OldCoyote
Trickster
The seventeenth-century Iroquois practiced a dream psychotherapy that was surprisingly similar to Frued's discoveries some two hundred years later. There is no evidence that Frued ever knew of these reports or could have had any inkling of this aspect of Iroquois culture. However, the Iroquois explained their concept of dreams to the Jesuit Fathers in terms remarkably similar to the words Freud used:
The Iroquois also believed that a person's natural wish was often fulfilled through their dreams, "which are its language".. They were also aware that a dream might mask rather than reveal the souls wishes.
All of which is a remarkably sophisticated grasp of what we in a
Modern culture call psychiatry.
In conclusion, the Iroquois recognized the existence of an unconscious, the force of unconscious desires, how the conscious mind attempts to repress unpleasant thoughts, how these unpleasant thoughts often emerge in dreams, and how the frustration of unconscious desires may cause mental and physical illness. The Iroquois knew that their dreams did not represent facts but rather symbols- which had to be brought to medicine people, more enlightened than the common, whose sight, penetrates, as it were, into the depths of the soul.
Thoughts?
"In addition to the desires which we generally have that are free, or at least voluntary in us, and which arise from a previous knowledge of some goodness that we imagine to exist in the thing desired, We believe that our souls have other desires,which are, as it were, inborn and concealed. These... Come from the depths of the soul, not through any knowledge, but by means of a certain blind transporting of the soul to certain objects,"
The Iroquois also believed that a person's natural wish was often fulfilled through their dreams, "which are its language".. They were also aware that a dream might mask rather than reveal the souls wishes.
All of which is a remarkably sophisticated grasp of what we in a
Modern culture call psychiatry.
In conclusion, the Iroquois recognized the existence of an unconscious, the force of unconscious desires, how the conscious mind attempts to repress unpleasant thoughts, how these unpleasant thoughts often emerge in dreams, and how the frustration of unconscious desires may cause mental and physical illness. The Iroquois knew that their dreams did not represent facts but rather symbols- which had to be brought to medicine people, more enlightened than the common, whose sight, penetrates, as it were, into the depths of the soul.
Thoughts?
