In traditions where the importance of dreaming is understood, the right dream may be your price of admission to the good stuff.
It is common in Tibetan tradition for spiritual teachers to ask
students to bring them a dream to determine if they are ready to receive
important teachings. A student without a dream is regarded as blocked and
possibly unclean. He is required to undergo purification and perform practices
to reopen his connection with spiritual allies. He is not allowed to continue
his studies until he can produce the right dream.
Tenzin Wangyal
Rinpoche gives a personal example, from the time of his training with Lopon
Rinpoche, in his book Tibetan
Yogas of Dream and Sleep. The story is doubly interesting because it
involves long-range dream precognition. At 13, as a student,Tenzin dreamed he
was handing out slips of paper with the Tibetan syllable A written on them to
people boarding a bus.
He brought this dream to his
teacher, who did not comment, but allowed him to proceed to a further level of
instruction. Fifteen years later, waking events caught up with the dream.
Invited to travel to the West for the first time, Tenzin found himself assigned
to hand out slips of paper with the Tibetan syllable A on them to people
boarding a bus. These were to be used in a meditation exercise.[1]
When the French ethnographer Jean-Guy Goulet
told the Guajiro (a South American people also known as the Wayuu) that he
wanted to live with them and study them, they replied that they would only
allow him to live with them if he “knew how to dream”. [2]
In 1994, a dream proved to be my admission ticket to the Dreaming
of an Aboriginal people in my native Australia. I dreamed I was carried back to
Australia by a sea eagle, to a reunion with my mother, and then guided into the
hinterland of south Queensland, to the banks of a muddy creek. Something
immense was thrashing and rising from the waters. Nearby were Aborigines
painted for ceremony. An elder told me, "This is the first of all
creatures. This is the beginning of our world."
When my mother died suddenly, three months later, I was grateful
that the dream had prepared me for this event, through our loving exchange in
the dream itself, and by how it inspired me to reach out to her and heal some
misunderstandings. I flew back to my native country. After the funeral, I went
"walkabout" for a few days, and found myself at an Aboriginal housing
co-op in a dusty town in the hinterland called Beaudesert. When I started
talking about dreams, I was told I needed to talk to Frank. Who was Frank?
"Oh, he's our spirit man." Frank's place proved to be three days bush
walk away, so this lead seemed like a non-starter.
But Frank walked in as I was getting ready to go; shamans are
tricky. He invited me down to the pub to talk. He sipped orange juice and
sniffed me, literally, checking if I was another white fella trying to rip off
his people yet again. Then I told him the dream. His manner changed radically.
He sat very still, his eyes blazing like fire opals.
"Oh, I guess you've come to me for a reason, mate. You've
just told me the start of the creation story of my people, the Mununjalli, as
it is told to made men. That thing you saw in the water was the bull eel. We
say it is the first of all creatures."
Yet a dream had taken me deep inside the Dreaming of an ancient
and indigenous people. Because of my dream, Frank volunteered to show me the
place of the Bull Eel Dreaming. Skirting quicksand and snakes, after many hours
I found myself on the bank of the muddy creek from my dream. No bull eel in
evidence that day, which was fine with me.[3]
- Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche,
The Tibetan Yogas of Dream and Sleep (Boston: Snow Lion, 1998) pp. 12-13.
- Jean-Guy Goulet, “Dreams
and Visions in Other Lifeworlds” in David E. Young and Goulet (eds) Being
Changed by Cross-Cultural Encounters (Peterborough, Ontario; Broadview
Press, 1994). p. 22.
- The full story
is in my book Conscious Dreaming. (New York: Three Rivers Press,
1996).