Hallway: the way one meets other people or allows them into one’s life or intimacy, the receptive female reproductive function, connecting link with aspects of oneself. Example: ‘I find myself in the entrance hall of a very large house.
The hall is very large with curved staircases at either side meeting at the top to form a balcony. There is nobody about and I am frightened. I stan to walk up the stairs but then find myself hiding in the roof with very little space above my body’ (Mrs B).
The hall is probably Mrs B’s childbearing ability and her image of herself as a woman.
The words ‘little space above my body’ suggest her main area of life has always been her childbearing function or physical attractiveness as a woman, and she had not developed her mental self.
A long narrow hall predicts a long period of worry; an average normal entrance hall signifies petty vexations; an elegant and/or impressive hall indicates coming changes; a public (or meeting) hall suggests that you have been delaying an important decision on which you would be wise to act [2]
Communication and action. Often it is part of yourself that needs to be opened up.
The function of the hall is important, and who is in the hall. [3]
(2) If the hall is a mere antechamber (like a doctor’s waiting-room) it may mean a large part of your psyche still remains unexplored. [4]
If you go through one in a dream, it represents the start of an exploration of the self.
Dreaming of a large and long hall foretells a period of preoccupation. [5]
2. Start of a path.
3. Passage, spiritual or emotional.
4. Vagina.
5. Two-faced individual. [6]
A long hallway can symbolize a long monotonous journey [7]
being in a: a two-faced companion wil injure your reputation.
alone: be prepared for extended period of il usive anxiety until you reach insight.
with others: transition from one group of friends to another.
having a meeting in a, with friends: conversion is made complex by conflicting ideas.
enemies: advancement within own position leads to pessimism about the future. [12]
