Sarah is exploring her dreams in a Jungian therapy session. During one session, Sarah recounts a dream in which she is trapped in a dark cave, desperately searching for a way out. She describes feeling overwhelmed by fear and anxiety. Her therapist, adhering to Jungian psychoanalysis, listens carefully and acknowledges the emotions Sarah is experiencing. How should her therapist apply the principle of equivalence to understanding Sarah's dream? a. The principle of equivalence suggests that Sarah's fear and anxiety in the dream are equivalent to her waking life experiences, indicating unresolved conflicts. b. The principle of equivalence implies that the therapist should interpret the dream symbols literally, focusing on the details of the dark cave and the search for a way out. c. The principle of equivalence encourages the therapist to explore Sarah's past experiences to understand the drearn's symbolism fully. d. The principle of equivalence highlights that dreams are simply random, unrelated mental phenomena without inherent meaning.