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- Story Listed as: True Life For Adults
- Theme: Mystery
- Subject: Fantasy / Dreams / Wishes
- Published: 08/31/2023
Dreams
Born 1969, M, from Herten, NRW, Germany"I don't dream at night. I dream all day. I dream for a living."
- Steven Spielberg
Dreaming for a living. That sounds like a pretty good way to earn your livelihood.
The fact is that it isn't far off and might be more true than we can fathom.
What we dream of is who we are and signifies our deepest desires.
If we follow our dreams and turn what they mean into reality, that can turn into a very happy life indeed.
Einstein's Theory of Relativity was inspired ... by a dream.
The idea for Google, the songs "Satisfaction" and "Yesterday", the sewing machine, James Watson's vision of the DNA double helix, the Periodic Table, Beethoven's piano sonatas, Handel's "Messiah", all of these things came into people's minds while dreaming and were put into practice by these dreamers.
Even Jekyll & Hyde, Frankenstein and the The Terninator were born ... during dreams.
It all boils down to energy.
Science has beyond all doubt proven that everything we see and are amounts to immaterial and electric wavelengths. Like smartphone waves, reality works on the quantum principal of the invisible turning visible. Information being sent across the ether. That happens from phone to phone, from sensor to pump, from telephone to printer, from TV to satillite. But it also happens from brain to brain, from heart to heart and from spirit to spirit.
We can also prove that the energy we are is exchanged with other energies and is connected forever.
This connection is called electron entanglement.
It even works with belief.
Rice that was labelled with "I love you!" tasted better after two weeks than rice labelled with "I hate you!"
In fact, we are conscious energy and this energy can be healed.
What you dream can hold information that wants to help you heal.
Tibetan monks healed cancer with chanting live on camera. A man with life long chronic side pains could only be healed once he remembered being stabbed with a spear on a 17th century battlefield. A little boy's nightmares stopped first when he realized that he had crashed into the Pacific as a World War II pilot. Energy. All these people might have taken the steps to heal themselves through listening to their dreams.
If we would include the energy of the eternal spirit into our aims of healing psychological disorders, the problems could be solved much faster.
How this can take a very complex turn, we see in the following case.
A man with severe and laming Obsessive Compulsive Disorder had been plagued by awful nightmares all of his life. They left him baffled and confused.
Nothing seemed to help him cure the problem. In fact, his neurosis even seemed to become more aggressive with old age. His OCD gave him acute migranes.
He could first be healed once he realized he had been the victim of a cruel manipulative scam sometime in the 19th century. He had been a soliciting woman back then, a prostitute, fooled to leave her own small flat in the middle of the night to make space for a new tenant. The woman he had been was threatened by a killer from a brothel mafia who threatened that if she did not leave the flat that night, he would murder her. Scared of what might happen, she complied, not knowing what the man was really up to. Terrified that the criminal was up to something awful, she returned to her flat early in the morning anyway, discovering that the criminal had brutally butchered the woman she had left space for, the new tenant. Imagine the guilt. She had spent her life trying to help her friends. Her trauma was so severe that she spent that entire morning stumbling through the streets, sobbing, hoping to be murdered as well. Perhaps it was fate that led her to run into the same killer, who murdered her with one blow and dumped her in the river. Her body was never found. The killer was never found, either. Instead, the woman on the bed was mistaken for her own self and was even buried under her own name.
The man she was reincarnated as was born with a massive guilt problem, his brain exploding into what he called "conflict fits" every time a problem arose.
He literally kept blaming himself for a thousand things that never were his fault, helping others while totally forgetting himself, never being taken seriously, never seen or so he thought. His past life imprints had left him with many unsolved traumas: being used as innocent bait in an unsolved crime case, fearing never to be heard or taken seriously, dying anonymously and being mistaken for someone else. And severe hidden anger at unheard injustice and social cowardice. The woman he had been had never been able to solve her problem and it transported into his current life. After remembering the occurrence, his nightmares stopped and his OCD subsided.
Dreams, however, can also ring bells of morning glory.
One woman dreamt of a chapel she had visited as a little girl and was inspired to go there during a summer vacation. It was out of the way and a rather inconvenient ride, but she went anyway. When she arrived there, she met an old school friend she had not seen for years. They had been in love back then, but never became a couple. It turned out the school friend made the trip because of a dream. Now, they became a couple.
People dream of past lives and even remember dying and going to heaven in their dreams.
Near-Death-Experiencers have spoken of the "God Energy of Dreams" with an immediate transition and shift into another reality after death. Almost all of them return with knowledge of names and places they could not have known before.
People with past life memories go back and prove that what they remember was true.
Places they never saw in pictures really existed, people they had never known had lived.
Hunches they had felt were true that became true.
Are dreams really portals to another reality?
Native American tribes have long supposed we travel to parallel dimensions during our dreams.
In "Dreams Are My Reality" from the film "La Boum", Nancy Danino sings about a lover she never has met,
but she knows exists. If we are honest, we have all had that dream that seemed so real we could touch the surroundings, we could actually feel the fabric of the dress of the woman we held. We woke up with a feeling of having been there. Some of us have even caught ourselves knowing we were dreaming and tried to concentrate on feeling the surroundings of our dream world. That is called lucid dreaming.
I had two such experiences of clear lucid dreaming.
I was in a romanesque cathedral courtyard of beige sandstone in one dream.
I clearly remember flying into a stone church pit in my dream and thinking:
"I know I am dreaming this. I will try to see if I can feel the touch of the stone walls here."
After touching them, I thought to myself:
"Hey, that's cool. I can feel the walls."
I looked at my hand in my dream and realized I had soot and dust on my finger.
So, I decided to wake myself up and see if my finger was filled with soot and dust in the "real" world.
I did wake up, but to my dismay I realized I had no soot on my finger.
My second lucid dream was one of many segments in a very typically active dream of mine.
I tend to move about a great deal in my dreams, searching for something that I never seem to find.
Someone I love is perfectly safe somewhere else and I always end up being busy trying to get there.
Anyway, in one of the segments, I was in an orange tent close to a mountain side dug into the ground breast high in rows with many other people. There was a guy next to me in the last row I was in.
I remember knowing that this was a dream and at least subliminally understanding that it was a symbol for spiritual awareness. "You are stuck breast high in a kind of physical prison in this life. The difference with you is that you are aware of it." I remember touching the ground in the dream and feeling the sand.
Reality is God's Dream. The sentence from one of Whitley Strieber's books rings a bell.
It also coincides with the idea MIT scientist Rizwan Virk writes about in his book "The Simulation Hypothesis": that we are living in a running computer game. Columbia Professor Brian Greene even calls the black holes the "storage spaces of the universe". If we believe that the universe is a running video game or an actual spiritual learning platform designed by God, it actually amounts to the same thing: what Niels Bohr told us a hundred years ago.
"None of this is real."
So when you dream, you are actually travelling into the real world.
The Beyond.
Dreams(Charles E.J. Moulton)
"I don't dream at night. I dream all day. I dream for a living."
- Steven Spielberg
Dreaming for a living. That sounds like a pretty good way to earn your livelihood.
The fact is that it isn't far off and might be more true than we can fathom.
What we dream of is who we are and signifies our deepest desires.
If we follow our dreams and turn what they mean into reality, that can turn into a very happy life indeed.
Einstein's Theory of Relativity was inspired ... by a dream.
The idea for Google, the songs "Satisfaction" and "Yesterday", the sewing machine, James Watson's vision of the DNA double helix, the Periodic Table, Beethoven's piano sonatas, Handel's "Messiah", all of these things came into people's minds while dreaming and were put into practice by these dreamers.
Even Jekyll & Hyde, Frankenstein and the The Terninator were born ... during dreams.
It all boils down to energy.
Science has beyond all doubt proven that everything we see and are amounts to immaterial and electric wavelengths. Like smartphone waves, reality works on the quantum principal of the invisible turning visible. Information being sent across the ether. That happens from phone to phone, from sensor to pump, from telephone to printer, from TV to satillite. But it also happens from brain to brain, from heart to heart and from spirit to spirit.
We can also prove that the energy we are is exchanged with other energies and is connected forever.
This connection is called electron entanglement.
It even works with belief.
Rice that was labelled with "I love you!" tasted better after two weeks than rice labelled with "I hate you!"
In fact, we are conscious energy and this energy can be healed.
What you dream can hold information that wants to help you heal.
Tibetan monks healed cancer with chanting live on camera. A man with life long chronic side pains could only be healed once he remembered being stabbed with a spear on a 17th century battlefield. A little boy's nightmares stopped first when he realized that he had crashed into the Pacific as a World War II pilot. Energy. All these people might have taken the steps to heal themselves through listening to their dreams.
If we would include the energy of the eternal spirit into our aims of healing psychological disorders, the problems could be solved much faster.
How this can take a very complex turn, we see in the following case.
A man with severe and laming Obsessive Compulsive Disorder had been plagued by awful nightmares all of his life. They left him baffled and confused.
Nothing seemed to help him cure the problem. In fact, his neurosis even seemed to become more aggressive with old age. His OCD gave him acute migranes.
He could first be healed once he realized he had been the victim of a cruel manipulative scam sometime in the 19th century. He had been a soliciting woman back then, a prostitute, fooled to leave her own small flat in the middle of the night to make space for a new tenant. The woman he had been was threatened by a killer from a brothel mafia who threatened that if she did not leave the flat that night, he would murder her. Scared of what might happen, she complied, not knowing what the man was really up to. Terrified that the criminal was up to something awful, she returned to her flat early in the morning anyway, discovering that the criminal had brutally butchered the woman she had left space for, the new tenant. Imagine the guilt. She had spent her life trying to help her friends. Her trauma was so severe that she spent that entire morning stumbling through the streets, sobbing, hoping to be murdered as well. Perhaps it was fate that led her to run into the same killer, who murdered her with one blow and dumped her in the river. Her body was never found. The killer was never found, either. Instead, the woman on the bed was mistaken for her own self and was even buried under her own name.
The man she was reincarnated as was born with a massive guilt problem, his brain exploding into what he called "conflict fits" every time a problem arose.
He literally kept blaming himself for a thousand things that never were his fault, helping others while totally forgetting himself, never being taken seriously, never seen or so he thought. His past life imprints had left him with many unsolved traumas: being used as innocent bait in an unsolved crime case, fearing never to be heard or taken seriously, dying anonymously and being mistaken for someone else. And severe hidden anger at unheard injustice and social cowardice. The woman he had been had never been able to solve her problem and it transported into his current life. After remembering the occurrence, his nightmares stopped and his OCD subsided.
Dreams, however, can also ring bells of morning glory.
One woman dreamt of a chapel she had visited as a little girl and was inspired to go there during a summer vacation. It was out of the way and a rather inconvenient ride, but she went anyway. When she arrived there, she met an old school friend she had not seen for years. They had been in love back then, but never became a couple. It turned out the school friend made the trip because of a dream. Now, they became a couple.
People dream of past lives and even remember dying and going to heaven in their dreams.
Near-Death-Experiencers have spoken of the "God Energy of Dreams" with an immediate transition and shift into another reality after death. Almost all of them return with knowledge of names and places they could not have known before.
People with past life memories go back and prove that what they remember was true.
Places they never saw in pictures really existed, people they had never known had lived.
Hunches they had felt were true that became true.
Are dreams really portals to another reality?
Native American tribes have long supposed we travel to parallel dimensions during our dreams.
In "Dreams Are My Reality" from the film "La Boum", Nancy Danino sings about a lover she never has met,
but she knows exists. If we are honest, we have all had that dream that seemed so real we could touch the surroundings, we could actually feel the fabric of the dress of the woman we held. We woke up with a feeling of having been there. Some of us have even caught ourselves knowing we were dreaming and tried to concentrate on feeling the surroundings of our dream world. That is called lucid dreaming.
I had two such experiences of clear lucid dreaming.
I was in a romanesque cathedral courtyard of beige sandstone in one dream.
I clearly remember flying into a stone church pit in my dream and thinking:
"I know I am dreaming this. I will try to see if I can feel the touch of the stone walls here."
After touching them, I thought to myself:
"Hey, that's cool. I can feel the walls."
I looked at my hand in my dream and realized I had soot and dust on my finger.
So, I decided to wake myself up and see if my finger was filled with soot and dust in the "real" world.
I did wake up, but to my dismay I realized I had no soot on my finger.
My second lucid dream was one of many segments in a very typically active dream of mine.
I tend to move about a great deal in my dreams, searching for something that I never seem to find.
Someone I love is perfectly safe somewhere else and I always end up being busy trying to get there.
Anyway, in one of the segments, I was in an orange tent close to a mountain side dug into the ground breast high in rows with many other people. There was a guy next to me in the last row I was in.
I remember knowing that this was a dream and at least subliminally understanding that it was a symbol for spiritual awareness. "You are stuck breast high in a kind of physical prison in this life. The difference with you is that you are aware of it." I remember touching the ground in the dream and feeling the sand.
Reality is God's Dream. The sentence from one of Whitley Strieber's books rings a bell.
It also coincides with the idea MIT scientist Rizwan Virk writes about in his book "The Simulation Hypothesis": that we are living in a running computer game. Columbia Professor Brian Greene even calls the black holes the "storage spaces of the universe". If we believe that the universe is a running video game or an actual spiritual learning platform designed by God, it actually amounts to the same thing: what Niels Bohr told us a hundred years ago.
"None of this is real."
So when you dream, you are actually travelling into the real world.
The Beyond.
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