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The dream of a common language
The dream of a common language












the dream of a common language

Imagine the end of an old "Scooby Doo" cartoon, where you unmask the caper only to discover the scary person is a part of you that had been excluded, scared, and vulnerable. Have you been avoiding unpleasant feelings or aspects of yourself you've deemed unlovable? The surprising message of this dream is there is no aspect of you inherently unworthy - every part is vital to you becoming the empowered being you are meant to be. May these inspire you to stop taking your dreams lying down and instead attune to their whacky but brilliant wisdom. But, as a frequent flier, I'll make suggestions as to what I think they're telling you in hopes of guiding you closer to your own understanding.

the dream of a common language

No one but you can tell you definitively what your dream means. Dreams speak in pictures, metaphors, and wordplay - so pardon the puns. Since it's clinically proven that we humans dream between three to nine dreams every night, spending a third of our lives sleeping and dreaming, to whet your dream whistle, I've decoded five of the most commonly remembered dream themes.īut first, here are a few things you should know about dreams. Needless to say, I'm a dream enthusiast, and I hope you will be too. Since those early days, I've had dreams that have guided, healed, and, I believe, even saved my life, and I've witnessed dream-related miracles in the lives of people I've worked with professionally as a certified clinical hypnotherapist for the past 25 years.

the dream of a common language

Having a partner in crime made dreams stick, even past the time when they might've typically faded. We often ended up in the same dream at the same time and then remembered it and shared it with each other the next morning over breakfast. That wasn't the case for me because my younger sister and I had what is known as tandem dreaming. Most kids have strong dream recall, but it tends to fade as we enter puberty. In the morning, I shared my dream with my younger sister, who was barely 4, and she told me she'd had the same dream. In my first-ever remembered dream, when I was 5 years old, I dreamed of being chased by an evil witch, running, desperately hiding to avoid her wrath around the turrets of her scary castle. Account icon An icon in the shape of a person's head and shoulders.














The dream of a common language