"Can you imagine a modern American
man coming to his wife, who had just had a baby, and saying 'I had a dream last
night, and I received a message that we need to move to Mexico because our baby
is in danger here'? Can you imagine her discussion with her parents, as
they’re packing up the house? The conversation at work when they quit
their jobs?"
The question was put to me by a Christian friend after he read an article I had written on the dreams that saved the life of the infant Jesus. My
friend continued:
"Somehow we seem to think that lives 2,000 years ago were
simpler, and that these decisions weren’t as 'big' as they would be today, but
in an era when the average person probably never traveled more than 50 miles from
the spot they were born, this was a very large decision indeed. They knew
how to listen."
A thought transference exercise of this kind is like stoking a
fire, and bringing the glowing coals under the cold ashes alive. It carries a
fierce and luminous story that may have grown cold and gray through mindless
repetition into blazing relevance for how we live today.
My friend had further questions. "Where, and when, did we
lose the ability to listen to our dreams? How do we get it back?"
Here's part of the answer I give in my book Conscious
Dreaming:
For centuries, the church applied crushing weight to deny the
validity of personal experience in the worlds of spirit. Personal revelation is
always perceived as a threat by religious monopolies. To impose its control
over bodies and souls, the medieval church not only demonized half the cosmos;
it demonized the dream source and the personal unconscious - a poor name for
what is also our channel to higher consciousness.
Carl Jung, the son of a Protestant minister who had lost his
faith, observed that organized religion exists to protect people from a personal
experience of the divine. Hopefully, we and our churches will evolve
beyond the need for such defenses. In these things, there is simply no
substitute for personal experience.
If fear of dreams breeds witchfinders, it also spawns
reductionists, who are perhaps more deadly (or at least more deadening) because
they invoke scientific jargon in a society where 'science' is widely presumed
to have all the answers. Turn a certain kind of scientist loose on the dreaming
mind and you will soon be informed that dreams are hallucinations spawned by
the wash of chemicals, or nonsensical clutter generated by random neural
firing. Such findings are usually reported without a single reference to the
researcher's personal experience of dreaming, which speaks eloquently about
their value.
There is all the difference in the world between a genuinely
scientific approach and scientism, the dull ideology that denies the
authenticity of what cannot be quantified and replicated under laboratory
conditions. It is scientism, not genuine science, that is the enemy of
dreaming. True science is hungry for fresh data and new experiments, ready to
jettison theories that our understanding has outgrown, ever alive to the
possibility that the universe (like the dream source) is putting bigger
questions to us than our best brains can put to it. It is no accident that the
pathfinders of modern science - Einstein and Pauli, Kekule and Bohr, even Sir
Isaac Newton in his day - have been dreamers and practical mystics.
"How do we get it back?"
I've spent nearly thirty years in that cause, and have founded my own
school of Active Dreaming, training dream teachers from more that 20 countries. Part of what we help people to understand - to
revert to my friend's initial questions - is the need for discernment.
Working with dreams, as with any other source of information, we want to check
the reliability of our sources and fact-check the details. Active dreamers
learn to do this in a number of ways, for example by (a)
identifying and trusting their true feelings and gut instincts about a
dream; (by) getting feedback from others according to the quick, clear and
action-oriented Lightning Dreamwork process and (c) mastering the art of dream
reentry, which means going back inside a significant dream, wide
awake and conscious, to develop further information and dialogue with the
source.
Image: Russian Orthodox icon of the archangel Gabriel
Image: Russian Orthodox icon of the archangel Gabriel
1 comment:
Thank you very much for such a wonderful post. It gives me something to digest. Beautifully written. I must say, I have just discovered your writings and posts. I feel so fortunate. I listened to your lecture last night on The Shift Network. Totally amazing. I have used imagery to help my patients heal in surgery and Naturopathic Medicine. When listening to your live webinar, I loved your exercises. They were so amazing. Thank you for all of your efforts in writing and speaking. Although you are new to me, I know that you are a perfect teacher and I am glad to read, listen and study your work, with gratitude and sending much kindness your way, Dr. Denise Tarasuk RN, ND, MA Ayurveda
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