Our bodies know what is going on inside them, and they speak to
us about this in dreams, which often diagnose developing illness before
physical symptoms are detected. By working with these diagnostic dreams, we can
often deal with a problem before it has reached a critical phase – and
sometimes avoid painful and costly medical interventions.
Some of our dreamscapes are living dioramas of what is going on
inside our bodies. Conflicts taking place in our dreams are sometimes dramatic
portrayals of how our immune system is trying to cope – or failing to cope –
with disease. Dreams can take us deep into the cellular structures of the body.
For thousands of years, gifted physicians have recognized that such “bodytalk”
dreams can provide accurate diagnosis of our ailments, often long before
physical symptoms have developed.
Reading somatic messages in this way was central to traditional
Chinese medicine, as well as to medical practice in ancient Greece and in many
other cultures. Galen, the most famous physician in the Hellenic world after Hippocrates, wrote a treatise on diagnosis and said that his own life had been saved by a diagnostic dream. In the Victorian era, Western doctors continued to look for
diagnostic information in their patients’ dreams.
Sometimes, the dream diagnosis can mobilize us to get the right
medical help before a developing illness becomes even more serious.
In her late thirties, Ellen, dreamed that a threatening intruder
walked into her dream house and pointed a gun at her breast. She
was sensitive to dream imagery and knew intuitively that the dream was warning
her that she might have developed breast cancer. She immediately sought medical
help. Ellen’s cancer was discovered in its earliest stages, thanks to the fact
that she remembered her dream and acted on its warning, and her problem was
solved with a simple lumpectomy.
Sensing that her dreams were telling her about a serious health
problem, a young woman called Carol made repeated visits to a physician who was
initially baffled by her punch list of vague and elusive symptoms The doctor
began to question whether there was really a physical problem. Then Carol
dreamed a very simple dream – a large wolf appeared and spoke to her: “I
am Lupus Wolf.” Carol called the next morning, snagged an appointment and told
her physician the dream. Now he went to work and soon confirmed that her dream
diagnosis was exactly correct; she had lupus.
The dream of Lupus Wolf gave Carol more than diagnostic
information her physician could work with to help her get well. Lupus Wolf
became a guide and partner in her dreams, helping her to become an active
participant in her own healing. He showed her the foods she needed to eat,
warned her away from a medicine that would cause anxiety, and led her in
further dreams to a healing garden, a place she found she could revisit to
relax and imagine herself well.
Illustration: "Wolf Doctor" by Robert Moss
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