Two common techniques of psychoanalytic therapy are free association and dream analysis. Free association occurs as the patient comes to realize that the therapist will not engage in ordinary conversation. Over time, the patients will begin to free associate, or to simply speak what is on their minds. Freud believed that such free associations gave hints to the underlying problems of the patient. Dream analysis is another commonly used tool in psychoanalytic therapy. Patients are encouraged to reveal their dreams which are then interpreted by the therapist. Psychoanalytic therapists distinguish between the concrete content of the dream (the manifest content) and the symbolic meaning of the dream (the latent content). Latent content is deemed more important because it helps to reveal hidden conflicts. Common interpretations include:
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Manifest Content |
Latent Content |
|
A trip |
Death |
|
A king and queen |
Your mother and father |
|
Climbing stairs |
Having sexual intercourse |
|
Balconies |
Breasts |
|
Snake |
Penis |
- Psychoanalysis Adapts to the 1990s--article, interm., medium, links, graphics
- From APA's Monitor (1996), discusses changes in the practice of psychoanalysis: more psychologists as analysts, changing treatment directions, and more. http://www.apa.org/monitor/sep96/modern.html
- Freud's Free Association and Writing--text, basic, short, links
- Describes Freud's technique of free association and how free association derived from a writing technique published during his time. http://www.utoledo.edu/homepages/ddavis/freudfre.htm
- Free Association--text, basic, short, links, graphics
- Short overview of Freud's switch to free association instead of hypnosis; also mentions the consequent discovery of repression. http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/hypertext/landow/HTatBrown/freud/Free_Association.html
- Where Will Psychoanalysis Survive?--article, adv., long, links, graphics
- From Harvard Magazine (1997), a long look at the future of psychoanalysis. http://www.harvard-magazine.com/jf97/freud.html