What is tha dream house?
* Houses are one of the most common elemente in dreams.
* Dreams of houses can symbolize feelings about your family and Childhood.
* House dreams can also symbolize the conditions of your body and mind.
"Dream House" or "Ideal Home",which is a place where one
feels peace, happiness and comfort, makes beautiful memories
with one's family and has all the comforts one imagines; it can also
symbolize a new beginning, goals, self-confidence and progress in l.
Life,especially when a new house is being built in the dream.
A home designed to your liking and needs, with a playroom,
comfortable spaces, and peace. The frequency of houses in dreams
surely reflects the large amount of time that many people spend in
their homes. In lit-eral terms, a house provides its occupants with
safety, privacy, comfort, and warmth.
As an enclosure built of durable materials, it separates inside from
outside, domestic from public, family from stranger. For many
homeowners, their house is their most valuable asset, a physical
repository of their financial resources. This is why dreaming of a
threat to one's house, such as from fire or flooding, can be so disturb-
ing. Especially in an era of rapid climate change, these kinds of
worrisome house-danger dreams are likely to increase.
Dream of houses also carry important symbolic meanings, in at
two different ways. One is the house as a symbol of family relations
and childhood experiences. Dreams often cast us back into the homes
we lived in as children many years ago, reminding us of how those
experiences still shape and influence us today. A house can embody
deep memories and formative events, both joyful and scary. What
makes a house “haunted” in waking or dreaming is the uncanny
presence of residents whose energies are still living even if they
physically died long ago. When you dream of a childhood home, there
may be a symbolic connection between something important that
happened in that house and a difficult or challenging situation you are
facing right now.
House dreams can also symbolize aspects of your mind and body. For
instance, Carl Jung once dreamed of exploring a house with many
different levels; as he de-scended from one floor to another, the décor
changed from modern to ancient to Paleolithic. Jung interpreted his
dream as a symbolic portrayal of the human psyche, with modern
consciousness at the "top" of the structure, and the depths of thecollec-
tive unconscious at the "bottom." Other psychologists treat house
dreams as metaphors of the human body, with its var-ious
openings/orifices, its outer façade ("curb appeal"), secret inner spaces,
plumbing and wiring, etc. If you have a house dream, it is worth
considering how the condition of the building in the dream compares
to the condition of your mind and body in waking life. Perhaps you dis
- cover the house needs maintenance or re-pair; maybe something
especially tasty, or horribly nasty, is being cooked in the kitchen; you
might find whole new rooms you have never explored before. Such
dreams can use the familiar features of a house to help you better
understand sub-tle, easily overlooked aspects of yoursel
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House references in dreams can have both literal and symbolic levels
of mean-ing, and the two levels often overlap. In American society,
many people aspire to private home ownership in order to satisfy their
literal need for shelter and also to mark their symbolic achievement of
the "American dream." The common associa-tion of home ownership
with the American dream reflects an admirable striving for a good,
settled, independent life. However, narrowly reducing the ideal of the
American dream to owning a private home can lead to an excessive
focus on material gain and social status.

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