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Episode 115 The Dream Show: Hippocrates, Freud & Jung

“Clearly you have an anxiety complex here,” Freud began, “and riding the pointed skateboard with a feeling of exhilaration does suggest a sexual connotation.”

“Clearly you have an anxiety complex here,” Freud began, “and riding the pointed skateboard with a feeling of exhilaration does suggest a sexual connotation.”

Imagine getting Freud, Jung, and Hippocrates (a dream healer from around 2,300 years ago who became immortalized as the Father of Modern Medicine) into a room together to interpret a dream.

They’d all have different views. Where would they agree, where would they disagree?

“Your knee is not working smoothly. We must give you some clay to make a statue of a running woman,” Hippocrates diagnosed.

“Your knee is not working smoothly. We must give you some clay to make a statue of a running woman,” Hippocrates diagnosed.

In today’s show, I meet these dream pioneers and ask them to interpret a simple dream I had about a skateboard. It’s an imaginary meeting, of course, but a genuine dream.

“Hippocrates, this is Freud; Freud, Hippocrates,” and so we begin.

The two grand old men eye each other tentatively as they reach across two millennia to shake hands. Hippocrates leafs through Freud’s weighty book, The Interpretation of Dreams, published in 1900, while Freud runs his hands over the stone snake-adorned walls of the 2,300 year old Aesclepian Healing Temple where Hippocrates works.

“Hmmm snakes,” Freud murmurs.

Splashes echo from the depths of an inner chamber where Jung dives back into the pool of the collective unconscious and taps me on the shoulder, “Okay, Jane. They’re ready for you now,” he winks.

“So who are all those people and roads in your dream, Jane?” Jung whispered in my inner ear.

“So who are all those people and roads in your dream, Jane?” Jung whispered in my inner ear.

I have decided to bridge millennial gaps and bring my dream, wide awake, for these dream grandfathers to consider. I have chosen the ancient Greek Healing Temple where Hippocrates worked as the venue.

The Dream Show, a free monthly podcast with Jane Teresa AndersonListen in as we continue.

We keep it light and playful, and I’m sure you’ll enjoy the fun and smile at their different perspectives.

Listen here (Episode 115).

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A tale of two snakes

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I’ve just had coffee with a beautiful soul who is creating something quite exquisite to celebrate dreams. You’ll hear about it here first, when it’s ready to unveil.

“What is that pendant you always wear? Some kind of totem?” she asked, leaning forward to examine the fine detail of the chain that I wear day and night.

“Two snakes, from a dream,” I smiled, settling back to tell my story. “It all began in the year 2001. Oh, and it also began more than 2,000 years ago …”

I had a powerful dream in 2001. A huge golden snake opened its mouth and swallowed a huge silver snake, leaving only its tail protruding from its mouth, still very much alive. I watched, horrified, expecting the golden snake to snap shut its mouth and consume its prize. Then I realised that the golden snake was in an equally vulnerable position, because the silver snake could start eating the golden snake from the inside.

Then came the greater realisation. This was not a dog-eat-dog or snake-eat-snake situation. This was a situation of trust. This dream was about trusting the process of facing fear. As I watched, I noticed I was covered in cobwebs, which I pushed away, emerging into sunlight, like a butterfly – I thought in my dream – from a chrysalis.

So yes, snakes are a totem for me. They’re a personal symbol for transformation through trusting the process of facing fears at the deepest level.

Now, let’s go back some 2,400 years, to the healing temples in ancient Greece. If you were sick of mind or body in those days, you went to a healing temple to spend the night sleeping in a room filled with (harmless) snakes. In the morning, you told your dream to your healer, whose job was to interpret your dream to diagnose your situation and prescribe a cure.

Shades of my approach: first interpret the dream then prescribe a dream alchemy practice to create the desired result (healing).

One of these dream interpreters was Hippocrates, the very same Hippocrates immortalised in the Hippocratic Oath sworn by western medical practitioners. That’s why the caduceus, that symbol of modern medicine, is a snake entwined staff.

Michael surprised me, back in 2001, by taking my dream to a jeweller, immortalising it in white and yellow gold. Pure dream alchemy.

What’s your totem? Where can a little extra trust take you?

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Episode 115 The Dream Show Hippocrates, Freud & Jung

Hippocrates, Freud & Jung

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