In our current closed-down society, people who did not
previously make much room in their lives for dreams are dreaming up a storm.
Unused to sharing or working with dreams, they often shout out, “Why am I
having this weird dream?” As a lifelong dreamer who devotes much of his time to
teaching others how to dream, let me offer a few general observations:
1.Dreams always tell us more than we already know. Don’t dismiss
any dream, or tag it as “weird” or trivial, until you have recorded it and
looked carefully at what is going on here.
2. "Weirdness" in dreams may be special effects your
dream producers bring in to dramatize something you need to understand or act
upon, such as the need for social distancing and self monitoring.
3Dreaming may be traveling; you make visits and you receive
visitations. Your social life may be very restricted in ordinary life, but you
can be as social as you like in your dreams. You can go to that farmer's market
or that travel destination you've been missing. I dreamed I wass in Aruba the other night, lying back under a palupa on the white sand beach with the taste of sea salt and lime daiquiri on my lips. I did not feel downcast when I reurned to my body's housebound condition. I enjoyed the full after effects of a mini vacation and did not have to pay for a plane ticket or wait for bags.
4.You have intuitive radar that comes fully alive in dreams. You
see things happening at a distance in time and space. You check out the
possible future. You see unwanted events in the possible future you may be able
to avoid if you clarify your dream information and take appropriate action. You
see desirable future scenarios -your dream home, your dream partner, your dream
job – that you may be able to manifest if you follow the road map your dream has
given you.
5. In dreams, you can go to a night cinema where the feature
films are made especially for you. You are not confined to sitting in the
audience. You can step through the screen and become scriptwriter, director an
star of your own life movies.
6. You can talk to the dead in your dreams. There is nothing “weird”
or unnatural about contact with the deceased, especially in dreams. We meet
them because they are still around, or because they come visiting, or because
in our dream travels we go to places where they are alive. Sometimes they have
guidance for us. Sometimes they need our help because they are stuck or
confused, and may have been hurled into the afterlife without preparation or
rituals of leave-taking. With so much death around us, this is a very good time
to learn, with the deceased, that consciousness survives the death of the body
and that life goes on in whatever world.
7. Dreaming, you have access to wiser sources than those available
to the daily trivial mind: to the god/goddess you can talk to, to the
ancestors, to a Greater Self. Your dreams are a voice of conscience and course
correction, showing you how your current actions and attitudes appear to an
objective, witness self. Dreams are a way for your true spiritual guides to get
past the cynical, reductionist skeptic in your left brain and recall you to
your bigger story.
8. Your dreams are a factory of images that can help you stay
well or get well. Your body believes in
images. Find the right ones and you program the amazing pharmaceuticals factory
inside you to pump out the right drugs, boosting your immune system.
9. You don't need to go to sleep in order to dream. Your most powerful
dreaming may unfold in the twilight zone between sleep and awake. You may
journey like the ancient shamans, hyper-awake. The scales may drop from your
eyes so you see that the world around you is a forest of living symbols looking
at you.
10.Active dreaming is a path of real magic. In my lexicon, true
magic is what happens when we bring gifts from another world into this one. We
do this when we remember our dreams and act to embody their energy and guidance
in everyday life. And when we wake up to the fact that dreaming is not fundamentally
about what happens during sleep. Dreaming is about waking up to a deeper
reality and deeper sources of meaning in our lives
To get good at dreaming, as with anything else, requires practice,
practice, practice. Three things to do now:
* Keep a journal. Date each entry and give it a title. This is going to become the most important book on dreams you will ever read: your personal encyclopedia of symbols, our data log for “supernormal” phenomena like clairvoyance and precognition, a place where you dialog with your Self and your inner teachers, a workout for the writer and creator in you.
* Keep a journal. Date each entry and give it a title. This is going to become the most important book on dreams you will ever read: your personal encyclopedia of symbols, our data log for “supernormal” phenomena like clairvoyance and precognition, a place where you dialog with your Self and your inner teachers, a workout for the writer and creator in you.
*Learn
some of the core techniques of Active Dreaming, my original synthesis of
dreamwork and shamanism. These include using the Nine Keys to Your Dreams explained
in my book Conscious Dreaming, practicing the Dream Reentry technique,
and learning to navigate by synchronicity, which is the dreamer’s way of
operating 24/7/ You’ll find a short guide to my relevant books here. You may
also want to check out my online video courses for The Shift Network
*Learn
my Lightning Dreamwork technique, a fast, fun process by which we can share a
dream or a personal story with a friend, give each other helpful feedback (without
presuming to tell each other what our dreams or our lives mean) and help each other determine what action we should take to embody guidance and energy from the story.
Get to know your dreams better and you may find that if you still want to call them "weird" you will use the word in older sense. Though few of us remember its origin, weird is derived from Wyrd, which is a
way of understanding how things in all the worlds are connected, and turn
together. In the Scotland of my paternal
ancestors, to be “weirdless” was to be unlucky or unfortunate in life.
Photo: Under a palupa on Manchebo beach, Aruba, by RM
1 comment:
Thank you for blessing the world with this wisdom. I am currently reading your book Conscious Dreaming and watched your Gaia episode yesterday so you could say I'm filling my life with Robert Moss as of recent ..!
I feel my dharma is involved in the dream and other worlds and raising collective consciousness with these tools, so thank you with all my heart for helping me along this path of remembering.
Blessings
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