Counterdreaming' is Donald Meltzer's term for the psychoanalytic reverie
that arises from the countertransference during the session, in response
to the analysand's own dreams and phantasies. He writes: 'It is
difficult to explain the technique of counterdreaming... I compare it
with waiting in the dark for the deer, grazing at night, seen by their
flashing white tails.' This nocturnal vigilance is on the alert for
movement of the quarry, part object minimal movements which with
patience can be seen to form a pattern of incipient meaning cast before.