which alone can exert a modifying influence upon the outer world. Sleep guarantees the security
of the fortress which is under guard. Conditions are less harmless when a
displacement of forces is produced, not through a nocturnal diminution in the
operation of the critical censor, but through pathological enfeeblement of the
latter or through pathological reinforcement of the unconscious excitations, and
this while the foreconscious is charged with energy and the avenues to motility
are open. The guardian is then overpowered, the unconscious excitations subdue
the Forec.; through it they dominate our speech and actions, or they enforce the
hallucinatory regression, thus governing an apparatus not designed for them by
virtue of the attraction exerted by the perceptions on the distribution of our
psychic energy. We call this condition a psychosis.
We are now in the best position to complete our psychological construction,
which has been interrupted by the introduction of the two systems, Unc. and
Forec. We have still, however, ample reason for giving further consideration to
the wish as the sole psychic motive power in the dream. We have explained that
the reason why the dream is in every case a wish realization is because it is a
product of the Unc., which knows no other aim in its activity but the
fulfillment of wishes, and which has no other forces at its
disposal but wish-feelings. If we avail ourselves for a moment longer of the
right to elaborate from the dream interpretation such far-reaching psychological
speculations, we are in duty bound to demonstrate that we are thereby bringing
the dream into a relationship which may also comprise other psychic structures.
If there exists a system of the Unc.—or something sufficiently analogous to it
for the purpose of our discussion—the dream cannot be its sole manifestation;
every dream may be a wish-fulfillment, but there must be other forms of abnormal
wish-fulfillment beside this of dreams. Indeed, the theory of all psychoneurotic
symptoms culminates in the proposition that they too must be taken as
wish-fulfillments of the unconscious. Our explanation makes the dream only
the first member of a group most important for the psychiatrist, an
understanding of which means the solution of the purely psychological part of
the psychiatric problem. But other members of this group of wish-fulfillments,
e.g., the hysterical symptoms, evince one essential quality which I have
so far failed to find in the dream. Thus, from the investigations frequently
referred to in this treatise, I know that the formation of an hysterical symptom
necessitates the combination of both streams of our psychic life. The symptom is
not merely the expression of a realized unconscious wish,
but it must be joined by another wish from the foreconscious which is fulfilled
by the same symptom; so that the symptom is at least doubly determined, once by
each one of the conflicting systems. Just as in the dream, there is no limit to
further over-determination. The determination not derived from the Unc. is, as
far as I can see, invariably a stream of thought in reaction against the
unconscious wish, e.g., a self-punishment. Hence I may say, in general,
that an hysterical symptom originates only where two contrasting
wish-fulfillments, having their source in different psychic systems, are able to
combine in one expression. (Compare my latest formulation of the origin of
the hysterical symptoms in a treatise published by the Zeitschrift für
Sexualwissenschaft, by Hirschfeld and others, 1908). Examples on this point
would prove of little value, as nothing but a complete unveiling of the
complication in question would carry conviction. I therefore content myself with
the mere assertion, and will cite an example, not for conviction but for
explication. The hysterical vomiting of a female patient proved, on the one
hand, to be the realization of an unconscious fancy from the time of puberty,
that she might be continuously pregnant and have a
multitude of children, and this was subsequently united with the wish that she
might have them from as many men as possible. Against this immoderate wish there
arose a powerful defensive impulse. But as the vomiting might spoil the
patient's figure and beauty, so that she would not find favor in the eyes of
mankind, the symptom was therefore in keeping with her punitive trend of
thought, and, being thus admissible from both sides, it was allowed to become a
reality. This is the same manner of consenting to a wish-fulfillment which the
queen of the Parthians chose for the triumvir Crassus. Believing that he had
undertaken the campaign out of greed for gold, she caused molten gold to be
poured into the throat of the corpse. "Now hast thou what thou hast longed for."
As yet we know of the dream only that it expresses a wish-fulfillment of the
unconscious; and apparently the dominating foreconscious permits this only after
it has subjected the wish to some distortions. We are really in no position to
demonstrate regularly a stream of thought antagonistic to the dream-wish which
is realized in the dream as in its counterpart. Only now and then have we found
in the dream traces of reaction formations, as, for instance, the tenderness
toward friend R. in the "uncle dream." But the contribution from the foreconscious, which is missing here, may be found in
another place. While the dominating system has withdrawn on the wish to sleep,
the dream may bring to expression with manifold distortions a wish from the
Unc., and realize this wish by producing the necessary changes of energy in the
psychic apparatus, and may finally retain it through the entire duration of
sleep.3
This persistent wish to sleep on the part of the foreconscious in general
facilitates the formation of the dream. Let us refer to the dream of the father
who, by the gleam of light from the death chamber, was brought to the conclusion
that the body has been set on fire. We have shown that one of the psychic forces
decisive in causing the father to form this conclusion, instead of being
awakened by the gleam of light, was the wish to prolong the life of the child
seen in the dream by one moment. Other wishes proceeding from the repression
probably escape us, because we are unable to analyze this dream. But as a second
motive power of the dream we may mention the father's desire to sleep, for, like
the life of the child, the sleep of the father is prolonged for a moment by the
dream. The underlying motive is: "Let the dream go on, otherwise I must wake up." As in this dream so also in all
other dreams, the wish to sleep lends its support to the unconscious wish. We
reported dreams which were apparently dreams of convenience. But, properly
speaking, all dreams may claim this designation. The efficacy of the wish to
continue to sleep is the most easily recognized in the waking dreams, which so
transform the objective sensory stimulus as to render it compatible with the
continuance of sleep; they interweave this stimulus with the dream in order to
rob it of any claims it might make as a warning to the outer world. But this
wish to continue to sleep must also participate in the formation of all other
dreams which may disturb the sleeping state from within only. "Now, then, sleep
on; why, it's but a dream"; this is in many cases the suggestion of the Forec.
to consciousness when the dream goes too far; and this also describes in a
general way the attitude of our dominating psychic activity toward dreaming,
though the thought remains tacit. I must draw the conclusion that throughout
our entire sleeping state we are just as certain that we are dreaming as we are
certain that we are sleeping. We are compelled to disregard the objection
urged against this conclusion that our consciousness is never directed to a
knowledge of the former, and that it is directed to a
knowledge of the latter only on special occasions when the censor is
unexpectedly surprised. Against this objection we may say that there are persons
who are entirely conscious of their sleeping and dreaming, and who are
apparently endowed with the conscious faculty of guiding their dream life. Such
a dreamer, when dissatisfied with the course taken by the dream, breaks it off
without awakening, and begins it anew in order to continue it with a different
turn, like the popular author who, on request, gives a happier ending to his
play. Or, at another time, if placed by the dream in a sexually exciting
situation, he thinks in his sleep: "I do not care to continue this dream and
exhaust myself by a pollution; I prefer to defer it in favor of a real
situation."
Footnote
1: They share this character of indestructibility with all psychic acts that
are really unconscious—that is, with psychic acts belonging to the system of the
unconscious only. These paths are constantly open and never fall into disuse;
they conduct the discharge of the exciting process as often as it becomes
endowed with unconscious excitement To speak metaphorically they suffer the same
form of annihilation as the shades of the lower region in the Odyssey,
who awoke to new life the moment they drank blood. The processes depending on
the foreconscious system are destructible in a different way. The psychotherapy
of the neuroses is based on this difference.
Footnote
2: Le Lorrain justly extols the wish-fulfilment of the dream: "Sans fatigue
sérieuse, sans être obligé de recourir à cette lutte opinâtre et longue qui use
et corrode les jouissances poursuivies."
Footnote
3: This idea has been borrowed from The Theory of Sleep by Liébault,
who revived hypnotic investigation in our days. (Du Sommeil provoqué,
etc.; Paris, 1889.)
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