A Guide to the Sleep and Dream Database
https://www.academia.edu/34960217/A_Guid...abase.docx
Quote:Intended for newcomers to dream research, this guide offers an introduction to thefunctions of the Sleep and Dream Database (SDDb), an open-access digital archive thatincludes tens of thousands of dream reports, along with survey data about sleep,dreaming, and demographic variables. Readers are shown how to use the SurveyAnalysis and Word Searching functions of the SDDb to study a variety of questionsabout dreaming. The topics discussed here as illustrations include gender and agevariables in dream recall; differences between men and women in the frequency of fearin their dreams; and the meaningful patterns of content in a woman’s long-term dream journal
Except that waking is long-lasting and dream is momentary, there is no other difference [between them]. To what extent all the vyavahāras [activities or events] that happen in waking seem [at this present moment] to be real, to that extent even the vyavahāras that happen in dream seem at that time to be real. In dream the mind takes another body [to be itself]. In both waking and dream thoughts and names-and-forms [the objects of the seemingly external world] occur in one time [that is, simultaneously].
-Ramana Maharishi
A Course in Dream Magic by FRATER ARCHER
Overview:
Quote:“Make your bed on a Delphic tripod and you will lead a nobler life. Everyone, woman or man, can do it, because sleep is the most readily available oracle of all.”
— Synesius, De Insomniis 144B
Quote:The following chapters are the results of my personal explorations into dream magic over the last decades. Many techniques described can also be found in the well-established literature on dreams and lucid dreaming. Surprisingly the most illuminating work I found so far is still the small German booklet ‘Träume Erinnern’ by Christoph Gassmann. I am deeply thankful to the author for his wonderful work.
However, what I couldn’t find in books when I picked up my own experiments with the subconscious side of our lives was a concise instruction that brought together all necessary steps in a single place. That is why I created the following instructions - for my own and personal use first and foremost.
Since then I spoke to many people about their experiences in dreams; many of them found the advise brought together on these pages helpful (originally this used to be a PDF document in German language). Yet, it took me another half decade to understand that the conscious engagement with our dreams actually is the best preparation for thorough ritual work and spirit contact. The skills of actively engaging with our subconscious, being non-judgmental in face of intense emotions, remain objective to our own experiences and - ultimately - find a place for every living creature in our worlds, may they be destructive or constructive, appalling or dulcet, have proven invaluable for my magical works.
It took some time to translate, revise and update the original content, yet it is now all available online, a new Circle coming to live. I also expanded it by a Third Part. This additional section will share more advanced techniques to engage constructively with dominant or aggressive dream beings.
May this work be brought to live by experience.
LVX,
Frater Acher