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Remembering and Interpreting Dreams
Dr. Judith Orloff
At different times in my life, I am a physician, a teacher, a friend and an
author, but being a dreamer is what I value the most.
Whatever I am doing, I always hear my dreams echoing in a distant underground
chamber beneath my thoughts and feelings, attuned to the rhythms of my body and
the very substance of the earth. They are my compass and my truth; they guide me
and link me to the Divine. They call out to me in an intimate whisper, always
knowing how to find me. They speak my real name.
For me, dreaming is a direct line to a place where magic abounds and nothing is
without meaning. It is a pristine state of awareness, unpolluted and clear.
Direct guidance for healing lies in our dreams, the natural territory of
intuition. Here, time and space are non-existent and anything is possible. Like
a blank, white canvas, our dream world is a spacious medium where intuition can
freely express itself. We have only to listen.
You are in partnership with your dreams. Initiate an ongoing dialogue with them.
It’s like consulting the wisest doctor you can imagine who knows you inside out.
You can ask your dreams anything. No question is trivial if it is meaningful to
you. Expect answers. Some will be direct. Others may require interpretation.
Your dreams can reveal many truths about your life. They can provide
extraordinary intuitive insights, and give you information that can help your
health, love life and career. You’d be surprised at the straightforward advice
that your dreams give, either spontaneously or on request.
Dreams can keep you well. Dreams provide answers. But first you must retrieve
them. Here are my four strategies to help you remember your dreams:
Keep a journal and pen by your bed.
Write a question on a piece of paper before you go to sleep. Formalize your
request. Place it on a table beside your bed or under your pillow.
In the morning do not wake up too fast. Stay under the covers for at least a few
minutes remembering your dream. Luxuriate in a peaceful feeling between sleep
and waking, what scientists call the hypnagogic state. Those initial moments
provide a doorway.
Open your eyes. Write down your dream immediately; otherwise it will evaporate.
You may recall a face, object, color, scenario, or feel an emotion. It doesn’t
matter if it makes perfect sense or if you retrieve a single image or many.
Record everything you remember.
When you’re finished, refocus on the question you asked the previous night. See
how your dream applies. One, two, or more impressions about the who, what, where
of your solution may have surfaced. Get in the habit of recording your dreams
regularly. Be assured I’ve never met anyone who can’t be taught how to remember.
Keep at it. Remember to practice. Soon it will become second nature to you!
In addition to the practical aspects of remembering dreams, there’s an intuitive
level to understanding dreams. Reliable intuitive information stands out in very
specific ways. Watch for these clues:
Statements that simply convey information.
Neutral segments that evoke or convey no emotion.
A detached feeling, like you’re a witness watching a scene.
A voice or person counseling you, as if you’re taking dictation from an outside
source.
Conversations with people you never met before who give instructions.
I’ve found my most dead-on intuitions either come across as compassionate or
have no emotion at all. Develop a careful eye as you practice separating the
content of your dreams from your reactions to it. Soon you’ll be able to tell
the difference between unreliable guidance and truly reliable guidance.
Be aware that your dreams go by different rules than your waking life. Get ready
for a mind shift. Physical laws no longer apply. Gravity changes. In dreams you
can fly!
Dr. Judith Orloff, M.D. is a board certified psychiatrist, energy and intuition
expert, and author of, Positive Energy, Guide to Intuitive Healing and Second
Sight. Visit www.DrJudithOrloff.com |