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Mari 07-17-2013 04:22 AM

Book about exploring dreams
 
http://www.amazon.com/Healing-Dreams...4052520&sr=1-5

Healing Dreams: Exploring the Dreams That Can Transform Your Life
by Marc Ian Barasch

Quote:

The Washington Post hails Healing Dreams as "a book as wise and healing as a dream...lucid, brave, and trailblazing." The winner of the Nautilus Award for best psychology book 2001, it invites the reader on an adventure of the soul. It offers a clear, compassionate understanding of what dreams mean, but also poses a daring question: What do our dreams ask of us, and how might we answer? Dr. Gayle Delaney urges, "Read this book if you want to live a bigger, more vivid life."
Here is a book I ran across about thinking about our dreams.

Mari

waves 07-17-2013 09:13 AM

This book sounds very interesting, Mari. :)

Did you buy it / are you reading it?

waves

Mari 07-18-2013 10:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by waves (Post 1000657)
This book sounds very interesting, Mari. :)

Did you buy it / are you reading it?

waves


HI, Waves,


The author has been busy and has an interesting bio:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Ian_Barasch

Here is an interview with about the book:
http://www.healingdreams.com/interview.htm
Here is part two:
http://www.healingdreams.com/int2.htm

Quote:

Barasch: The medieval Hasidic commentator Amoli distinguished between the "Dreamweaver" and the "Master of Dreams." The Dreamweaver produces ordinary dreams, which are a rehash of waking life, what Freud called Tagereste, "the residues of the day." The Dreamweaver is probably close to our conscious mind, or just below it, in the subconscious.

But the Master of Dreams is another story.
The more you look into what Jung called "big" or "numinous" dreams - dreams in which the dreamer is being spoken to - the more you find them infused with great wisdom. These dreams tend to be very vivid, with bright color and intense sounds. You get the sense you've been somewhere else. They're called "clear dreams" in some traditions, "true dreams" or "talking dreams" in others.

When I was trying to sort out my own big dreams, I would tell people, "It was a dream, but it wasn't a dream." I had no language to describe it. But then I studied Jung and looked at other cultures and discovered they all talk about it. Most commonly, they make a distinction between true dreams and ordinary dreams, or big dreams and little dreams.
And the big dreams, the true dreams - whatever you want to call them - seem to come from a Master of Dreams, a source outside ourselves, which appears to be the basis for our idea of God.

I have too many issues with sleep to add one more thing.

Mari


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