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Cayce
was able to obtain virtually an unlimited
amount of knowledge on an unlimited number of subjects. One of these
subjects was
dreams and
dream interpretation. Cayce was able to astound people by interpreting their
dreams and giving them insight into their psyche, lives and even past lives.
Cayce revealed that dreams are actually journeys into the spirit world.
Edgar Cayce once said, "Dreams, visions, impressions, to the entity in
the normal sleeping state are the presentations of the experiences necessary
for the development, if the entity would apply them in the physical life.
These may be taken as warnings, as advice, as conditions to be met,
conditions to be viewed in a way and manner as lessons, as truths, as they
are presented in the various ways and manners."
Each night the average person spends approximately ninety minutes in a dream
state. Some of us can remember all or most of our dreams, and others have
trouble remembering even a snippet from one of our nightly sojourns.
The dream state is an experimental playground which gives you a chance to
explore and express emotions without the usual inhibitions you may display
in your waking life. Dreams provide an avenue of expression for that part of
yourself that knows both your history and your potential as a spiritual
being. They are another way the universe provides guidance about
relationships, careers, and health problems. Through dreams you may find
answers to your spiritual questions and even receive encouragement to some
challenge in your life. While some dreams may allow you to release bottled
emotions from your day's activities, others can lead to profound insights in
a psychological or spiritual way.
However, Carl Jung said dreams are "the main source of all of our
knowledge about symbolism." This means that the messages you receive
from your dreams are expressed symbolically and must be interpreted to find
their true meanings.
Mark
Thurston, executive director for Edgar
Cayce's research foundation and author of the book, Dreams:
Tonight's Answers for Tomorrow's Questions, says, "A dream symbol
is the very best way for your unconscious self to communicate to your
conscious self. The particular image chosen - be it an object, a person, an
animal, or whatever - has shades of meaning and personal associations that
make it the best communicator of some truth about yourself."
Ancient Chinese tradition held that it is your spiritual soul which creates
your dreams and leaves the body to travel to other realms and meet other
souls. They and other ancient cultures, including the Greeks, erected dream
temples for seekers to find guidance about their lives. Many times
purification rituals as well as other rites of preparation were performed by
the seeker prior to entering the temple and the dream state. Upon awakening,
the seeker consulted with the temple dream interpreters.
Cayce believed that our dreams
serve several functions. Somatic dreams - dreams referring to the body - are
extremely important to be mindful of. Very often dreams will offer solutions
to health problems. For example, one man was plagued with food allergies for
many years, but was unable to find the source of his discomfort. Then one
night he went to bed and he dreamed of a can of coffee. He quit drinking
coffee and his symptoms disappeared.
Jung says that rarely do the symbols in dreams have just one meaning. And
when interpreting the messages in your dreams, he suggests going with your
first hunch, relying on your intuitive abilities, before applying more
rational methods of dream interpretation.
Cayce also believed that deceased friends and family members do occasionally
visit us in our dream state. These occurrences may offer direct
communication with those people or allow us to resolve our feelings about
their death. The person may also represent some aspect of ourselves.
One man reports that occasionally he hears a voice in his dreams. This voice
usually is loud and strong and is not associated with any characters in his
dreams. "Typically, I'm told something very specific to do or not to
do," he relates. "I know this is God speaking to me - loud and
clear. And I know I'd better listen."
Morton Blumenthal, who received more dream interpretations from Cayce than
anyone else - often reported
dreams of a disembodied voice, which offered counsel. Cayce
usually indicated this was input from the Creative Forces, God. For example,
in one dream, Blumenthal dreamt of a figure leading him by the hand, and a
voice which said, "The Lord will lead you - but you must ..." He
had forgotten the rest of what was said to him, but Cayce interpreted it as
follows:
"As in this, as is seen, again and again, the entity receives that
reassurance of the higher forces guiding, guarding, and directing the entity
in its actions, as it were, with the cloud by day and the pillar of fire by
night."
Blumenthal also had a fascinating dream in which God came to visit him. To
the dreamer's surprise, God was a modern businessman. Cayce's interpretation
pointed out that God was someone with whom we can "do business."
God is not only transcendent but also actively involved in human affairs. It
was a powerful message and, in a sense, a wonderful revelation from the
divine.
More Cayce on
Dreams
The following is an excerpt from the excellent
book by Harmon Bro entitled
Cayce
on Dreams.
During the dreaming state of sleep, we experience the different levels of
consciousness and receive input from the different realms of the spirit
world. Through dreaming, we have special access to our spirit within.
According to the Cayce
readings, there is not a question we can ask which
cannot be answered from the depths of our inner consciousness when the
proper attunement is made.
A dream may be of a physical, mental, or spiritual nature and may deal with
all manner of psychic manifestations. These include telepathy, clairvoyance,
prophetic visions, out of body traveling, remembrance of past lives,
communication with beings in other realms including deceased friends and
relatives, spirit guides, angels, Christ, and even the voice of God. Dreams
can also give invaluable information on the status of the body.
All subconscious minds are in contact with one another. Through the
subconscious, dreams may place us in attunement with those in the physical realm
or those in the spiritual realm. We may be visited in the night by
discarnate entities for many reasons: they may seek to give us assurance
about their well-being in other realms of existence; they may come seeking
our aid through prayer; they may come to bring us information which may be
very helpful or limited; or they may come to influence us with their own
desires or perspectives, which may be helpful or harmful. For example, there
are dream reports of deceased relatives appearing and giving instructions
about where to find a will or a lost object.
The events we experience in the third-dimension are, as it were, a
"past condition" because this dimension is simply a projection or
a reflection of what is being built at another higher level. Therefore, when
we tune into these higher levels, as we may in dreams, we become aware of
what is being built, and what may be projected into the physical in the
future. Nothing of importance happens to us that is not foreshadowed in our
dreams. Which is not to say that all dreams are precognitive or that the
exact detail of everything we experience is given earlier in dreams.
However, the word "foreshadowed" suggests that we may glimpse and
be warned of what we are building now which may come into manifestation
later. We call these dreams "precognitive" or
"prophetic."
Just as the angels spoke to people in dreams in the times of the Bible, the
spirit world still speaks to people to this day. Some people came to Cayce
with dreams of Christ. None was told that it was simply his imagination, but
all were assured they were indeed in touch with him.
There is no dimension of human life, whether social, financial, emotional or
physical, mental or spiritual with which the dream may not on occasion deal.
Dreams may encourage or reprimand, instruct or deceive, inspire or seduce,
guide or confuse. The potential for an immense array of experiences in
consciousness is always there. What we actually receive depends upon our
attitudes, motivations, the measure of our attunement, and the extent to
which we have made applicable what was received in earlier dreams and in
waking experiences.
Many people came to Cayce to have their dreams interpreted. An example was the dream of a young man about his father-in-law, who had recently taken his own life. In the dream a voice
commented: "He is the most uncomfortable fellow in the
world." Then the dreamer was shown his own baby crying for food. The image was to convey the dead man's hunger for guidance and spiritual sustenance, said Cayce. The next night the dreamer heard the man's own voice, together with "a wandering impression of restlessness." The voice
said: "I seek rest. I want to leave and be with my family down there."
Again Cayce said the dream contact had been authentic, showing the dreamer how much his prayers were needed for the father-in-law, who was still an "earthbound" discarnate. He added that the reason the discarnate was turning towards people in earthly life was that "the lessons are learned from that
realm, see?" It was a point Cayce often made, that souls who had once entered the Earth had to learn their final lessons in the Earth, where will is called into play in a fashion different from existence on other
realms. Yet contact between the dead and the living can be joyous. Sometimes it occurs because the dead want to show the living what death is like, to take away their fear and grief. Exploring the possible reality of such contact, one dreamer had her side pinched by a discarnate friend, so vividly that she screamed in fright, while another had his toe pulled when he asked for it - and did not ask again.
One dream took a man inside the brain of a woman dying of cancer, a relative, and showed him precisely what a relief death was, when it finally came. A later dream also showed him how a soul feels when awakening to consciousness after death.
Discarnates are not only rewarded by recognition from the living, they can experience the joy of teaching the living. They can also, in relatively unusual cases, work directly with the living for the fulfillment of worthy causes. The dead differ from the living only in this respect: they are in a permanently subconscious state because the conscious mind of the physical body no longer exists. But the body is an expendable shell, and all else is intact. On the astral level of existence, the subconscious mind replaces the conscious mind of the soul, and the superconscious replaces the subconscious.
Hence, in dreams, we find that communication with those who have passed on is more logical than the average person is able to comprehend. The following are more excerpts from spirit communications in dreams as told to Edgar Cayce and interpreted: One man related to Cayce:
"Both my mother and father
[deceased] came to me and were so glad to see me, but then they told me my sister had committed suicide."
Cayce replied in trance:
"This dream presents to the entity, through the mother and father both dead, the thoughts being entertained by the sister because of dissatisfaction to meet properly the conditions in her life. And as seen, the father and mother depend upon you to so instruct, to so direct, and to so counsel your sister.
Give the sister spiritual counsel so that she may better understand, thereby enabling her to grow; otherwise, detrimental experiences will destroy her. Suicide is in her mind. Remember, too, that
thoughts are deeds in the mental realm, and they increase or mar the activities of the higher self." [136-70]
A woman related to Cayce this dream:
"I dreamed my mother told me I should warn Aunt
Helen against an accident between an automobile and a streetcar. My mother then became ill."
Cayce replied in trance:
"This is a warning. Tell Aunt Helen about it. If she observes the warning, and stays out of automobiles and streetcars until the waning of the moon, it will not happen. Warn her, then, for this is a direct communication from one in the spiritual
realm to one in the physical realm. This attunement is made when the conscious mind is subjugated, as in meditation or in sleep, and an attunement with the universal forces is established. This is also an illustration of the ability of those in the spiritual
realm to see the future." [136-48]
Perhaps the most common dream experience in spirit communication according to Cayce is related by the message which in essence
says: "I am fine and happy. Your grief, however, is holding me back and making me sad. You can help me greatly by trying to overcome your sorrow. You must stop grieving!"
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Dream Analysis Tips
from Edgar Cayce
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Keep a notebook beside the bed. Record your dreams as soon
as possible after waking.
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Suggest to yourself every night as you fall asleep, "I
will remember my dreams."
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If you wake during the night, write down the main symbols,
and the entire dream will usually come back in the morning.
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Practice keen observation in your dreams through
self-suggestion prior to sleep.
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Look for these components in your dreams: the setting, the
people, the action, the color, the feeling, and the words.
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Work on analyzing your dreams every day, otherwise their
progression will be difficult to assess.
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If dreams are illogical, three reasons are possible:
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Only the fragments of the
dream have been recalled. |
| (2) |
The dream is reflecting
something illogical in the dreamer's life. |
| (3) |
Mental blocks have erased
your recall. |
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If you are
unable to decipher an important dream, suggest to yourself, before your next
sleep, that the dream repeat itself more clearly.
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Nightmares, which bring with them an inability to move or
cry out, usually indicate the wrong diet. To end the nightmarish dreams
change your diet.
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Dreams that are unchanged through the years indicate the
dreamer's resistance to change.
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Dreams of ill health can be either literal or symbolic
warnings.
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When a problem confronts you, ask by prayer for guidance
to be sent to you through your dreams.
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Be practical in your interpretations. Always look first
for a lesson. What have you refused to face or been ignoring? |
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Observe carefully recurrent dreams, as well as the
serially progressive ones. These often illustrate progress or failure. |
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Dreams are the reaction of the inner self to daytime
activity and often show the way out of the dilemma. So relate them to
current activity, because dreams may be retrospective as well as
prospective. |
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Dreams come to guide and help, not to amuse. They direct
your attention to errors of omission and commission and offer encouragement
for right endeavors. They also give us the opportunity to pray for others
and to help them bear their burdens. |
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If you receive an unusual message, reduce it to common
terms. See if the symbolism of the Bible can be of help in interpreting the
dream. |
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Look for past-life experiences in your dreams. These
manifest themselves not only in color, but in the proper costume and setting
of their period. They come to warn you against repeating the same old
mistakes; to explain your relationship and reactions to certain people and
places; to reduce your confusions; to enable you to better understand life. |
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Do not fear conversation with the so-called
"dead" in dreams. If the communication is one-sided, it denotes
telepathy. If both participate, it may be an actual encounter of bodiless
consciousness. |
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Dreams are primarily about self. Only a few dreams relate
to family, friends, and world events. |
Watch for mental telepathy in dreams. |
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Remember, persistence is necessary to learn any new
language, and dream symbols are the forgotten language of the subconscious. |
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Give daily thanks to God for all things and use daily
prayer to improve the quality and reception of your dreams. |
Other Dream
Information
How to Interpret Your Dreams
It would seem that sensory experiences are permanently
recorded by our subconscious mind, even though we remain consciously unaware of them.
Under hypnosis, eyewitnesses to a crime are able to recall detailed facts that they had
previously been unable to remember. Asleep or awake, the subconscious, like the tape
recorder, registers continuously. This is because the senses are awarenesses of the inner
self which never sleeps. This may also explain why associations with some symbols
appearing in dreams are difficult to interpret they are not consciously observed.
Dreams symbols, such as a house, a bird, or a
friend, always represent much more than that which first meets the eye. This is why the
beginner can benefit from help received from those who have made a serious study of
dreams. Carl Jung voiced much the same thought when he said that, if one understands
symbols, one can understand the dream as much by empathy as by formal analysis.
The ideal, however, is for the individual
himself to learn to understand his dreams by writing them down. Dreams are more easily
understood in series. Dream researchers have discovered that three or even four of the
dreams each night often relate to the same basic problem or subject, but in different
symbols.
It is also helpful not only to pray for
guidance, but also to learn to meditate. Meditation, which is the art of listening with
the ego subdued, improves the clarity of dreams, expands the consciousness, and encourages
extrasensory perceptions by breaking down the barriers between the conscious mind and the
subconscious and superconscious.
Perhaps the most fundamental aspect of
symbology is that it is a universal language, teaching and preserving permanent basic
truths. What shorthand is to words, symbology is to ideas. This is especially true of
religious concepts.
According to Edgar
Cayce, the Book of Revelation is
a compilation of the Apostle John's dreams and visions while he was in exile. It
illustrates his growth in consciousness as he sought, through meditation and prayer, to
fully comprehend the manifestation of the Holy Spirit in his life.
The following are many of the dreams symbols
Cayce encountered from all those who came to him to have their dreams interpreted.
Each dream symbol and its meaning are given. If you cannot find the dream
symbol in the list below, visit the
Edgar
Cayce Dream Dictionary website.
Dream Symbol
Index
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"Each soul enters with a mission. We all have a mission to perform." -
Edgar Cayce |
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Copyright © 2007 Near-Death Experiences & the Afterlife
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