I've begun to pay much more attention to my dreams, particularly after reading Jung's Memories, Dreams, and Reflections , an autobiography which seemed peculiarly organized for an autobiography--it was non-sequential, and Jung omitted events in his life that one would think to be significant, such as the time he got married and when he had children. Frankly, the content in his book was so material dense that I'm sure a large portion of the ideas contained within it must have went over my head. But, I'd say that the part I enjoyed the most were the recollections of his dreams. I still remember many of the dreams and visions he recounted in his book, such as the dream of the ominous, dark figure of Jesus that he encountered underground in a childhood vision, and the vision of desecration of the cathedral, and the repeated dream he had about discovering different floors of a house. Jung's writing portrays him as a very odd person who has weird thoughts and encounters a...