I dreamed of a silly little dog decked out with fake antlers for some kind of Christmas pageant. The dog ran out on the road and was killed, but was magically revived by a dubious, utterly amoral character who seemed remote from the normal range of human emotions.
The dream had a movielike quality. I had no idea what was going
on here, but because I had no particular feelings about it, I was content to
record it in my journal before rushing off to the airport to catch a plane to
Denver.
I missed my connection and later found myself on a different
flight form the one schedules. Whenever my travel planes come unstuck, I am
alert for the play of the Trickster. On the “wrong” plane, I found myself seated next to a woman who
turned out to be best friends with a person in publishing to whom I had been
introduced only the day before, and I was able to glean some useful insights.
Our conversation was interrupted by the screening of the in-flight movie. I
looked up to see a silly little dog decked out in fake antlers for a Christmas
pageant. Later in the movie, the dog is killed on the road and magically
revived — by a low-flying angel
portrayed by John Travolta. The title of the movie is Michael, and I highly recommend it. What interested me most was
that I seemed to have attended an advance screening in my dream the night
before.
We dream things before they happen in waking life. If you work
with your dreams and scan them for precognitive content, you can develop a
superb personal radar system that will help you to navigate in waking life. For even the most active dreamers, however, the meaning
of many dreams of the future may be veiled until waking events catch up with
the dream.
I dreamed of a garden in Manhattan, modest in size, but beautifully designed. A place for quiet meditation, a refuge from big-city noise and hustle. A place where I felt I could do good work with good people. I was intrigues by this dream, which came to me at a time when I was quite resistant to leading programs in New York City because of the energy required to clear out all the static and psychic clutter and create a safe space for soul work. The dream left me feeling bright and happy. I was curious about the location of my dream garden. Did it exist in ordinary reality? When I reentered the dream, I found myself on a block in the East Fifties, between Third and Second. This satisfied me that I had visited a locale that existed in physical reality.
Lacking an exact address, I forgot about the dream after logging it in my journal. Yet the dream continued to exercise an influence: to my mild surprise, I said yes when several groups subsequently invited me to conduct workshops in New York.
Nine months after the dream —
the period of an average pregnancy —
I entered the meeting room of the New York Theosophical Society, on East Fifty-third
Street, for the first time. I stopped short. Through the picture window at the
end of the room, I looked out into the garden from my dream. As I stepped out
into the garden, an austerely elegant man in a black tunic followed me out. He
introduced himself as the society’s
program director, who had invited me. He explained that he had also designed
and now tended my dream garden.
Text adapted from Dreamgates: Exploring the Worlds of Soul, Imagination and Life Beyond Death by Robert Moss. Published by New World Library
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