Here are the open secrets of the Dreamtime, insights shared by
many dreaming traditions and indigenous peoples that challenge the ruling
paradigms of a culture that confuses the real
with the physical.
1. Dreams are real experiences.
There are big dreams and little dreams. In big dreams we are dealing with events, encounters, and challenges that are entirely real
on their own level of reality. Our dream memories may be garbled or muddy, but
the dream is a real experience whose meaning lies within the dreamscape itself.
The dream experience, fully remembered, is its own interpretation. But we must
do more than interpret dreams; we must manifest their energy and insight in our
waking lives.
Shamanic dreamers tend to be quite literal-minded about dreams.
If you dreamed you fell off a rock-face, you’d
better remember to check your safety harness if there is any chance you might
go rock climbing. If you flew with the eagle, you discovered a powerful
spiritual ally — and your own ability
to transcend the limitations of your physical body. If you dreamed of your dead
uncle, before you start asking yourself what part of you he might represent,
you should consider the possibility that you had a visit with him. Is he
bothering you — maybe trying to cadge
a drink or a smoke — or offering you help?
If you dreamed you received instruction at a mountain shrine, you should be
open to twin possibilities: that you may go there someday, in physical reality;
and that you may have been called in
your dreams to one of the many “invisible
schools” where training and initiation
on the higher planes are conducted.
2. Dreams are flights of the soul.
Shamans say that in real
dreams (waking or sleeping) one of two things is happening. Either you are
journeying beyond your body, released from the limits of space-time and the
physical senses; or you receive a visitation from a being — god, spirit, or fellow dreamer — who does not suffer from these limitations. In the
language of the Makiritare, a dreaming people of Venezuela, the word for dream,
adekato, means literally a “flight of the soul.”
The open secret is that consciousness if never confined to the body and brain. We discover this in
spontaneous night dreams and intuitive flashes, when our left-brain inhibitions
are down. As we become active dreamers, we can hone the ability to make
intentional journeys beyond the body at any time of day or night.
3. You have a dreambody as well as a physical body.
In dreams, we usually travel in a subtle energy body of greater or lesser density. If we travel great distances - especially if the journey is over water - in a relatively heavy energy body, we may come back feeling jet-lagged. In our dreambody, we know pleasure and pain. Just as it can travel beyond the physical body in dreams and astral excursions, the dreambody survives physical death.
Czech artist František Kupka depicted the adventures of the dreambody brilliantly in his painting "Dream", in which we see lovers rising above their physical bodies in second bodies that are joined in a luminous space above them. The floating dreambodies are suffused with light rather than reflecting it; they are made to seem solid by shadows..
Czech artist František Kupka depicted the adventures of the dreambody brilliantly in his painting "Dream", in which we see lovers rising above their physical bodies in second bodies that are joined in a luminous space above them. The floating dreambodies are suffused with light rather than reflecting it; they are made to seem solid by shadows..
4. Dreams may be memories of the future.
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. You
can also learn to fold time and travel into the possible future by the methods
explained in this book. 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.
If dreams are memories of the future, is much of waking like the
experiencing in the physical body what we have already lived in the dreambody?
What would we become if we participated more consciously in this process? There
is an Iroquois story of a great hunter who always scouted ahead, in conscious
dream journeys, to locate the game and rehearse the kill. In one of his dream
scouts, he located an elk and sought its permission to take its life to feed
his extended family. He killed the elk in his dream and noted the red mark on
its chest where the arrow had gone in. The following day, he walked to the place
he had visited in dreaming and identified his
elk by the red mark on its chest. He then replayed an event that had already
taken place, by killing the elk again with a physical arrow.
5. Dreaming, we choose the events that will be manifested
in our waking lives.
The fact that we dream things before they happen does not mean
everything is predetermined. People who are not active dreamers can get quite
confused about what is going on when they wake up to the fact that we are
dreaming future events, both large and small, all the time. I think it’s like this. If you do not remember your dreams, you
are condemned to live them. (If you don’t
know where you’re going, you will
likely end up where you are headed.) If you remember some of your dreams and
screen them for messages about the future, you will find yourself able to make
wiser choices. You will discover that by taking appropriate action you can
often avoid the enactment of a “bad” dream or bring about the fulfillment of a happy
one. As you become a conscious
dreamer, you will find yourself increasingly able to choose inside the dreaming the events that will
be manifested in your waking life.
It’s not about
predestination. It’s about the spiritual
secrets of manifestation — and your ability to
become cocreator of your life. Meister Eckhart tells us how it is the razor-sharp clarity of the
practical mystic who has seen and experienced for himself: “When the soul wishes to experience something, she
throws an image of the experience out before her and enters her own image.”
It is not merely that we dream things (maybe everything) before
they happen; dreams make them happen.
6. The path of the soul after death is the path of the
soul in dreams.
Your dreambody does not die when your physical body loses it
vital signs. You will live on in your dreambody for a shorter or greater time,
according to your ruling passions and personal evolution. You will find
yourself, as you do each night in dreams, in a realm where thoughts are things,
and imagination, the great faculty of soul, can create whole worlds.
You come from the Dreaming, and you are released into the
Dreaming when you drop your sack of meat and bones.
Conscious dreaming is excellent preparation, not only for the
challenges that lie before you on the roads in this life, but for the
challenges of the journey you will make after physical death. How do you know
for sure? By doing it.
Text adapted from Dreamgates: Exploring the worlds of Soul, Imagination and Life Beyond Death by Robert Moss. Published by New World Library.
Art: František
Kupka,"Dream" (1909)
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