Theft

To steal something is to appropriate what is not one’s own, something that does not belong to oneself. For example, stealing a uniform in a dream might signify an attempt to acquire a collective attitude one does not possess and perhaps should not possess.  

The impulse to steal something can, in itself, be healthy. Wanting something we need is entirely natural and helps us survive. However, acquiring it solely through theft suggests an immature shortcut, laziness; one is unwilling to work for it.  

Theft is a “trickster act” that can be necessary for further development. The most famous theft is perhaps Prometheus’ stealing of the gods’ fire, which he gave to humanity. Expanded consciousness is something of a transgression, as the story of Adam and Eve illustrates. “Dreams often allude to the criminal aspect of ego development.” (Anatomy of the Psyche, p. 93.)  

If one experiences theft in a dream, it might suggest that something within oneself has been repressed, which has transformed in the shadow into a thief, stealing one’s time, attention, energy, focus, etc.—in any case, some form of theft from oneself.

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