Visions of the Night
Dreams are another portal to another reality, a dimension of unlimited possibilities, through which visions and intuitions communicate with you. They are powerful agents for change and inform you that you are so much more than what you think you are. The unlimited and collective wisdom and visions which come from dreams are within the reach of everyone. Dreams are a timeless source of guidance, wisdom and learning when you use them properly. Journal them because they are easily lost upon waking.
Transitional states between sleeping and waking are extraordinarily fruitful times for your dreams. I recall one morning, as I was in the hypnagogic state, a state of intermediate consciousness, a state of half-asleep and half-awake which we often experience before fully waking in the morning, I heard a knock on our front door. I opened the door and a uniformed trooper informed me that my husband was riding in a pickup truck coming from Ellsworth, a nearby town, and the driver had been drinking, hit a semi-truck and the driver was killed. My husband, the passenger, was in intensive care and in critical condition at the hospital. I sobbed so profusely that I awakened myself from the dream.
I could not stop weeping as I showered and dressed to go to my clinic that morning to begin a full day of seeing patients. Before I left, however, I noticed a note from my husband requesting that I drop over a document to him since I passed him on my way to my own office. As I met my husband, I was still weeping. I could not seem to stop. Puzzled to see me in this state he questioned, “What is the matter, I have never seen you this way?” I related to him the dream, and as I mentioned the rural town of Ellsworth, a town which we rarely have reason to visit, his face turned white. Noting the sudden change in him I asked, “What is the matter with YOU, you have turned pale.” He took a deep breath and informed, “I have a meeting in Ellsworth this evening and I am being picked up in a pickup truck by Ben.”
It is important to stay focused on the mystery of dreams. This precognitive dream was a vehicle through which my intuition made itself known. My husband changed his plans. This precognitive dream may very well have saved his life and the life of the driver. Precognitive dreams are a way that we reach into the vast inner space of our eternal nonlocal mind as Larry Dossey, M.D., physician and author of Recovering The Soul, instructs. Dr. Dossey lectures globally about the importance of consciousness and spirituality in medicine. Dreams are a source of inner knowledge. The wisdom and power of dream experience can transform your life.
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