First, I want to talk about how I got to this place and how much joy it brings me to help others find the brilliance in their own dream selves. My dream life has been rich in texture and stories, and as a child, the ones that stuck with me were usually the scary or thrilling ones. My childhood was a very scary, abusive place so it makes complete sense to me that my dreams were either the place I released those fears or was given guidance (which I didn't understand) to get through it. And now, as an "older" adult, I can see what I didn't see back then. I decided to add a blog here to share some of the dreams experiences I and others have had over the years.
Seventeen years ago I embarked on a conscious, spiritual path and tha t was when I began learning about dreams and symbols. It sparked something in me and I haven't stopped learning about them since. I find them fascinating. Dreams don't lie to you, but it is up to you to decipher them. My favorite memory of a dream is as an 11 year old when I was taken from the foster home I had been in and was traveling to an adoptive home. The caseworker wouldn't tell me where I was going but I said to her, "That's okay, I know where we're going." How, she asked? "I dreamt it last night ," I replied. And so I told her the correct answer. She was dumbfounded.
My soul self talks to me all the time in dreams and back the n, I thought n othing of it. It was normal. It was natural. I admit, I stopped listening somewhere along the way, and it took me until my 40th birthday to come back around to paying attention to my dreams. Listening to dream messages is truly is a natural way of being, something that has been around since mankind has come to be and conscious enough to communicate them, it just takes practice to notice and remember what our dreams are showing us. And it helps to have someone with an objective viewpoint clarify what they might mean. I feel privileged to be that person for anyone who asks me. That's my daytime dream.