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Layne Dalfen
[edit]Layne Dalfen | |
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Born | Montreal, Canada | April 4, 1951
Alma mater | Alfred Adler Institute |
Occupation(s) | Author, columnist and therapist |
Years active | 1995-present |
Organization(s) | Dream Interpretation Center, International Association for the Study of Dreams |
Website | thedreamanalyst |
Layne Dalfen (IPA: lˈe͡ɪn dˈalfən) (born 1951) is a Canadian psychotherapist, columnist, educator, and author broadly recognized for her work in the field of dream interpretation under a contemporary and scientific perspective. She is the founder of the Dream Interpretation Center in Montreal and has appeared in numerous media outlets and magazines sharing insights and methods into the science and psychology of dreaming.[1]
Early life and Education
[edit]Dalfen was born on Canada. At 20 years old she had her first daughter, Tina, who was born with Down Syndrome, reason for which she felt obligated to confront depression and sought professional assistance. She then met a psychiatrist who introduced her to the world of psychotherapy[2]. Dalfen’s interest with dreams began during her early experiences with Freudian analysis, where dream interpretation was well-known and widely used as a key therapeutic tool. Later, she earned a certificate in Gestalt Counseling in 1988 and then studied dreamwork at the Alfred Adler Institute working with Dr. Leo Gold in 1992[1]. Her education and training reflect primarily the influences from prominent thinkers such as Freud, Jung, Perls, and Adler.
Career
[edit]Since 1995, she has been an active member of the C.G. Jung Society[3] [4] [5], furthering her expertise in psychological approaches to dreams.[6] Dalfen founded the Dream Interpretation Center in Montreal in 1997, where she provides workshops, private consultations, and lectures with the aim of teaching people how to analyze their dreams from a psychological and therapeutic perspective, frequently with the maxim of "Dreaming is just thinking. There’s always a reason for today’s dream. It’s not random".[7]
She has been a lecturer at Concordia University since 2005, teaching her approach to dream interpretation to counseling students.[1]Also, she has been an active member of the International Association for the Study of Dreams (IASD), where she was even a recognised board member between 2005 and 2009.[2]
Dalfen has also contributed as a consultant for Disney Pixar on the series Dream Productions, which explores the role of dreams in emotional and mental development[8]. The series is set to premiere on Disney+ in December 2024.[9]
Methods and Approach
[edit]Dalfen seeks to figure out the often so-called 'complex language of dreams', using and blending psychology, metaphor, and personal insight. Her approach emphasizes the use of dreams to uncover solutions to everyday problems and personal challenges. By combining analytical rigor with a relatable style, Dalfen claims to have made dream interpretation accessible for a wide audience from a modern and renovated way[10].
According to Layne, the subconscious mind is a kind of database or personal storage that holds every memory and association human beings have had throughout their lives. Because of that, Dalfen does not agree with the idea that dreams mean the same thing. In this way, each dream or unconscious mind is as unique as a fingerprint[7]. For her, the dream is a sort of internal conversation that the mind is having with itself about a very specific current issue, which generally could be bothering the person while he is awake. Specifically, Dalfen denominates her approach as "easy-to-grasp method", and it has the principal objective of helping the patient to uncover the situation about the dream is talking about or "mirroring" through symbols[2].
Uncovering the unconscious messages is a deliberate process that starts by setting six steps: Feelings, Actions, Play on Words, Symbols, Plot and Repetition. Each of them forms a larger one that Dalfen calls an "Entry".[2]The dream could bring with it different solutions and contexts that reflect reality regarding interpersonal relations and emotional reactions. In this way, they can represent a 'safe place' for the dreamer.[11]
Finally, the person should be able to understand the next steps, given that the significance or meaning—which inherently includes the solution—has already been revealed. This method aims to be a "solving-problem" tool.[12]
Media and Publications
[edit]Dalfen has been dedicated as much to writing as to being a columnist on several media. She authors the Understanding Dreams blog on the specialized platform Psychology Today, offering readers tools and advice to "decode" (as she denominates it), and understand the significance of their dreams, she emphasizes the premise that every dream holds a subjective and personal meaning, in her articles she discusses various topics and affairs related to the importance of general dream themes applied to specific contexts, such as dreams about teeth falling out or being attacked by a criminal, she then deduces possible meanings and variables depending on the personal situations, e. g. an internal conflict or doubts about the future.[1]
She is also known as the "Dream Catcher" columnist for Oprah Daily, where she shares insights into dream analysis and its practical applications. In this column she focuses on more specific types of dreams and the possible messages that those images and signals from unconscious mind might be sending to individuals, highlighting benefits they can bring to daily life[13]
Prominent works of her career as an article writer include Problem Solving While You Sleep, and Sexual Dreams, both published in the magazine Body and Soul in the United States.[14]
Dalfen has written two books in the Have a Great Dream series, which focus on teaching readers how to explore their dreams as a path to self-discovery and problem-solving. Among these works are found[15]:
- Dreams Do Come True, 2002
- La solution est dans vos rêves
- Have A Great Dream, Book 1;The Overview, 2018, by Dream Interpretation Center
- Have A Great Dream, Book 2;A Deeper Discussion, 2019, by Dream Interpretation Center
Her media presence includes over 250 radio and television appearances on major networks in Canada and U.S. such as NBC, CBS, ABC, WGN, Body and Soul, Canadian Living, Women's Voices, Inner Self, Ghost Village, Vice, and FOX affiliates, such as Good Day New York or Morning News in Chicago [16], as well as frequent guest spots on Coast to Coast AM, where she discusses her work and experience with dream interpretation.[17] She has also appeared as guest on programs like CJAD in her home-town Montreal, addiitonally in another major radio services as Bitboard.com, Launch Radio, and MegaPrep, recently, she appeared on The Kate Dalley Show on January 26, 2024.
On television, her presence stands out on the documentary series Seeing 911, a skeptic’s journey into a very real prophecy through Elevator Films for Vision TV in 2009, in Discovery Life Channel’s Health On The Line, in CITY TV’s Breakfast Television, and CTV’s Three Takes. Dalfen participated in The Age of E series on Wisdom TV, also was featured in a documentary titled, Dream Symbols:How To Work With Them for DREAMTIME for the PBS channel. [14]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Layne Dalfen | Psychology Today". www.psychologytoday.com. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
- ^ a b c d Fisher, Kimberly (2019-03-12). "Interview with Dream Analyst Layne Dalfen". Medium. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
- ^ "cgjungmontreal - Lectures on Tape 1986-2020". sites.google.com. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
- ^ "cgjungmontreal - Lectures on Tape (1986-2011)". sites.google.com. Retrieved 2024-11-25.
- ^ "President's Notes 2010-2014". C.G. Jung Society of Montreal. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
- ^ "Meet Layne Dalfen". canvasrebel.com. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
- ^ a b "Layne Dalfen on dream interpretation interview". www.worldofculturetimes.com. Retrieved 2024-11-25.
- ^ "Layne Dalfen The Dream Analyst - WBC Designs". 2023-10-27. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
- ^ "Dream Productions". Pixar. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
- ^ "Layne Dalfen Analysis". Presbourg Speakers. Retrieved 2024-11-25.
- ^ "Wedding Dreams: What They Mean for You". Brides. Retrieved 2024-11-25.
- ^ Rabinovitch, Jamie (2022-05-04). "We Asked A Dream Analyst To Tell Us What Our Dreams Meant". BuzzFeed. Retrieved 2024-11-25.
- ^ "Layne Dalfen". Oprah Daily. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
- ^ a b "Layne Dalfen 2014". Old Stone Farm. Retrieved 2024-11-26.
- ^ "Books by Layne Dalfen (Author of Have a Great Dream)". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2024-11-27.
- ^ "Layne Dalfen". Presbourg Speakers. Retrieved 2024-11-25.
- ^ "Layne Dalfen". Coast to Coast AM. Retrieved 2024-11-24.