You are the final
authority on your dreams, and you should never give the power of your dreams
away by handing them over to other people to interpret. Yes, our dreams can be
confusing and opaque, and we gain greatly from other people's insights,
especially when those other people are "frequent fliers" who work
closely with their own dreams and have developed a fine intuition about what
may be going on in dreaming. So it's okay to ask for help. More than that, we
often need help because we are too close to our own issues, or too inhibited by
self-limiting to see what may be obvious to a complete outsider.
However, we need to learn
some simple rules about how to share and comment on dreams. I suggest the following
guidelines for both sharing and self-study:
1. Record or tell the dream as
clearly and exactly as possible. Dreams are real experiences, and the meaning
of the dream is often inside the dream experience itself. Give your story a title.
2. Consider your
feelings, inside the dream and especially on waking. Your first feelings around a dream are a quick and usually
reliable guide to its relative importance, urgency and quality (e.g. positive/negative, literal/symbolic).
3. Always run a reality
check by asking: Is it remotely possible the events in this dream could be
played out in waking life? I have never seen more time wasted in dream analysis
-- and more life-supporting messages lost -- than when we fail to recognize
that our dreams are constantly rehearsing us for challenges that lie around the
corner. In our dreams, we are all psychic.
4. If you are going to
comment on someone else's dream, always begin by saying (in these words or
similar words), "If this were my dream, I would think about..." This
way, you are not leaning on other people and presuming to tell them the meaning
of their dreams or their lives. If we can only encourage more people to follow
this vitally important etiquette for dream-sharing, we'll create a safe space
for many people to share dreams and work with them in everyday situations. Most important, we will help each other to become authors of meaning for our own dreams, and our own lives.
5. Try to go back inside
the dream and recover more information. A dream fully remembered is often its
own interpretation. You may find dream reentry much easier than you thought when you wake up to the fact that a dream is also a place; because you have been to that place, you can find your way there again.
6. Try to come up with a
one-liner to summarize what happens in the dream (or encourage the dreamer to do
that). This will often turn out to be a personal dream motto that will orient
you towards appropriate action -- to act on the dream guidance and honor the
dream.
7. Always do something
with the dream! Dreams require action. We need to do far more than interpret dreams;we need to bring
their energy and insight into manifestation in waking life.
The simple guidelines
above are central to my Active Dreaming approach. You can learn more about fun,
everyday techniques for working and playing with dreams and using them as
portals for adventure and healing in a larger reality in my books; The Three "Only" Things and Active Dreaming are
good places to jump in.
Art: René Magritte, Belgian, La légende des siècles (1952).
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