News:

Welcome to the Astral Pulse 2.0!

If you're looking for your Journal, I've created a central sub forum for them here: https://www.astralpulse.com/forums/dream-and-projection-journals/



Find meaning in Dreams

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

runlola

...

James S

Absolutely!!!!

We used to have a lady working at our centre that was highly skilled at dream analysis. She used to teach it as a subject.

Apart from some basic guielines, she taught her students to build their own dream dictionaries based on what certain objects or events meant to them personally.

Dreams are one of the most fundamental ways our subconscious, our "soul", speaks to us and tries to guide us. It doesn't use spoken language, but rather symbols and concepts. Once we learn to pay attention to our dreams and what the messages are there's a wealth of useful info that we can receive from them.

Blessings,
James.

cainam_nazier

One of the reasons why when I am talking to some one about thier dreams I give them only possabilities, and usually several, so they get the idea.  It is usually better than asking, "What does it mean to you?"

Awakened_Mind

It's hard to interpret dreams unless you completely understand yourself. Otherwise you can interpret some of them, incorrectly.

Quote from: James S on December 02, 2006, 18:15:32
Dreams are one of the most fundamental ways our subconscious, our "soul", speaks to us and tries to guide us. It doesn't use spoken language, but rather symbols and concepts.

I remember after binge drinking I'd have dreams where I'd try to find water, or be drinking and it wouldn't help my thirst. This is only a physiological need but it offers some evidence to what you are saying.

I've read that dreams are your subconscious interpretation of being out of your body, as you slowly become more conscious or aware. So what is it that controls your dreams in the first place, your subconscious or your soul? Or does the latter reside in the former?

-AM
Truth exists beyond the dimension of thought.