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Robert Moss WAY OF THE DREAMER |
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DREAMING
WITH SPIRITUAL GUIDES by Robert Moss The guides who come to us in dreams put on
masks or costumes adapted to our level of understanding. There is an old Greek saying that
the gods love to travel in disguise. The guide may appear with a familiar face
that of an old friend, or a departed loved one. The sacred guide may appear in a
form that has been shaped by our religious upbringing or in a form that is wildly
shocking to conventional beliefs. Genuine teachers often love to shock us awake. The guide may appear in dreams as a
generic figure, especially in places of transition or in border zones: as the taxi driver,
or the customs official, or the train conductor, or the person at the airline check-in
desk. The sacred guide may appear in a form that has
been shaped by our religious upbringing or in a form that is wildly shocking to
conventional beliefs. Genuine teachers often love to shock us awake. When the guide drops even the edge of the mask,
the initial effect can be terrifying. Every angel is terrifying, wrote Rilke,
who knew what he was talking about. The encounter with the guide may
challenge us to brave up, to move decisively beyond the fear and clinging of the little
everyday mind, in order to claim our connection with deeper sources of wisdom and true
power. This is often the case with dream experiences
in which we meet a powerful animal. Faced with a bear or a tiger in a vivid dream, our
first instinct may be to run for our lives. Yet the bear or the tiger may be hunting us to
invite us to claim our own power and our own medicine. How do we do that? By going back
into the dreamspace, through the Dream Reentry technique explained in Conscious Dreaming to face whatever needs to be
faced and to claim our connection with the dream animal (and/or the angel). In Native American teachings, we are not fully alive
we are missing a part of our vital soul energy if we lack a strong and
vibrant connection with the animal guardians. Here, also, it is recognized that our truest
and most important spiritual allies come looking for us in dreams. The Lakota have many
ways of approaching the sacred. But they also recognize that the greatest gift comes when
the sacred beings come looking for us. The most revered medicine lodge among the Lakota is
the Bear Dreamers Society. It is composed of those who have been visited and called by the
Bear in their dreams. Dream encounters with the guide like all
powerful dreams need to be honored. We may want to create a talisman, or personal
power object, to hold the memory and the energy of the dream. It may sometimes
be appropriate to use a stone or crystal for this purpose. In the shamanic dream practice
of the Ojibwa the pawaganauk, or dream visitor,
is honored in this way. After an encounter with a dream guide, the dreamer finds a stone
that will be more than a souvenir; the stone can become a place of rendezvous and
continued communication with the dream guide as the dreamer learns to journey into
a chamber that opens inside the stone. |
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| © 2003 Robert Moss. All rights reserved | ||||