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What are dreams?

“Lets start with a visual. Take for example a ray of light, as in shining from a light source, and shining it into a prism. You would be able to see all these different aspects of light, moving and fragmenting themselves, extending to different facets of reality. This light shining is you and through the prism you see all these different aspects of you. YOU are a multidimensional being. All the light rays are aspects of you.

Brief overview of consciousness and multidimensionality:

  • “Dimensions” are a means of organizing different planes of existence according to their vibratory rate. Each dimension has certain sets of laws and principles that are specific to the frequency of that dimension.
  • “Consciousness” represents awareness. The inhabitants of each dimension function clearly, easily, and with a minimum of resistance within that plane because their consciousness vibrates in resonance with the frequency of that dimension.
  • “Multidimensional Consciousness” is the ability to be “conscious” of more than one dimension. To be multidimensional in our consciousness we must remember that we have within us the potential to expand our perceptual awareness to the dimensions above and below our physical plane.
  • “Unconscious” means unaware of and unable to attend to internal and/or external stimuli within the inhabitants’ own dimension or within another dimension. Third dimensional humans are largely unaware of their first dimensional, second dimensional, and fourth dimensional selves. The human unconscious is best accessed through physical body messages, introspection, dreams, and meditation.
  • “Conscious” means aware of and able to attend to stimuli within the inhabitants’ own dimension. The third dimensional self is conscious of what can be perceived by the five physical senses of sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell.
  • “Superconscious” is a higher order of consciousness of the fifth dimension and above in which the inhabitants are able to be aware of and attend stimuli of their own dimension as well as all the lower dimensions. The superconscious is innately multidimensional. The third dimensional self can become “conscious” of the superconscious through meditation, prayer, and by surrendering to the enfoldment of the higher order consciousness.

When you are dreaming you are retracting aspects of yourself. Yes, dreams seem like a great adventure, yes they seem to be unrelated to your physical life here, and at times they are fantastic. But the purpose of the dream is to pull together part and parcel of what has been splintered.

When you have “good dreams” it is a representation of your capabilities, it is you in harmony. It is symbolic translation of what you are going through. Saying to yourself,”Hey, you are happy, keep it up. Do what you love.”

If you have a “bad dream” it is a parallel version of what you are experiencing here in this life. Saying to yourself, “Hey, this vibration is out of alignment. You should maybe take a look at this.”

Okay, phew, indeed you have your higher self connected to you, obviously, but also you have parallel reality lifetimes which include MANY other beings, past and future lives, and the “you” here and now (even though all is now). And all that information is YOU. You need it for the growth of your soul. You are not just a wandering zombie, you are learning compassion or kindness. Or total chaos and destruction. Each journey is unique and important for the growth of a soul.

I have a friend who helps injured wild animals. He often has a crow, salamander, a frog, or some other bird and a opossum. I wonder, “How in the world do you find all these animals?” I rarely see an injured animal weak enough for me to take home and nurture. Well, these things are in his path, he is experiencing being a steward of the Earth by helping animals. That path is not the same as mine. You create the reality that helps you learn what your soul is seeking. And your dreams guide you, tell you, reflect you, remind you, and help you experience what you need to continue your purpose, if you will.

If you kept a dream journal and then mapped all the places you go, the things you learn, the people you visit, you will learn exactly who you are!

One more thing; when you go to bed at night to sleep, your dreams reflect the vibrational quality you are in when you went to bed. You do not gain momentum while you sleep. So when you pay attention to the dream it is most important to look at the quality of the dream, it’s your compass.”

What are dreams?

“Dreams are thoughts lighting up during sleep. When thoughts light up while we are awake we call it reality, and when thoughts light up while we are asleep we call it dreaming. Why is that? Neither shows reality so why do we believe one more than the other? Product of the mind can never be real, but points to the real, that’s all we can know. We dream in an attempt to find wholeness – bridging conscious thoughts and unconscious thoughts together. We have an evolutionary drive to seek Oneness.”

What are dreams?

“We dream as a grounding tool.  Waking life is already so dream-like that, without an alternative state to call “dreaming” we would lose track of what is real – like the movie “Inception”.  Dreaming may have been evolved is an adaptive trait so that we do not go insane.  Or, it may have been devised by a higher power of some sort in order to keep humans believing that ‘reality’ is all there is, since it is more conscious state than dreaming.”

What are dreams?

“Dreams are a glitch in the matrix.  It is a bit of the simulation that sneaks through the cracks.  As in a video game, where there is a loading period for the next level, each night is that for us.  While our next day is simulating, we sleep.  However, sometimes, we wake up or sleep lightly, and this interferes with the loading process.  We wake up to a random algorithm of combined thoughts, memories, and predictions.”

What are dreams?

“Dreams are an alternate dimension of consciousness that we access for the purpose of working through trauma.  We are exposed to so much stimulus each moment of waking life.  Our nervous system handles most of it, but some sneaks through and burns us where we are most fragile.  Dreams are our mind’s attempt to process these scars and heal them.  They are the wisdom of our subconscious, which is always there but able to work its magic when our waking consciousness isn’t in the way.”