What a Dream Symbol Is Actually Doing: Structural Analysis and Transjective Affordance

John ZenoMarch 19, 20269 min read

There are two ways to fail at dream interpretation. The first is to treat a symbol as a fixed code: snake means transformation, house means self, water means the unconscious. Look it up, apply the answer, move on. This is what dream dictionaries do, and it misses the point almost every time.

The second way to fail is to treat the symbol as purely private: it means whatever you project onto it, full stop, no framework needed. This sounds like it honors the dreamer's uniqueness but it actually forfeits the interpretive leverage that comes from understanding what symbols are and how they work.

The problem with both failures is the same: they locate the meaning either entirely in the symbol or entirely in the dreamer. But that's not where meaning lives in a dream. It lives in the relationship between them. What a symbol is doing in a dream is a function of what it is and what this dreamer, at this moment in their life, needs and resists and cannot yet see.

DeepJung uses a framework developed based on this idea, called a Transjective Affordance Analysis (TAA). It is very similar in spirit to what Professor Christian Roesler's Structural Dream Analysis (SDA) does. To understand what a Transjective Affordance Analysis is, let's look at Roesler's work.

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What Roesler's Research Actually Found

Roesler is a professor of clinical psychology at the Catholic University of Applied Sciences Freiburg and one of the few researchers applying systematic empirical methods to Jungian dream work. His Structural Dream Analysis method, developed and validated across a series of studies, focuses specifically on the relationship between the dream ego and the other figures and spaces in the dream.

The core question SDA asks is not what the dream symbols mean in general, but what the dreamer is doing in relation to them. Is the dream ego active or passive? Does it engage, avoid, or freeze when it encounters the central figure or image of the dream? The structural relationship, not the symbolic content in isolation, is treated as the primary diagnostic data.

"The assumption is that the meaning of a dream consists not so much in it containing certain symbols or elements but more in the relationship between the elements and in the course of action that the dream takes" – Professor Roesler

This matters because Roesler's 2018 study of 202 dreams across 15 therapy cases found that dream series are dominated by one or two repetitive structural patterns, and those patterns correspond closely to the patient's psychological problems and personality structure as assessed through other clinical means (Roesler, 2018). Critically, as therapy progressed and patients improved, the patterns in the dream series shifted. The structure of how the dream ego related to the symbols in the dream was tracking something real about the dreamer's psychological situation.

His 2020 paper extended this, finding that Jungian compensation theory — the idea that dreams correct for one-sided conscious attitudes — holds up against the empirical evidence from dream series. Dreams are not random. The figures and images that appear are not interchangeable. And the relationship between the dreamer and those images is the variable that changes when healing happens (Roesler, 2020).

What SDA establishes empirically is that the symbol cannot be read in isolation from the dreamer's relationship to it. A passive dream ego encountering a large threatening figure is in a different psychological situation than an active dream ego encountering the same figure. The symbol is not the unit of analysis. The relational dynamic is.

The Problem This Points Toward

SDA is designed for empirical tracking across a series of dreams. It is a method for measuring structural change over time, for identifying which patterns are present and whether they shift. What it does not fully address is the interpretive question of what a specific symbol is offering at a specific moment: what it is inviting the dreamer to do, feel, or become.

This is where the concept of transjective affordance becomes useful.

The term affordance comes from ecological psychologist James Gibson, who used it to describe what an environment offers an organism independent of whether the organism consciously recognizes the offer (Gibson, 1979). A ledge affords sitting. A gap affords crossing. The affordance is real and exists in the relationship between the organism and the environment, not solely in either one.

Applied to dream symbols: the image is not a blank screen for projection and not a fixed code. It is transjective — it exists in the relational field between psyche and world — and it carries affordances: what it invites the dreamer's psyche to do, feel, or become. Those affordances are real properties of the symbol. But they are only activated in relation to a particular dreamer in a particular psychological situation.

Four Questions for What a Symbol Is Doing

Transjective Affordance Analysis asks four questions about any dream symbol. Together they map what the symbol is offering in the relational field, complementing the structural tracking that Roesler's SDA provides.

Threshold affordance: what boundary does this symbol sit on, and what does it offer as a crossing point? Every living symbol exists at a liminal space: death and life, conscious and unconscious, inner and outer, known and unknown. Identifying which threshold the symbol is standing on tells you the direction of movement it is proposing. A locked door in a dark basement sits on the threshold between what is known and what hasn't been brought to consciousness. The affordance it carries is the possibility of crossing, whether the dreamer moves toward it or away from it is part of the data, and maps directly onto the SDA question of dream ego activity.

Tension affordance: what opposites does this symbol hold simultaneously, and what is the unresolved polarity it carries? A symbol is psychologically alive precisely because it cannot be reduced to one meaning. The snake carries danger and healing in the same image. Fire carries destruction and purification. Jung distinguished a symbol from a sign on exactly this basis: a sign points to one known thing; a symbol holds opposites in tension and resists collapse into a single meaning. The tension affordance is the measure of the symbol's interpretive vitality. A symbol that has been fully explained has ceased to function as a symbol.

Somatic affordance: what does the body want to do in the presence of this symbol? Approach, flee, bow, devour, freeze? The body registers a symbol before the interpreting mind reaches it. The somatic response in the dream, and when the dreamer sits with the image while awake, is diagnostic information about what the symbol is activating below the level of narrative meaning. This question is the phenomenological equivalent of Roesler's structural question about dream ego activity and passivity. SDA measures the structural relationship. The somatic affordance question makes that relationship viscerally explicit: not just active or passive, but in what bodily register, with what felt quality.

Compensatory affordance: what does this symbol offer that the dreamer's conscious attitude is currently refusing? What function is it trying to restore? This is the most interpretively demanding question because it requires understanding the dreamer's current conscious position before the compensation can be identified. Roesler's research confirmed empirically that Jungian compensation theory holds up: dreams do appear to correct for one-sided conscious attitudes, and the correction tracks therapeutic change over time. The compensatory affordance question makes that correction explicit for a specific symbol in a specific dream: what, exactly, is being extended here that the waking ego has been refusing to carry?

How They Work Together

SDA and TAA are not competing frameworks. They operate at different levels of resolution and are most useful in combination.

SDA provides empirical structure. It identifies the repetitive patterns in a dream series, tracks whether the dream ego's activity level is changing, and provides a longitudinal measure of whether the psychological situation is shifting. This is the scaffold: a reliable, reproducible way to see what is structurally present across multiple dreams.

TAA provides interpretive depth within the structure SDA identifies. Once a recurring symbol or pattern has been identified, the four affordance questions ask what that symbol is specifically offering: which threshold it sits on, what polarity it holds, what the body already knows about it, what the conscious attitude has been refusing that it is trying to restore. This is the depth reading inside the structural frame.

Together they address the failure modes that each alone is vulnerable to. SDA without interpretive depth can track structural change without illuminating what the specific symbols are doing. Affordance analysis without structural tracking can produce rich interpretations of individual dreams that have no longitudinal anchor. The combination gives you both the map of where the dreamer is in the process and a depth reading of the specific images that are carrying the most psychological charge.

This is why neither framework produces a fixed interpretation of any symbol. Both are asking relational questions. What the symbol means is always a function of what this dreamer, in this psychological situation, at this moment, is doing with it and what it is offering back. That relationship is what changes as the psyche integrates material. That relationship is what dream interpretation is actually tracking.


References

Gibson, J. J. (1979). The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception. Houghton Mifflin.

Jung, C. G. (1916/1948). General aspects of dream psychology. In The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche (Collected Works Vol. 8). Princeton University Press.

Roesler, C. (2018). Dream content corresponds with dreamer's psychological problems and personality structure and with improvement in psychotherapy: A typology of dream patterns in dream series of patients in analytical psychotherapy. Dreaming, 28(4), 303–321.

Roesler, C. (2020). Jungian theory of dreaming and contemporary dream research: Findings from the research project Structural Dream Analysis. Journal of Analytical Psychology, 65(1), 44–62.

Roesler, C. (2025). Dreams and Dream Interpretation: A Contemporary Introduction. Routledge.

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John Zeno

About the Author

John Zeno

John Zeno is the founder of DeepJung and a researcher in Jungian dream analysis. After a transformative dream experience in 2024, he immersed himself in Carl Jung's Collected Works, studying archetypal psychology, dream interpretation methodology, and the neuroscience that validates Jung's core theories.

His research draws from Jung's compensatory dream theory, Jaak Panksepp's affective neuroscience, Mark Solms' neuropsychoanalysis, and the work of Marie-Louise von Franz. He has analyzed hundreds of dreams using formalized Jungian methodology and is a member of the Baton Rouge Jung Society.

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