https://youtubetranscript.com/?v=fEtK3s8VoRU
Some people remember dreams all the time, like two or three a night. I’ve had clients like that. They often have archetypal dreams that have very clear mythological structures. I think that’s more the case with people who are creative, by the way, especially if they’re a bit unstable at the time. Because the dream tends to occupy the space of uncertainty and to concentrate on fleshing out the unknown reality before you get a real grip on it. So it’s like the dream is the birthplace of thinking. That’s a good way of thinking about it. So because it’s the birthplace of thinking, it’s not that clear. It’s doing its best to formulate something. That was Jung’s notion. As opposed to Freud, who believed that there were sensors, internal sensors, that were hiding the dream’s true message. That’s not what Jung believed. He believed the dream was doing its best to express a reality that was still outside of fully articulated, conscious comprehension.