The
soul thinks in images.
Aristotle
A SIGH OF RELIEF USUALLY ACCOMPANIES the realization that it
was “just a dream” about our teeth falling out. We dismiss
it as yet another disturbing image from that often incomprehensible
dream world. Maybe it was too much pizza?
After many years of struggling to understand dreaming and dream images,
I discovered that our dreams are up to something far beyond the gastro-intestinal
repercussions of what we ate last night. Our dreams relentlessly identify
those essential, extraordinary qualities that make us unique and authentic
individuals. At the same time, dreams are ruthless and often shocking
in exposing the consequences of influences from others, from society,
from family, from groups, from ideologies, that threaten our ability
to live our own lives. Any technique of dream interpretation that ignores
this powerful and empowering dream dynamic is like a child playing in
the shallow end of the pool—safe and secure but missing something
tremendous.
When we have little or no sense of who we are, adaptation and the desire
to please others can lead to rapid self-destruction; we begin to lose
valuable parts of ourselves. One evening in a small dream group, an
attractive Asian woman in her early twenties told us about a recurring
dream that was really upsetting her:
I’m very upset because my two front upper teeth have fallen out.
When I wake up, it is such a relief to feel them—they are still
there.
I asked her to tell me what those two particular teeth did for her,
what was their job? “They help me smile,” she replied without
hesitation. “I don’t smile,” she added, clenching
her jaw and obviously trying not to smile.
“What happened to prompt you to decide not to smile?” I
asked, surprised and curious about such a tragic loss.
“My boyfriend told me I don’t look good when I smile.”
I recall that my mouth dropped open in disbelief at that point. I was
appalled but also amazed at her recurring dream’s obvious warning.
She had allowed a valuable part of her identity and her authenticity
to be stolen from her: her “smile.” And what is a smile?
It is a natural, authentic response to life, an expression of our unique
humor, our ability to laugh at life, a priceless form of self-nourishment.
She was allowing an outside influence, her boyfriend’s criticism,
to silence an important part of her essential nature.
Here’s how to work with dreams about your teeth:
• Always imagine being the specific tooth or teeth in your dream
and ask yourself, “What is my job? What do I do for this person?”
• Next, imaging being the teeth in your dream and experience
what it is like to be falling out, coming loose, losing your grip—exactly
as events happen in your dream. You might experience what one person
described as feeling “no longer useful.”
• Remember to also imagine being your jaw, your mouth, your
tongue, and explore what it would be like to lose those particular
teeth. Pay close attention to what you say as you imagine being the
different dream elements. For example, in the above dream, from the
tongue’s perspective, losing those two teeth would make speech
difficult; she is also losing a part of her voice, her ability to
speak for herself and express herself.
• Think about your waking life and see what circumstance or
situation fits your experience of role-playing the various parts of
your dream.
Our
dreams do not want our essential nature to “disappear.”
They want to free and protect our Authentic Life— that expression
of our essential nature, the original blueprint, the soul struggling,
playing, creating, and recreating life. Our dreams want us to break
the mold, live outside the boxes of life that want to define, contain,
and imprison us. They want to free the distinct, eccentric, unconventional
self, our unique sense of who we are in the core of our being.
© John
D. Goldhammer, Ph. D., 2005 |