Sunday, October 23, 2011
Avoiding Bad Events and Hidden Traps
These messages protect you from the absurdity of your wild side.
Your house in dreams represents your own psyche.
Your car in dreams represents the way you drive your life.
Your mother represents your evil anti-conscience.
Your father represents your one-sided human conscience.
The dreamer of our example cannot be lazy forever without facing serious problems in life.
Now, let's analyze the meaning of another very important dream symbol:
The INFJ Temperament
The Introversion/Extroversion Issue
The E/I issue has been debated ad infinitem in many places but the primary difference for the INFJ is biological (i.e. cannot be changed). It boils down to how much stimulation you can take in and still remain comfortable. For INFJ's, this threshold is low and you are going to have to accept this fact, frustrating though it is. Your ability for laser focus on one thing for long periods; your tendency to observe and reflect, and your need for time alone are all a direct result of a lower threshold for receiving external environmental input. If you take in too much, you will become overloaded. Because you don't depend as much on external stimuli for motivation as other types, you come to regard your internal concepts about life as primary and even once this picture this looks pretty solid, it is, in fact a work in progress that will never be complete. Why? Because introverted intuition is your dominant function.
Introverted Intuition
What is introverted intuition? It is the process of recognising and interpreting information you take in. It is a perceiving left brain function. What's interesting about this way of viewing the world is that you take in the material facts as do all the other types, but you are immediately aware of an ability to organize them in more than one way. You form many different conceptual patterns with information which changes its meaning and gives new options or potential outcomes. Your direct opposite, the extroverted intuitive types, do this too but unify information into multiple "outward" patterns or possibilities. For INFJ's the patterns aren't out there but inside and part of themselves. Everyone will at some time use introverted intuition to contend with some serious ambiguity in their life but what's unusual about the INFJ is that they use introverted intuition as their "dominant" perceiving function all the time! It is their primary method of understanding reality.The extreme end of this perception is experience of psychic phenomena. Something that seems to result from the combination of the F and introverted N function.
Self Identity
From the INFJ's perspective, the self cannot be defined by external circumstances. On the contrary, reality is what INFJ's bring to something from within. You will, of course, create a personal external identity just as other types do but you tend to place much less importance on it, sometimes even seeing it as a kind of character to assume in certain circumstances. If, for example, you are at a party and you're asked what you do (a perfectly reasonable conversation opener) you might find yourself struggling to give a suitable answer. This is because INFJ's simply don't view themselves in terms of externals (what they do or who they are in relation to others). To them, the self is something that cannot be explained in a sentence and involves not just the individual self but also the universal self that exists within the INFJ. To complicate things further, the line between the individual self and the universal self starts to get blurry as the INFJ gets older. This is complete lunacy to other types, particularly those who are dominant sensates but it is the reality of the INFJ.
Extroverted Feeling the Secondary function
Each personality type has one dominant and one secondary function. The secondary function for the INFJ is "extroverted feeling". The dominant function will come naturally and easily to you but the secondary function will be harder and take much more effort. Our two best functions are meant to work together but because their attitudes are directly opposed, their integration initially creates inner conflict. The attempt to use both creates a certain amount of mental and emotional friction. We need this friction to stay conscious no matter what type we are. An unopposed dominant function leads to a one dimensional life and a vague sense of feeling incomplete.
Basic Concepts And Ideas Of Freudianism
Psychoanalysis of Sigmund Freud
Based on the foregoing, the essence of psychoanalysis, we may consider three levels:
Philosophy And Psychoanalysis
Being acquainted with the philosophy of Plato, Freud might draw out ideas about the unconscious as Plato reflects on the problem of the unconscious person's knowledge. Yes, and other topics, developed in the framework of Greek philosophy and is directly adjacent to the problem of the unconscious, whether it be dream or motivations of human activity, could not interest the founder of psychoanalysis. It is no accident, justification or excuse for his psychoanalytic postulates it, though not often resorted to the authority of Empedocles and Aristotle.
In the philosophy of the eighteenth century XVII-to the forefront of understanding the fore issues related to the understanding of the nature of the mind, the definition of the role and place of consciousness in human life. One of the main question was about whether to consider the human mind as endowed with consciousness only if you can avoid it in the presence of something like that, that does not possess the properties of consciousness, or as part of the processes that take place automatically, unconsciously and spontaneously, it should make for mental limits of human life.
In Descartes (1596-1650) deals with this question are clear: he proclaimed the identity of consciousness and mental, believing that the human psyche, there can be nothing other than deliberately running processes. The maxim "I think, therefore I am" becomes the starting point of his philosophy. This does not mean an absolute power of the mind and reducing everything to a mental conscious. Descartes did not recognize the existence of passions of the human soul. On the contrary, in his treatise "The Passion of the soul," he attempted to understand the problem. In this treatise, Descartes not only provides a classification of the passions, but also writes about the struggle taking place between the "lower" part of the soul, which he called "sentient" and "higher" part of it - a "reasonable". However, he believes that the parts of the soul have no fundamental differences and, therefore, the soul actually is one. At the same between the two parts of the soul, there is no struggle, because the mind is the determinant. The struggle in the soul of man is only when one and the same is the passion and the reason which has an effect on the body. In this case, human passion is like an unconscious body movement, while holding back their soul.
Against the absolute power of intelligent design made in a man Spinoza (1632-1677) believed that "people would rather follow the leadership of a blind desire, than the mind...". In contrast to the Cartesian philosophy Spinoza proposed a provision that the inclination or desire is the very essence of man. These representations of the relationship between reason and passion, mind and instincts of man are reflected in the works of several philosophers who expressed doubts about certain provisions of the Cartesian philosophy.
One of these was the philosopher Hume (1711-1776), who opposed the restructuring of that any rational being is into conformity with the mind of his thoughts. Hume attempted to prove that, first, the mind itself can not motivate an act, and, secondly, that reason does not prevent the flow of emotions. Thus, Hume believed that, in principle, it affects the mind and can not stand each other or challenge each other priority in the management of human will, and therefore there is no need to talk about a struggle between them. In the arguments of Spinoza and Hume, there were many similarities with what was later expressed in the psychoanalytic Freud. This, above all, is that the position that human life in predetermining the role played by his unconscious desires or inclinations, than the consciousness of the mind. In addition, Spinoza treats desires and impulses of man as his most intimate, the fundamental fact entirely separate founder of psychoanalysis.
Along with the problem of the relation of mind and passions an important place in the philosophy of XVII-XVIII centuries, had the question of the relationship between conscious and unconscious perceptions, ideas and opinions, which refers to a philosophical understanding of the nature of human cognition. Descartes recognized the existence of man "vague" and "dark" perceptions that arise because of the dual origin of the perceptions themselves, because according to the Cartesian philosophy, some of them occur in the body, the other in the human soul. In turn, Spinoza distinguished between "clear" and "vague" idea.
In the philosophy of Leibniz (1646-1716), this problem was seen through the prism of the so-called "small perceptions," "subtle perceptions." In his view it is difficult to explain the emergence of conscious perceptions and ideas, if you do not admit the existence of something like that, that is not characterized by the property of consciousness, but still dormant in the human soul. Way of speaking about the need to recognize the unconscious and reasoning, which uses Leibniz and Freud, in many aspects is identical. Thus, if Leibniz indicates faulty connection between the processes of perception in the case of non-recognition of previous states of consciousness of the human soul, then, similarly are also constructed arguments by Freud. He proceeds from the assumption that the unconscious is necessary because of the existence of such acts of consciousness, which is required to explain the recognition of the other acts that are not conscious, because consciousness in the data, there are many gaps. Only in this case, he believes, is not disturbed psychic continuity, and it becomes clear the essence of the cognitive process, with its conscious acts.