Layne Dalfen has been interpreting dreams for years. Her own interest in dreams stems from her early experience in Freudian analysis where dream work was the primary tool. She is a lecturer at Concordia University and has been a guest on over 250 radio and podcast shows across The U.S. and Canada. In The States, Layne appeared on FOX’s Good Day New York, WGN, ABC, and NBC. She has been on FOX Morning News in Chicago several times. In Canada, Layne has appeared on Discovery/Life Channel’s Health On The Line, Global’s Morning Show, CTV’s Nationwide, Canada AM...
I am a dream analyst. The other day, I was working with a client on the telephone, who was describing her dream filled with themes of black and white. My office is in my home and from my desk I have a view of the vestibule. While I was discussing her dream with my client, my daughter came into the house and walked past me into her bedroom. When she passed I noticed she was dressed all in black. A few minutes later as the dreamer was discussing the white images in her dream, I looked up and saw my daughter walk by me again except this time she had changed and was dressed all in white!
The late Dr. Montague Ullmans’ approach, commonly referred to as the “If this were my dream” method is what I want to discuss in this article. Dr. Ullman, like all of us, was faced with a dilemma when working with a group of people doing dreamwork, a situation he found himself in constantly.
You have sex with your best friend. Or sex with a hot stranger, perhaps while lying in bed right next to your partner! How does this dream make you feel when you wake up? Aroused? Uncomfortable? Guilty? All of the above? It’s not surprising that of all the dream topics I analyze with clients,
Story 1 https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/PXbI_d08lkA Story 2 https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/tOsUnzGoWok Story 3 https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/0g-yzcbjUKo
The video below is an uplifting story of surviving and thriving. Mid interview, Jai Breisch discusses his precognitive dreams and the loss of his sister Kali during a family trip to Thailand in 2004, the year of the tsunami that killed over 230,000 people. We learn how he unraveled the symbolism in his dreams during the…
The philosophy that respects all the parts of the dream beings parts of ourselves begs a discussion of how polarities appear in our dreams. In fact, establishing the polarities in a dream often leads to the ‘answer’ or strength therein.
Many people believe they cannot meet the first requirement of dreamwork —remembering their dreams. Some investigators, for example Freud, say that we forget our dreams because we don’t want to know what is in them. If true, this would be tough to overcome, and remembering our dreams would require professional assistance. However, this isn’t the…
Here is a dream I had 7 years ago, around the time Oprah’s last show was airing. During that period of my life I was having plenty of what I started to refer to as my Oprah Dreams, that’s why this one was titled Another Oprah Dream. This one in particular, illustrates how we use repetition in…
Wondering what to do about something that’s bothering you? Life is filled with decisions– our own, others’, and even those others telling us what decisions to make. But the fact is, deep down inside, we usually know exactly what we should do. The trick is getting in there to access that wisdom.
Doug Llewelyn on CUTV Radio in New York City recently interviewed me. The interview is here, below for you.
Since we only had a half hour and wanting to be sure I’d get in everything, I pasted everything I wanted to cover, right across my desk!