This paper develops a method for reading dreams as structural maps rather than fixed messages. It argues that the first question should not be “What does this dream mean?” but “What is this dream showing?” Dreams may be meaningful, but they are not automatically messages, commands, prophecies, or symbolic codes. They are better approached as temporary simulations of how the psyche routes pressure, avoidance, desire, memory, threat, shame, relationship, and possible repair. The paper brings SI into conversation with Freud’s dream-work, Jung’s compensatory view of dreams, activation-synthesis theory, the continuity hypothesis, threat simulation theory, social simulation theory, content analysis, imagery rehearsal therapy, and lucid dreaming research. It introduces several practical concepts: dream-map, architecture of avoidance, load-bearing figure, symbolic pressure, blocked repair route, dream leakage, interpretive seduction, and the lucid trap. The method asks readers to observe dream structure before interpreting symbols: what moves, what freezes, who has power, who has no voice, where movement stops, what boundary appears, what repeats, and what waking-life structure matches the dream. The paper also warns against AI-generated dream interpretations that produce coherence too quickly, turning dream work into impressive but contactless explanation. Its practical contribution is the SI Dream Runtime Sheet, a disciplined tool for slowing interpretation, reducing overclaim, and linking dream material to reality, boundary, repair, and lived contact.
Vladisav Jovanovic (Fri,) studied this question.