Dreams are the wellsprings for embracing aspects of the self and the community that have been split off, denied, and repressed. The intent of this research was to invite interested individuals to engage and understand the images that arise from shared dreams situated in the world of the post-Soviet Ukrainian psyche. When the figures and images of historical trauma are not given representation, they will walk among us as symptoms and nightmares. The literature review exhumes the forgotten images of woundedness which the Ukrainian people have endured during countless acts of genocide committed by imperial and soviet Russia. A personal dream of shattered Easter eggs set a path for engaging in depth research. Initially, this dream led the researcher to do fieldwork in Chornobyl, but also fueled the development of an imaginal approach to research that embraced the writings of James Hillman. He outlines this approach as one of notitia, pathologizing, and seeing through. Hillman’s affirms depth psychology’s responsibility to behold and listen to symptoms rather than numb them. A social dreaming group was organized in Kyiv, Ukraine and consisted of ten participants who met weekly for five weeks. Three dreams were shared by different members of the group. The imagery of all three dreams were deemed as a preparation, a rehearsal, for the Revolution of Dignity which began two days after our last session. In this case images are the foundation for action; for tending soul in a wounded world.
The relevance of her myth, her meaning to my creative spirit, and how she drew me to her is at the core of this study. This work further examines the difficulty of integrating opposite forces within the psyche.