T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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466.1 | My 3 cents worth... | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Aug 28 1987 17:44 | 39 |
| One way or another dreams are like movies created for your "conscious"
by your "subconscious" for serious or for trivial reasons. With that
as context, it seems to me that there are three basic possible
explanations (each of which have many variations):
First, you may have subconsciously detected the presence of the spider
via ESP (specifically clairvoyance), and then incorporated the
appropriate response into your dream. Vast quantities of experiential
evidence and substantial quantities of scientific evidence indicate
that information obtained by ESP can and does influence dream content.
Since we don't really know what ESP is or how it operates (we only know
that it *does* operate) this possibility cannot really add to your
understanding. But you may feel more comfortable knowing that this
can occur.
Second, more conventionally, you may have briefly wakened and seen
the spider near you on the floor, and then returned to sleep. Your
dream prepared to respond to the potential threat if it materialized.
When you felt the spider on your hand, your subconscious generated
the appropriate response. It has been conclusively demonstrated in
dream/sleep laboratories that very brief awakenings are not remembered.
Finally, it has been shown that the memory of dreams are subject to
huge amounts of revision after awakening. This is something
undetectable to the person who does it, and is pretty universal (i.e.,
there is no personal criticism implied). Until recently, when Steven
LaBerge was able to communicate during (lucid) dreams, the theory that
*all* dreams were memories fabricated during or just after awakening.
The application of this to your case is that your dream may have been
initially much less explicit, and the spider was edited in, without
you being aware of it, after you awoke and saw the spider which you
had compulsively crushed. The editing in of a large hairy spider
could have begun from the moment you felt it and the visual details
could have been added after you actually saw it. I think that this
"editing" theory is very unlikely, but it *is* possible.
Hope this helps.
Topher
|
466.2 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | The Disney Channeler | Fri Aug 28 1987 18:53 | 15 |
| RE: .0
What a gross thing to wake up to!
Even though you were asleep, you were still capable of feeling. Have you
ever dreamed that you had to go to the bathroom, and then awoke to a full
bladder? I can think of several instances where I was feeling something
in my dream that was really happening.
What I think happened is that you felt the spider crawl into your hand
while you slept and crushed it. Your dream was simply reporting to you,
in its way, what was really going on.
John M.
|
466.3 | Spiders for you, Elephants for me..... | ELMO::STAFFON | | Mon Aug 31 1987 08:57 | 26 |
|
I can relate to the last few. My left hand is still bothering me
thinking about that spider! YUCKO!
The body and mind together can produce strange images when trying
to tell your subconcious and concious that there is a problem.
When I was tweleve and had walking pnemonia (I didn't know it at
the time), my dream was so vivid that I remember it to this day.
I was sleeping on my back in this dream, and an elephant, rather
cute and 'Disneyish' walked over and sat right on my chest. I had
the most spectacular view of an elephants backbone! But I couldn't
breathe!!! i couldn't even get words out. And this semianimated
pachyderm just turned and looked and wouldn't budge even when I
tried to push him off. I tried for what seemed to be hours calling
my mother, and she was a little teed off at first when she came
into my room thinking i was talking in a sleep. When she turned
on the light, I was lying on my back, gasping for air. With her
help I was able to roll over on my side and breathe freely.
Went to the doctor next day and had a nice 6 shots of penicillin
in the old backside! OUCH! But the feeling of that dream has never
left me and I can still see that elephant. The feeling was worse
when I woke up from it.
Leigh
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466.4 | Shamanism, anyone? | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Wed Sep 02 1987 16:22 | 5 |
| From a Shamanic perspective, dreams, especially disturbing ones,
involving an animal that covers or attacks you, and you overcome,
are related to obtaining animal allys.
Elizabeth
|
466.5 | | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Fri Sep 11 1987 14:22 | 33 |
| Re: .4
Hmmmm . . .
I dreamt of spiders for years--they were one of my standard nightmare
symbols. Then, about 10 years ago, I dreamt of being chased by
a spider, dashing into a room and locking the door. It started
to squeeze itself under the door, and I took a huge book and dropped
it on it. Woke up with a big smile on my face, too. I felt as
if I had triumphed over some subconscious ugliness.
After that, my spider dreams took a different turn; I would start
out dreams afraid of them, whack at them, injure them, and then be
disconcerted when they would begin to talk to me, or cry, or ask me
why I was trying to kill them. This was unnerving at first, but
coincided with a period when I began questioning why I was trying
to "kill off" troublesome pieces of my soul rather than trying to
integrate them.
The last "spider experience" I had was a daydream, or vision, if
you will. I was working on cleansing a newly acquired crystal,
and suddenly got the idea to sit with it in my hands and see what
visual images rose to mind of how best to cleanse it. In the "movie"
that passed in front of my closed eyes I found myself in a cavern
and came upon a gigantic injured spider--one of its legs was missing.
I found the leg and managed to maneuver it into its socket, and
somehow it healed and reattached itself. The spider reached out
its little "feeding legs" and stroked my shoulders in what seemed
a gesture of thanks.
Allies? :-)
Marcia
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