Within a background that seeks to intertwine the psychoanalytic and the phenomenological approaches, the article investigates the role of images, metaphors, and spatial and temporal representations within Freud’s research of the unconscious, leading to a reconsideration of his presence and meaning within Husserl’s investigation of the temporality of consciousness. The article aims to reconstruct the common (problematic) ground between Freud’s Wunderblock (1924) and Metapsychology (1915) on one side, and Husserl’s Semiotics (1890) and Phenomenology of Internal Time-Consciousness (1905-1910) on the other.