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Dreams
When we dream, we believe we are awake. That is, while we're actively engaged in a compelling dream, we truly believe we are awake. The only other time we believe we're awake is—well, when we are actually awake.
Dreams mock our very sacred sense of reality. Perhaps, it is one reason we pay such little attention to them, or, more accurately, why we so frequently and persistently try to dismiss our dreams.
On occasion, however, we are all visited by a dream that is not so readily dismissed—what is sometimes called a "big dream." It might be nightmarish, eerie, or just rich with meaning. Whatever the reason, it simply lingers through the day; it won't let us go, and it begs for interpretation.
Much has been written across time and cultures about approaches to dream interpretation. Virtually all such approaches allow us to make psychological sense of dream content. They do this essentially by explaining the dream in terms of our view of the waking world. Our psychological sensibilities—the things we just presume to be true become the gold standard we use to evaluate our dreams. ...
The spiritually fatal flaw of such dream interpretation is that it implies we can come to fully understand a dream. An alternative approach suggests there is a meaningful but irreducible mystery in dreaming.
In the end, is it not more important to know there is meaning in a dream than to know exactly what that meaning is? We can best understand dreams only in the larger context of the process of dreaming itself.
—Dr. Rubin Naiman
A Note on Dreams and Dreaming
Copyright © 2005 by Dr. Rubin Naiman