2006
DOI: 10.1516/7gm3-mldr-1w8k-lvlj
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Where are you, my beloved?: On absence, loss, and the enigma of telepathic dreams

Abstract: The subject of dream telepathy (especially patients' telepathic dreams) and related phenomena in the psychoanalytic context has been a controversial, disturbing 'foreign body' ever since it was introduced into psychoanalysis by Freud in 1921. Telepathy- suffering (or intense feeling) at a distance (Greek: pathos + tele)-is the transfer or communication of thoughts, impressions and information over distance between two people without the normal operation of the recognized sense organs. The author offers a compr… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
14
0
6

Year Published

2007
2007
2021
2021

Publication Types

Select...
7
1

Relationship

2
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 43 publications
(20 citation statements)
references
References 41 publications
(50 reference statements)
0
14
0
6
Order By: Relevance
“…In the many years that have passed since I treated Nir, I have come to realize that transformation in the most cut‐off, blocked, deadening, empty, desperate, and despairing psychic zones—zones of psychic breakdown, madness, annihilation, and catastrophe—may become possible only when the analyst/therapist is willing and able to be‐within (and with‐in ) the patient's experiential world and within the grip of the analytic process, with the ensuing patient‐analyst deep‐level interconnectedness or “witnessing” psyche‐with‐psyche (Eshel , , , , , , , ). This interconnectedness, which becomes at‐one‐ment when the analyst puts him‐/herself entirely within the patient's emotional reality, is difficult and demanding, an unyielding, ongoing struggle with the underlying catastrophe to reach a new and formative, deep experiencing, beyond epistemological exploration‐K.…”
Section: Clinical Example: a Voice From A Haunting Dungeon Of Madnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the many years that have passed since I treated Nir, I have come to realize that transformation in the most cut‐off, blocked, deadening, empty, desperate, and despairing psychic zones—zones of psychic breakdown, madness, annihilation, and catastrophe—may become possible only when the analyst/therapist is willing and able to be‐within (and with‐in ) the patient's experiential world and within the grip of the analytic process, with the ensuing patient‐analyst deep‐level interconnectedness or “witnessing” psyche‐with‐psyche (Eshel , , , , , , , ). This interconnectedness, which becomes at‐one‐ment when the analyst puts him‐/herself entirely within the patient's emotional reality, is difficult and demanding, an unyielding, ongoing struggle with the underlying catastrophe to reach a new and formative, deep experiencing, beyond epistemological exploration‐K.…”
Section: Clinical Example: a Voice From A Haunting Dungeon Of Madnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In modern physics, different paradigms—classical physics and quantum mechanics—do coexist (Kuhn ). Whereas classical physics is based on assumptions of linear causality, determinism, and a sharp separation between observer and observed, quantum mechanics introduced into scientific thinking enigmatic principles of uncertainty and inseparability of observer and observed, the crucial formative effect of the process of observation, and the fundamental organization of unbroken wholeness that underlies our perceived world of separateness at the particle level (Bohm ; Botella and Botella ; Eshel , , , , , ; Field ; Godwin ; Kulka ; Mayer ; Sucharov ; Suchet ).…”
Section: Concluding Thoughts: Reading Late Bion and Winnicott Into “Qmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is precisely this kind of constriction of the sensory "flow" within the patient and between patient and analyst that can contribute to a profound sense of psychic suffocation as was suffered frequently by the patient described earlier. These claustrophobic and constricted sensory "packages" may act upon the analyst in somatically powerful ways, and the analyst may, in turn, respond with sensory fragmentation or hallucinatory-like somatic symptoms (Eshel, 2001(Eshel, , 2006Grand, 2003;Goldberg, 2004).…”
Section: Further Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… For recent discussions of the enigma of telepathy in dreams, see Eshel (2006) and Mayer (2001). Significantly, Eshel interprets telepathic experiences as an expression of the unconscious communication that occurs between therapist and patient. …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%