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​Resources: Dreams

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  • Afterlife
  • Ageing/Wisdom
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"Dreams are more than reality itself; they’re closer to the self," says Gao Xingjian, a Chinese novelist and playwright. Many dream theorists might also agree with Xingjian’s statement.

In 1973, my first precognitive dream
resulted in an epiphany and complete transformation of life as I knew it to be. Everything considered normal in my life was to change drastically. Incredibly new pathway opportunities were to unfold, taking me into deeper, more meaningful levels of conscious spirituality exploration. The situation inspired me to become a life-long seeker and prober of conscious spirituality pathways. More importantly this direction provided doorways towards finding the real self!

R
ecollection of dreams, and sharing and interpreting their respective meanings have significantly contributed to varied personal journeys of transformation. Studying dream theorists, metaphysical divination, and topics related to spiritual consciousness have led me to continuous self-directed learning, workshops, psychic consultations and more.

A second precognitive dream in the 1980s virtually saved my life through an awareness and subsequent avoidance of what would have been an horrific car accident.

T
here is obviously more work to be done! For serious seekers of truth, probers and interested others one thing to always remember is to honour your dreams because you own them! Keep a journal. Carl Jung has stated in his 17 volumes of psychological work: “You and only you know the answer to your dreams.”

Consider researching any of the following
dream theorists: Carl Jung, Edgar Cayce, Ann Faraday, Robert Moss and Robert Waggoner.
DREAMS SELECTION

  1. Philip Crouch: An Introduction To Dreamwork Click here
  2. Robert Waggoner: Lucid Dreaming Experience Magazine Click here
  3. Cynthia Pearson: Dreaming The Future: Can We Change It? Click here
  4. Robert Moss: Introduction To Conscious Dreaming Click here
​
  • To download a PDF containing all of the articles in the DREAMS SELECTION, click here.
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Sample extracts from the DREAMS SELECTION

4.  Robert Moss: Introduction To Conscious Dreaming Click here

According to Moss, some shamans believe that nothing occurs in ordinary reality unless it has been dreamed first. In the dreamscape, we not only glimpse future events, we can also develop our ability to choose more carefully between possible futures.

Conscious Dreaming's innovative system of dream-catching and transpersonal interpretation, of dream re-entry and keeping a dream journal enables the reader to tap the deepest sources of creativity and intuition and make better choices in the critical passages of life.

Moss offers nine keys when working with your dreams:
  1. Trust Your Feelings,
  2. First Associations,
  3. Reality Check,  
  4. Dream Re-Entry,
  5. Dialogue With Dream Characters,
  6. Tracking Your Dream Self,
  7. Symbol Exploration,
  8. “What Part of Me?”
  9. Dream Re-enactment
 
  • Robert Moss You Tube - Introduction to Conscious Dreaming: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=516AedPdtWE
  • www.mossdreams.com ​

1.  Philip Crouch: An Introduction to Dreamwork Click here

​Common dream themes, courtesy of J.A. Hadfield Dreams and Nightmares:
  • Falling: “fall from grace”; lacking support; “fallen woman”
  • Flying: “rising above conflict”; “on top of the world”; “flying high”
  • Nudity: feeling exposed, vulnerable, revealed, open
  • Examinations: “under examination”; “put to the test”
  • Losing teeth: “lost face”; “spoiled self-image”; feeling “toothless”
  • Losing money and valuables: losing/re-evaluating values; detachment
  • Finding money and valuables: reflection of one’s own value or worth
  • Sex: being excited, “worked up,” intimately involved, intruded upon.
​
  • https://www.bookdepository.com/Dreams-and-Nightmares-J-- Hadfield/9781853437137?ref=grid-view
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