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Welcome to Jung on purpose with CreativeMind, hosted by Deborah and Dr. Rob Maldonado, creators of the NeuroMindra coaching method based on Jungian psychology, non dual spirituality and social neuroscience. Join us each week as we explore personal growth for purpose seekers and the incredible inner journey of becoming your true self. Let's get started.
B
Hello everyone.
A
Welcome back to another episode of Young on Purpose.
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I am Deborah Maldonado.
C
And I'm Dr. Rob.
B
We're with CreativeMind and we have a wonderful new series that we're going to begin this week and we're going to talk about dreams and dream interpretation and we're also going to talk about our new dream app that we created that is really fantastic and will blow your mind to help you with your dream interpretation. And we'll tell you about that later in the show. But before we begin, I do want want you to take the time to subscribe to our channel if you're listening to one of the on our podcast services or on YouTube. It really helps us get more people listening to this information and changing more lives. We really appreciate it.
C
Nice.
B
I love. So dreams. What, what, what's so great about dreams, Rob?
C
I know, you know, I. For me it's very personal. It feels like from the time I was born or small kid, dreams were always part life and they continue to to be. So the more work we do, the more important dreams become for us also. So for me, it's a lifelong obsession and focus on dreams.
B
And I had dreams young too, but I didn't know what they meant. I just sort of wrote them down in a journal, but I never examined them really until I met you. Really. I just thought took them literally. I made some of the missteps we'll talk about, you know, some of the missteps we make in dream interpretation that stop us from really getting the message today. But yeah, I think there's people that naturally dream and then there's some people that say I never dream, which is not true. We all dream. We just don't have great dream recall.
C
Yeah. So it's a conversation we wanted to have. And obviously this is not a class or anything like that, so it's not comprehensive. We're not going to give you everything we know about dreams, but some important ideas to help you with your dream life. One of the most important ones is that the language of dreams is symbolic. Now this is an important principle because most people give up trying to understand their dreams because they're trying to interpret them in a literal way. And so if you Try to interpret a dream in a literal way, it's going to appear as nonsense, or at least most dreams will appear to you as nonsense. It has nothing to do with my life, you know, it's not giving me any wisdom, instruction, notice, and nothing. Because you're misreading the language. The language.
B
Well, you can get superstitious too about it, right? This person, you know, is mad at me. I had a dream. They were mad, they must be mad. Or that person said they're going to leave me. So I need, you know, my dream is telling me I, I have to be prepared for this forecasting of our, my future. And there are some precognitive dreams, but not every dream is literal and precognitive.
C
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And so the unconscious, where dreams are formed and they, where they come from has a symbolic function. In other words, it's doesn't think in the way we think in our waking experience. It thinks in metaphor, it thinks in emotion. It thinks in puns, even in humorous ways of thinking.
B
Very humorous.
C
Very humorous if you pay attention. Right. So it's speaking a different language than our typical waking language. And to understand it, of course, just like trying to understand a foreign language, you have to take some time to study and to think about it and to practice. So those are the case.
B
What is the purpose of dreams anyway? Like, just backing up from, like, why do we need to even look at them? Like, it's interesting. Oh, wow, that's cool. That that meant this symbolizes this. But what is the purpose? And Jung saw the dreams as a way for us to understand our unconscious mind and our collective unconscious mind beneath the surface so that we can use it toward growth too.
C
Yeah, I'd say there's three levels to it. Okay, so one is the neurophysiological level. And dreams, what they do is they, they help maintain our sanity and our cognitive function. And this is by research. If you disturb people and don't let them get their rem, their dream time in, their cognition will start to deteriorate. In other words, they won't be able to solve math problems. They won't be able to solve complicated equations, logical kind of thinking questions or problems. They'll start to suffer and eventually kind of lose their mind, I imagine, if they continue. Right. So it's got a physiological function that's really about maintaining your brain and good, optimal working function. The second one is psychological, meaning that dreams connect us to deeper source in us. What Jung called the collective unconscious that appears to feed our mind in, in a creative way, it gives us visions, intuition, perhaps, like you say, precognitive hits that. It gives us a sense of what's going to happen in our lives. So really important stuff. And we can go into. Deeper into that one. Right. And then thirdly, it has spiritual. Spiritual element to it because we all know from scriptures from all around the world, this is the way that God spoke to people through dreams. It was a kind of direct communication, of course, when people believed in those things. Now people don't believe in gods and so they don't hear them, of course, because it's, you know, it's. It's what you believe that is important.
B
So can I add a fourth one? I don't know if it fits into any of those three, but for me, understanding my dreams, it's more of a spiritual thing. But it helped me understand that there's something in me, like a. An awareness in me that knows me more than I know myself and is like intimately involved in my own growth. Because it goes through the effort of like showing me symbols and showing me information that I feel would. If I didn't have that information, I wouldn't have been able to get it on a conscious level. And it just, it reaffirms and some things I believed or about myself or things I've been working at on a conscious level. And I feel, though this gives me like a. It just feels connected, like a real tangible connection. Like when people think about connecting with God or connecting with the divine. Like you can go to church or you can go to your temples and pray and like, have like kind of euphoric experiences. But this is. Gives you like a real tangible. Every night you're really connecting to deeper wisdom within you. And I just find it so magical. For me, that was the biggest. The content itself is great too, but just the knowing that there's another presence within me that's not my ego that is wanting me to like, have the things I want, that's like helping me through life. It's just so beautiful.
C
It is. It's the deepest or the deeper intelligence in us in the Jungian model, of course, the one we. We really gravitate towards and that we teach and practice ourselves in our life. Dreams are very much a conversation with a living sight. In other words, we are in conversation because it's listening to our thoughts. It's like our iPhone, essentially. It's listening to us.
B
It's like meta.
C
Yeah, it's like meta.
B
It knows everything about us.
C
It knows all our passwords and everything we think and do. And therefore it speaks to us in the way that we need to hear it. That's an important piece to understand that your dreams are very unique to you. They're, they're tailor made for you and so they're so important. Like somebody said not paying attention to dreams is like leaving your mail unopened. I know, Getting these messages but not opening the mail.
B
So anyway, I love that what you said about it being unique because this is why another misstep people make is dream dictionaries. Like, I'm just going to look up dreams. I have the book of symbols. They're really great to like stimulate like what these symbols could mean. There's some universal symbols, but for every person there's many layers to even the symbol itself. There's a personal layer, there's archetypal layer, there's an emotional layer. So there's a lot of different layers to even the same symbol. And so to simplify it, by like a snake means spirituality. Okay, I got that done. And every time I dream of a snake, it means spirituality. Not always. And, and then another mistake with a literal idea is that here's something really important that I find fascinating is that you have something happen during the day and you have like an altercation with someone or your boss is, you know, you're worried about losing your job or something. And then you go and you have a dream about your boss and you think, oh, that's my mind just taking the contents of the day and trying to figure things out. But it's what it does is the dream amplifies content that we know for us to read it symbolically, which I find so fascinating versus just dismissing. Oh yeah, I had that dream because, you know, my boss and I had a fight and of course I had that dream. It's just reinforcing that, that fight because the dream won't tell you what you already know. So if it's showing you that there's like something symbolic here that's happening in that external world, you need to look at this deeper because there's a symbolic meaning to this that you need to pay attention to.
C
Absolutely. So it is a strange phenomena because we're forced to dream every night. In other words, if we look at the physiology when we go into sleep, when we, when we fall asleep and we're entering what's called rem, rapid eye movement, which is the dreaming phase of sleep. And we do this every 90 minutes or so. So it's like a, like a wave or a cycle that every 90 minutes we're about to wake up. But right before we wake up, we go into rem, Rapid eye movement, which simply means this, that if you look at somebody sleeping and dreaming, their eyes will be darting all over the place behind their closed eyelids, and they'll be fluttering, too.
B
They usually have. Fluttering.
C
Yeah. Like as if they're looking at a scene, right at things happening right in front of their eyes. Now, the interesting thing about this is that the body is actually paralyzed during rem. In other words, you. Unless the. The person has some kind of sleep disorder or some kind of problem, usually our bodies will be very still while we're dreaming. It's only our eyeballs that will be darting around and moving. It. It sleeps. It puts to sleep every muscle in your body except the eye muscles, which is.
B
Well, you know, it's interesting. I did hypnotherapy for years before I got into coaching, and I still do incorporate that in our work. When I would do them in person, people would. If they go to a deeper trance, they would. I'd see their eyes darting, and they. They basically will not move. They will. They can't lift their arms. They can't do anything. And we even do tests where you lift the arm and drop it. It's called the arm drop. And it's like that body is just so limp and relaxed. And a lot of times they get really stiff where they can't even move. And they're just. And it's not. It's very relaxing. And then when they come out, it's very, very refreshing. They feel like there's a high. I call it the hypno glow. They get this high afterwards. So I think that is interesting that you can actually create it too, when you do a deep visualization. But it's still like, if you're in that, you're still too conscious, where your ego's still filtering a lot of things in dreams. It's like the ego's, like, really taking a backseat. You're seeing, like, the unconscious more in a raw form in dreams.
C
Yeah. A couple other phenomena that we know from research is that the dream sequences will get longer as the night goes by. In other words, as you're moving towards the morning, the dreams you're having become longer and more intense. That's why we tend to remember the last dream before we wake up or the last two dreams before we wake up. But we. We have a sense, right, that we dreamed even more before those dreams.
B
We do.
C
Typically, within the first 90 minutes of sleep, we'll have an REM period. Meaning we'll have a dream, but we might forget it. By the. By the.
B
Unless you wake up because it could be very intense. Sometimes you wake up in the middle of the night, like, oh my God. And then you go back to sleep. Okay, I don't want to go back there.
C
And. Yeah, now. So let's consider just the phenomena of this. We're falling into a coma, hypocoma, where our body isn't even able to move. And then the mind is forcing us to experience these simulations of reality. Because when we're dreaming, we think we're awake and that we're experiencing life somehow, right? So it's a state of consciousness, but it's very different than our waking state where all kinds of fantastical things can happen so that we can be in two places at once. We can walk through wars, we can fly, sometimes breathe underwater, See dead people. Dead people have gone, passed on, and they're there and we're conversing with them. And all of this doesn't wake us up for some reason. It's like we're okay with it now. Why would nature have us do that? Why would it force us to sleep? Because moving and acting it out, but then forces to experience a simulation of life in a fantastical way. In other words, it's not regular life. Things are happening that are, you know, extraordinary. So that phenomena is not well understood. Like why, what is the purpose evolutionarily? Why does nature consider that so important for us? So from the Jungian perspective, of course we know that because the language is symbolic. It appears to our waking mind fantastical. It appears to our everyday, rational mind to be bizarre, exotic and so forth.
B
But the unconscious is irrational, that's it, right? And fantastical. And that's why we kind of lock it down during the day, because it's. It really is, can be. And so when people do, like, drugs to like, release their unconscious, you know, have visions and stuff like that, that's what they're seeing, this unstructured, unfiltered consciousness.
C
That's it. I mean, Jung, Freud said it initially, right? The royal road to the unconscious mind. In other words, if you want to know what's going on in, in the deeper layers of the psyche, in, in dreams, you. You see it directly. It's a very emotional, symbolic language that's happening and it's. It's always going on. In other words, it's going on right now as you're awake, but you're not paying attention to it because your mind is being flooded by Sensory experience. So that subtle mind with which you dream is operating right now. It's simply being put to use in constructing your external reality, which is.
B
This is a dream.
C
It's dreamlike.
B
It's a waking dream. Yeah. Dreamlike, yeah. So it's the same, same quality of a dream, but this is more organized.
C
More organized because you're.
B
And it has space and time in it and other.
C
And you're inputting sensory experience. In other words, the color, the texture, the temperature of the room, all that input stabilizes the imagination. And so you're able to function as if everything was solid and real.
B
Wouldn't it be true too, that the waking life, since it's so repetitive that we're in like wake up in the same home every day and we have the same people in our lives and the same routines, that it's the habit of the ego that keeps this waking life a little more structured. And then when you go into the dream, it just opens up all the other possibilities for us.
C
There is something to that. We know in waking life, our brain is really focused on predictability. It's always trying to predict what is going to happen. So what if I get up and go get a glass of water, what will happen? And if I can predict things, I feel peaceful, calm, secure, safe. When unpredictability comes in. Right. When I can't predict what's going to happen, I feel anxious, nervous, just uptight or at least alert and vigilant.
B
Is that why in dreams, when things are unorganized or things don't work the way it does in the waking life? Like you have that dream where you can't operate your phone or you lost something, or you're trying to get somewhere, the car doesn't work, you lost your car. It creates anxiety because the mind wants that control.
C
That's part of it, yes.
B
And then the ego, the dream is telling you like you're. You gotta let go a little bit. This is happening underneath. Yeah.
C
Those anxiety dreams are some of the most common ones. Precisely because of that, in the dream world, it's difficult to predict what's going to happen next. And therefore we're kind of always anxious in those situations.
A
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C
yeah.
B
So there's a secret code in dreams that is mo. This is one of the things that people leave out because they're looking so much on the symbols in a very rational way. Your ego mind is like interpreting. So you don't want to interpret from the ego, you want to interpret from the witness. And there's ways to do that. We could talk about that later in another episode. But the secret code, do you know what it is, Rob?
C
I can guess.
B
But emotions.
C
Ah, yes.
B
So this emotional energy that shows up in the dream. And for a lot of people, they don't remember the dream, the full dream, but they do remember how they felt in the dream. And when people try to do dream interpretations for others, that's the one question sometimes they forget to ask. Or what was the emotional tone of the dream? And so what does the emotional tone of the dream like? Say you have anxiety show you about your mind or yourself?
C
Yeah. Jung writes a lot about this because the emotion we can say is the a direct connection to the unconscious. For one, emotions appear to happen to us, which means we are experiencing elements of our psyche that are unconscious to our waking mind. That's why they the arises or appears to come in from. Somebody triggered me. Right. But that's not the right perception because if the emotion wasn't in you, you would not be able to experience that powerful emotion. It appears as if the other person made you react that way. You say someone made me angry. And no one could make us angry. If we don't have anger within us, it's not going to happen. So the misperception is important to understand. What we are experiencing when we experience emotions is we're experiencing our unconscious, our personal unconscious.
B
So would you say that it like compensatory, like if you've been ignoring or stuffing anxiety, for example, and you feel like you have everything together or you have feel a little bit of it like it's kind of in the peripheral, but you're not really paying attention. You're kind of pushing it away. You'd have a dream that's like trying to balance out the psyche.
C
That's one of the functions. Yes. One of the functions, yes, that the dreams often are trying to balance our conscious attitude by presenting situations in which the opposite arises. So that if we're, you know, I, We've. We've often experienced this when, when very kind of tightly wound people do our work. They often have these, like me. No, a lot more than you really have fantastic psychedelic dreams. Almost like their mind is telling them you need a little bit of color and chaos in your life, creativity in your life. And therefore in the dreams you're experiencing those things. And it's, it's probably that they were always experiencing them, but they weren't paying attention. So that's another phenomenon is that they, as they enter this program and they start to focus on their mind, then they start to understand and experience their dream world in a, in a much more vivid form.
B
And like, for me, you always say that I have a very creative, imaginative, conscious mind. So when I have dreams, you always say your dreams are so like, obvious, like more left brain, you know, more like this is what you need to do. Very, very direct. Where I'm not that way in conscious life. So it could be that way too. If you're like highly creative or imaginative, your dreams may come in the form of more kind of structured way versus the opposite. And then there's a mixture always.
C
And also that if you're not paying attention to dreams, the unconscious understands that too, that you're not even opening your mail. Why should I bother to give you important messages unless it's really.
B
Yeah, you're not examining them. You can have them and then you stop. Like, you just ignore them. Is that what you're saying?
C
Yeah. You know what I notice when I meditate and I use visualization? Often my dreams diminish or they're. They're not as powerful or as frequent. When I don't, then I tend to have more vivid dreams. Because like I say, your subtle mind is always with you. So if you use it in visualization, you're kind of doing the work of the dream world or the rem, you're. You're putting yourself into an R, E, M state by visualizing so you can, you can compensate for that. So in other words, if you're not getting enough sleep or you're not really remembering your dreams, try meditation and visualization to compensate for those things so that your mind is able to catch up and do those, those cleanup tasks that it needs to do. We know, for example, during rem, memories are consolidated so that the things you experience during the day during REM sleep, the Brain is kind of putting things where they need to be so that you can recall them later on.
B
And so if something. Let's say someone has a recurring dream and it's. They keep having dreams of like, anxiety or something stressful happening or a fear. And I talk about phobias and things like that or like really intense stuff, but just kind of like, oh, there's a theme here. The dream will keep. Or the. The consciousness will keep giving you the same dream or similar dreams until you really get it. And so sometimes you can say, I can interpret that dream. I know what it is. And then you go on your life and you have the same dream again. The dream is like. Consciousness is like, no, you didn't get it yet. I'm gonna send you this again. Let's try this again. Started from the top. And so those recurring dreams are sort of like unexamined. You're not really examining it. And the unconscious is trying to get you to look at the. But the emotion is really the key. And I think if. So if you don't know any symbols and you don't understand anything, just notice how you're waking up. Notice the feeling tone if you start there and just start examining, like, what is this feeling telling me? And you could start in a very basic way. Now, before we go, I want to add. I want to give some suggestions to people who say, I don't dream or I don't remember my dreams. This is something that is, you know, we've used for years with students who say, I don't recall my dreams. And so a really great way to start is you set the intention, obviously, that you want to start recalling your dreams so you can work with your dreams. You're setting that intention, powerful intention. And then before you go to bed at night, you place a paper and pen or your phone with a recorder to record your dream in the morning. To record in the morning. And you wake up, you go to bed, and you say, I want to remember my dream. Or you have an intention. Like, I would love a dream to tell me about my love life, or I'd love a dream to tell me about my work. What's stopping me from being successful or finding love or being healthy? You know, send me a dream. And then you do that every night. And in the morning you wake up and if you still don't recall the dream, you write something down, whatever the first thought is. And so you're getting into like, almost like the habit of examining something. Like you're. You're like telling your Psyche. I'm, I'm ready. I'm priming myself up for this. And usually within a week, you should start remembering your dreams. If you do that every day, it really is very, very powerful. And I want to talk a little bit too about our dream app, the Jungian Dream Oracle. It's our new app that we, Rob, created. Do you want to talk about it a little bit, Rob?
C
Yes. So we wanted to create an app that would approximate the kind of work that we do in our program with dreams. And this app pretty much fills that role. Right. It allows students to continue to work with their dreams in between sessions.
B
And clients too, not just students, clients. In our coaching programs, anybody that has
C
the app can use it to interpret their dreams, but in a particular way
B
that you personally programmed.
C
Yeah, because we wanted again to approximate what we actually do in the coaching program. And we're very focused on individuation. So the interpretation is made by the app as the dreamer undergoing an initiation into their higher self. In other words, the dream that the, the individual inputs is not simply seen as this is an isolated dream, just kind of on its own. Let me interpret it. But it's seen as this is somebody undergoing individuation, meaning they're on a journey, on a process of becoming themselves. What does this dream mean in that context? And then it gives them a prompt as to how to work with the symbols that appear in the dreams. So it's really useful beyond just a simple interpretation.
B
And I, you know, I love it. I've been interpreting my own dreams for 20 years, but this is really like, it takes it to the next level. And we've had a beta version with our students in our life coach training program and they're blown away by it. I gave it to one of my long term clients. She was like, oh my God, this is so incredible. Actually, two of my long term clients told me they couldn't believe how cool it was and they've been working with me for a year. So very, very powerful. And the cool thing is it's free, so we're giving it away. You get a free one free interpretation a day. If you want to upgrade to premium, you can have as many as you want. It's $59 a year for that, but that means $5 a month. The value you get is so outweighing it, but it helps us invest in, you know, more releases and stuff like that. So a way to give back and make it even better. But it's really, really incredible. And so we're going to Give you a link in the show notes to get your copy and how to download it either on Apple or Google phone, whatever you have. And really excited for it. And it's called the Jungen Dream.
A
Yeah.
C
And it's a good introduction if you are not paying attention to your dreams. It's a good introduction into the dream world and the way we do dream interpretation. And for those of you that are advanced, it will match you in the your advanced work and it will give you something, let's say that is equal to the kinds of thoughts and dreams that you're having because it will also interpret your synchronicities. So you're having synchronicities in your waking life. You can input those things and re in the dream Oracle will interpret them as in a symbolic way. So Jung calls that the entering the
B
symbolic life and then active imagination. If you're using active imagination and you're getting symbols, we use them with our active imagination protocols. Symbols appear all the time. So great to find out what that means. And then you can type in your going through your life and have it match that versus you just getting a blanket. Oh this, this snake needs spiritual life. You really get to. And then it gets to know you. And then also I love about it is that there's a dream journal that keeps track of previous dreams so you can go back and and record and you can record them via audio. You just click the record button so you don't have to write them all down or you can type them up. Up to you. But we're really excited about it and we hope you take advantage of the it and explore your dreams. And we'll have more sessions on dreams. So if you do start, get started on your dreams. Maybe this is the first time you've ever worked with your dreams. Pay attention because we have a couple more episodes on dreams. We'll go deeper.
C
It's like having Carl Jung in your pocket.
B
It's like that's kind of nice. The Dream Oracle. And another thing about it, it's not a therapy model. It's based on analysis. It's really based on Jungian coaching, which is in our unique blend which includes Eastern philosophy, not just the psychology of Jung, but the Eastern philosophy which sees the self and the ego in just a slightly different way, a more empowering way and a more expansive way. So very excited to share it with you. And again, thank you for joining us for Jung on Purpose. We will see you next week with another episode. Take care.
C
See you soon.
A
Thank you for joining us for Jung on Purpose with Deborah Maldonado and Dr. Robinson Maldonado of Creative Mind. Don't forget to subscribe to our podcast before you leave and join us each week.
B
We'll see you soon.
Podcast: Jung On Purpose by CreativeMind
Episode: Unlock the Secret of Your Dreams
Date: March 2, 2026
Hosts: Debra Berndt Maldonado ("B") & Robert Maldonado, PhD ("C")
Theme: Exploring the symbolic language of dreams, their psychological and spiritual functions, and effective methods for dream recall and interpretation rooted in Jungian Psychology.
In this episode, Debra and Dr. Rob Maldonado kick off a dream interpretation series, delving into why and how we dream, the symbolic nature of dream language, and practical tools for interpreting dreams. They introduce their Jungian Dream Oracle app and provide actionable tips for listeners to access and explore their dream life as a path to individuation and greater self-awareness, emphasizing the Jungian approach of seeing dreams as personal, symbolic messages.
Personal Connection:
Common Missteps:
Three Levels Outlined by Rob:
Debra suggests a fourth aspect: Dreams reveal an inner intelligence that desires personal growth and well-being, providing a tangible, nightly connection to deeper wisdom.
"There’s another presence within me that’s not my ego... that is wanting me to have the things I want..." – Debra (06:39)
Dream content is uniquely tailored to each individual’s psyche.
Dream dictionaries can help stimulate ideas, but symbols have multiple layers—personal, archetypal, emotional.
The same symbol (e.g. a snake) may mean different things depending on context and the dreamer.
"Not paying attention to dreams is like leaving your mail unopened." – Rob (08:59)
Dreams simulate reality in fantastical ways, challenging the predictability craved by the waking mind.
The unconscious is essentially irrational and unstructured, which drugs or altered states may also expose.
"In dreams, it’s like the ego’s taking a backseat. You’re seeing the unconscious more in a raw form." – Debra (12:55)
Emotion as Key: Emotions are the direct language of the unconscious. Most forget dream details but recall how they felt, which is crucial for interpretation.
“The emotion... is a direct connection to the unconscious. …What we are experiencing when we experience emotions is we're experiencing our unconscious.” – Rob (20:51)
Emotions in dreams often indicate what's been ignored or needs balancing, revealing unconscious content that compensates for conscious attitudes.
Dreams compensate for imbalances or unacknowledged aspects of the psyche.
Recurring dreams point to unresolved issues or ignored lessons.
“Those recurring dreams are sort of like unexamined. You're not really examining it. And the unconscious is trying to get you to look...” – Debra (25:12)
Setting Intention: Before sleeping, consciously intend to recall dreams.
Keep a pen/paper or audio recorder bedside.
Write something upon waking, even if no dream is recalled, to prime the psyche.
Consistent practice usually brings dream recall within a week.
“You’re like telling your psyche, ‘I’m ready. I’m priming myself up for this.’” – Debra (26:14)
Purpose: Mimics the deep, symbolic approach used in CreativeMind’s coaching programs.
Users input dreams or synchronicities, receiving interpretations that focus on personal growth and individuation (the journey toward authentic selfhood).
Supports both beginners (good introduction) and advanced practitioners (matches advanced dream symbology and synchronicity work).
Features: Daily free interpretations, dream journaling (audio or text), personalized symbolic prompts, and support for active imagination work.
“It’s like having Carl Jung in your pocket.” – Rob (32:08)
The app is free for basic use (1 dream/day), with a premium upgrade for unlimited entries and additional features.
On Unopened Dream Messages:
“Not paying attention to dreams is like leaving your mail unopened.” (Rob, 08:59)
On the Unique Language of Dreams:
"If you try to interpret a dream in a literal way, it's going to appear as nonsense." (Rob, 02:19)
On the Deeper Self:
"There’s another presence within me that’s not my ego...wanting me to have the things I want, that's like helping me through life. It's just so beautiful." (Debra, 06:39)
On Emotion as the Key:
“The emotion... is a direct connection to the unconscious.” (Rob, 20:51)
On Recurring Dreams:
“Those recurring dreams are sort of like unexamined. You're not really examining it. And the unconscious is trying to get you to look at it.” (Debra, 25:12)
On Using the App:
“It’s like having Carl Jung in your pocket.” (Rob, 32:08)
This episode provides a comprehensive, inviting introduction to dreamwork through a Jungian lens—exploring dreams as vital, personalized messages from the unconscious aimed at personal growth. The hosts blend scholarly concepts, relatable anecdotes, and practical advice, empowering listeners to approach their dreams with curiosity and intention. For listeners, whether complete beginners or seasoned self-inquirers, the new Jungian Dream Oracle app promises to be a valuable ally on the journey to individuation.
For links to the Jungian Dream Oracle App and further resources, see show notes.