Category: places
A barn symbolizes storage, rustic simplicity, or shelter. Jung sees it as a repository of the psyche; Freud, as a rural desire. Filling a barn suggest...
Keywords : storage, simplicity, shelter, preparation
Category: objects
A bean represents potential, growth, or modesty. Jung links it to a seed of the self; Freud, to a small desire. Planting beans suggests hope; eating t...
Keywords : potential, growth, modesty, nourishment
Category: animals
Bees symbolize collective work, discipline, and creativity. Jung associates them with communal instinct and fertile femininity (hive). A sting may ref...
Keywords : work, community, sting, creativity
Category: places
A border represents limits, transition, or separation. Jung links it to a psychic threshold; Freud, to a barrier of desires. Crossing a border suggest...
Keywords : limits, transition, separation, change
Category: objects
A bow (weapon) evokes tension, precision, or ambition. Jung links it to a spiritual goal; Freud, to directed sexual energy. Shooting a bow indicates f...
Keywords : tension, ambition, precision, goal
Category: objects
A box symbolizes a hidden treasure or accumulation. Freud sees it as repressed reserves; Jung, as an archetypal chest. Opening a box evokes discovery;...
Keywords : treasure, accumulation, discovery, closure
Category: actions
Breaking down a door symbolizes rupture or forced entry. Freud links it to phallic aggression; Jung, to a breach in the unconscious. Successfully brea...
Keywords : rupture, entry, aggression, breakthrough
Category: objects
Breath symbolizes life, spirit, or vitality. Jung sees it as the soulâs essence; Freud, as a primal urge. Deep breathing suggests calm; shortness of...
Keywords : life, spirit, vitality, calm
Category: emotions/characters
A brother symbolizes camaraderie, rivalry, or a mirror self. Jung links it to a shadow companion; Freud, to sibling dynamics. Bonding with a brother s...
Keywords : camaraderie, rivalry, unity, conflict
Category: places
A building symbolizes social structure or built ambition. Jung sees it as a temple of the self; Freud, as a phallic tower. Constructing a building evo...
Keywords : structure, ambition, creation, ruin
Category: actions
Burning something symbolizes purifying destruction or anger. Jung interprets it as destructive alchemy; Freud, as an incendiary urge. Burning an objec...
Keywords : destruction, purification, anger, purge
Category: actions
A burst (of laughter or glass) symbolizes joy or fragmentation. Jung interprets it as illumination; Freud, as a pulsating explosion. A joyful burst ev...
Keywords : joy, fragmentation, illumination, liberation