Dream VS Dream of Fear

< p > < / p > < p > the idiom 'dream' left behind in our country refers to the beautiful things that we all dream of. But in our lives, we will find that what happens in our dreams may be unpleasant. < / p > < p > since the age of ten, the author has repeatedly repeated the dream of traffic jams and traffic accidents. I remember when I was in the second year of junior high school, when I took the school bus home in the afternoon, there was a traffic accident at the intersection. The car failed to turn and slammed into the side of the road, and several students, including me, were injured. Later, I appeared the plot of 'car crash' several times in my dream. When I was in high school and college, I learned to drive a car. Although dreams like this rarely happen, until now, I always have similar 'negative dreams' several times a year that disgust me. Having such a dream seems to run counter to the psychiatric master Freud's theory that dreams are 'the realization of personal wishes'. It is by no means my wish that I was involved in a car accident. It should be said that it was the fear of my life. So I pondered the details of mental psychology, including the theories of 'the other side of the pleasure principle' in the 1920s and 'Freud's instinct for life and death' in the 1930s, especially the direct influence of the Spanish scholar Mr. Daly's meeting with Freud. I began to understand that the human state of mind is all about the principle of happiness, and that the plot of the dream may be an expression of fear, and it is precisely that I am not perfect in avoiding unhappiness and pursuing happiness. Dali, both a painter and a writer, was regarded by Freud as a 'strong, arrogant-looking Spaniard with real talent.' Dali's interpretation of the dreams of war psychopaths seems appropriate. He said that our world has experienced war, and on the battlefield, a person is often caught between his own awareness of life and the orders of his superiors, resulting in neurasthenia. He received orders from his superior to attack, but he didn't want to die. He was willing to hide in the tunnel to avoid the enemy's bullets. However, if you disobey the orders of your superiors, you may make a mistake and may be shot by your superiors. Therefore, it is a dead end in any case, and I don't know what to do. Hanging in mid-air like this, you must be supported by others, otherwise you can't stand up, or be paralyzed all over the body. People want to forget such a terrible experience as soon as possible, but a person who has experienced an encounter on the battlefield still has to dream about what he experienced on the battlefield many times after he really left the battlefield. The same thing often happens in our daily life. For example, at the year-end meeting of the unit, the leader was called up to accuse the work of loopholes, and people who broke out in a cold sweat in full view of the public would 'repeat' all the embarrassing plots in their dreams several times later. In the days of lovelorn, walking on the road with sadness to hear a song, from then on as long as you hear that song, it will once again cause frustrated melancholy. Unpleasant memories are repeated subconsciously. 'Human beings have the nature not only to pursue happiness, but also to pursue unhappiness, don't they?' Freud once used such a hypothesis to divide the entanglement between human instinct and self. At this point, we can understand that the psychological subconscious dream interpretation theory is not mysterious, each of us has our own needs, and the needs are pleasant, and the unpleasant feeling should be the precaution of our own needs. < / p > < p > < / p >