T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1383.1 | | WLDWST::GUILLEN | | Sat Nov 03 1990 08:37 | 7 |
| I'm not to much of an expert on dreams, but could it be your
little boy knew somehow how your suffering for him and
he wanted to come to you and reassure that he is okay and
with you in spirit and thought. I too lost my daughter
and even its been 17 years and I still get depressed at times
about her. But somehow I know she's happy and safe and someday
we will be togather.
|
1383.2 | It will happen again...allow it to. | NSDC::SCHILLING | | Mon Nov 05 1990 08:17 | 2 |
|
|
1383.3 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Open the heart to enchantment | Mon Nov 05 1990 11:31 | 9 |
| Having had similar experiences in the "dream" time Tim, imho, your
experience was real, and yes it was a message from Ben. Will it
happen again? This is anyone's guess...there are too many variables to
know for sure.
My *very* best to you and Ben. I remember reading your story about him
a while ago and I was very very touched by it.
Karen
|
1383.4 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | wooing of the wind.... | Mon Nov 05 1990 12:32 | 8 |
|
Tim....there are different kinds of dreams. I believe that some
of them are *real* in the sense that we are actually participating
and experiencing with others in that time. I believe that you and
Ben were together.
Carole
|
1383.6 | Time to be done with that past... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Tue Nov 06 1990 09:34 | 22 |
| re: .5 (Ric)
I don't like to get into these "dream topics" very much
because most of us have dozens and dozens of dreams every week
that we could analyze to tears...and each person's dream is
very subjective, anyhow.
Anyway, what I noticed about your situation is that there
is a lack of forgiveness in there. You need to forgive yourself
and it is clear that in this area you haven't. Period. This
part of you can be released. There are ways to do this, not within
the scope of this reply to you. There is no *good* reason why
you need to continue to endure a nightmare, not for 13 years, at
any rate. It is not mandated that someone needs to suffer, endure
pain, continue in some sort of torture...there is no spiritual
nobility in struggle, only man-made "nobility" (as in "I deserve
more because I've suffered more.") Cancel those beliefs immediately!
Anyway, I won't belabor this, I think I've made my point. As to
HOW to do this, there are ways, some of them already delineated within
DEJAVU. Ask and discover, if it seems appropriate to you.
Frederick
|
1383.7 | I'm a believer...it's real! | DELNI::D_LANE | | Tue Nov 06 1990 14:01 | 42 |
|
re: .0
Hello,
I am new to this conference. I just wanted to voice my opinion on this
subject. I honestly believe that what you experienced was very
touching and very real. I am very sad for you and your loss, but happy
that you had an opportunity to experience your son's presence. I too
had a similar experience.
I was very close to my grandmother. I have to admit that I don't think
I could ever love anyone more than I loved her. I was crushed when
she died of cancer a few years back. The night that she passed on I
had been home dreaming of her. She had been in a coma and it was
horrible for me to see her like that. Before she had slipped into the
coma she had told me how afraid she was to die and she'd cry. I'd cry.
Anyway, I was afraid for her....In my dream (the night she died) she
came to me. She told me that it didn't hurt anymore, that she was OK
and that she loved me and not to worry about her. I believed her. The
next morning my sister (who lived with her) called me to tell me she
passed away during the night. I believe she visited me on her journey.
I flipped.
Anyway, she has been with me since. I have felt her standing over
my shoulder and I can imagine the warmth and softness of her skin. I
used to love to be close to her. Even as a teen I would sit on the
floor in front of her with my head on her lap. I loved to be close to
her. I believe that she is still with me. Always. There are times
that it is stronger than others, but I know she is there and it's not
in my head. I believe she may want to communicate with me, but I've
been afraid. The thought that we can communicate is frightening. I
know she loved me unconditionally and that she would never hurt me, but
I am still afraid. I do miss her though...
I hope that if you found joy in this dream, that they continue. I
believe they will, and if you welcome your son I believe that it may
become more frequent or more real.
Sweet dreams,
Donna
|
1383.8 | | SHRFAC::ADAMS | | Wed Nov 07 1990 09:13 | 20 |
| Tim,
Regardless of the significance or spiritual validity of your dream,
having experienced a similar encounter, I'm sure you'd welcome it
again and again.
My particular experience also seemed so real, so true, that it re-
affirmed my beliefs in the herefafter, and the ability of those
departed to contact us and reassure us that all is well.
My "dream" occured about 13 years after the death of my girlfriend.
I had gone on in life and hadn't really thought of her in awhile.
Yet, when I met her in the dream it was as if she were alive again,
frozen at the age of eighteen years. We talked for a long while
and it wasn't until I started questioning her about wheather I was
dreaming or not that she departed. She never answered the question.
I only hope that your dream brings you as much strength as mine
did. God bless...
Mark
|
1383.9 | Note 24 | DECXPS::KEAVENEY | | Wed Nov 07 1990 12:39 | 7 |
| Tim,
Note 24 and it's replies refer to many similiar dreams.
May the love that IS Ben be a strength to you forever.
Meg
|
1383.11 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | Life, a state of cluster transition | Tue Nov 13 1990 13:31 | 26 |
| Tim,
I'm not a usually a writing participant in this notesfile, although I really
enjoy reading the stories, and check it out occasionally,
..........this note was one I didn't enjoy reading...
I will say that was touched by your note though...
I too have an eleven year old son.. Last March, he got banged up pretty bad
in a bike accident. Thankfully, kids heal incredibly fast, but he came so
close to fatal injury, (he was lucky) that for months, I was a mess...
even though he was o.k. after only a few weeks. I was devestated, and
still have some bad times over it.
You have my deepest sympathies getting through this time Tim.
Believe in what ever it is that gives you peace...
/ray
(Ps. Hellos to Karen B. + Carole F.)
|
1383.12 | contact dreams!! | MR4DEC::THORGAN | go, lemmings, go | Thu Nov 15 1990 15:39 | 24 |
| re: last two
I absolutely believe in a higher power, and a life after this. Our
experiences during the past 7 years have convinced me of this. (For
more on this see prior note on George Anderson). And every once in a
while I learn something new and fascinating - like the dream mentioned
in .0!
Thanks for everyone's notes. Coincidentally (or perhaps not) I met
someone last week at an offsite who overheard a conversation I was
having with a friend about that weekend being Ben's birthday and she
and I got into a conversation in which she casually mentioned "contact
dreams" - and asked/told me that of course I knew what those were! She
then described the type of dream I had, and explained some research she
had read about it! (BTW - she does not work at DEC, so probably did not
read this conference).
So apparently this is a known phenomenon, as several people have
shared, and as she told me.
Wow!
Tim
|
1383.13 | Smells? | CHEFS::HAYESD | | Wed Nov 21 1990 06:58 | 9 |
| I didn't believe in this type of thing before, until my SO experienced
something strange shortly after his grandmother passed away. He was
busy doing some DIY in the bathroom when he was overwhelmed by this
distinctive smell, which was of his grandmother's house. He didn't
believe in 'the afterlife' or anything like that before, but now he's
convinvced she came to visit him, and is looking after us, because
he's experienced this since. Has anyone else experienced anything
similar?
|
1383.14 | Ok, I give up...what's a DIY? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Wed Nov 21 1990 09:36 | 9 |
| re: .13
If I DIY in the bathroom I can expect some strange smells, too!
What had been the experience during other DIY's?
;-)
Frederick
|
1383.15 | is my grandfather there? | SUBWAY::FORSYTH | LAFALOT | Wed Nov 21 1990 12:12 | 19 |
| re: .13
(first, I give up too -what's DIY??)
Yes, I continue to have experiences like that...but it's strange.
When I was 10, my grandfather died. I was close to him, but then again
not as close as I was to my grandmother (his wife). He was the first
person in my family to die. I remember feeling just "unreal" through
the whole funeral process. When we went to the wake and I went over to
the casket, I knelt down to pray, and looked at him closely. I think I
even touched his hand very quickly. But what I remember most is the
smell - not bad, perhaps from the make-up? Anyway it was a smell I was
unfamiliar with. From time to time since then I will be someplace and
all of a sudden I will get a whiff (sp?) of *that smell*. I can be inside
or outside, and it only lasts a second. But I think of my grandfather
every time and wonder if he's there.....
Laf
|
1383.16 | Maybe I'm not crazy | MSESU::HOPKINS | tax the rich...feed the poor... | Wed Nov 21 1990 12:59 | 10 |
| And here all this time I thought I was crazy. There was a very
distinctive smell the night my daughter died. I can't explain it
because I've never smelled it before. I have since however. Every
time I'm upset/depressed thinking about her and the night she died, I
smell it. Maybe it's all in my mind, maybe it's my own tears, or maybe
it's Tina visiting. I'd rather believe it's her helping me through the
rough times.
Marie
|
1383.17 | so we were told! | MR4DEC::THORGAN | go, lemmings, go | Wed Nov 21 1990 13:28 | 15 |
| My wife and I both experience very real and intense feelings that our
son is around every once in a while. It happens most frequently around
his birthday and Christmas/New Years (when he died).
We met with George Anderson earlier this year (more details in another
note in this conference), and our son us/George that he is around quite
often, especially when we need him or are having a rough time. He then
told us that we had not changed his room at all, and it reminded him of
a shrine. We in fact haven't changed his room!
In the book about George ("We Don't Die") he states that we are
surrounded by spirits. I believe it.
Tm
|
1383.18 | | OLDJON::KEEFE | Bill Keefe - 223-1837 - MLO1-2 | Wed Nov 21 1990 19:01 | 6 |
| re .14, .15
DIY usually refers to "Do It Yourself" type projects around the house,
though there may be other meanings I'm not familiar with.
- Bill
|
1383.19 | Smell-O-Grams! | MEMV02::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Fri Nov 23 1990 21:03 | 11 |
|
Shirley MacLaine mentions the ability to smell things that are not
really there in her book "It's All In The Playing". Apparently her
friend and wellknown channeller Kevin Ryerson couldn't be there in
person for some event one night...so he sent long-distance flowers
instead...smell only. Kevin called her up and told her about it,
and she replied that she wondered why she smelled flowers nearby.
Maybe we could start a new business here. (;^)
Cindy
|
1383.20 | Grandmother | MTADMS::TUCKER | | Sat Nov 24 1990 08:24 | 17 |
| I also had an experience 4 years ago when my grandmother died. I was
very close to my grandmother, having been all my life. I was really
crushed when my mom called me and told me. My grandmother had a very
bad cold when she died.
About a week later I had a dream that I was at her house standing by
her desk in the living room drinking a cup of coffee knowing that I
missed her bad. Now in my dream I knew she was dead. I looked over
and I saw her coming out of the kitchen. In my dream I could not
beleive it and ran to her crying and hugging her. She told me not to
worry about her and that her 2 sisters were taking good care of her.
Her sisters are dead too. The weird thing about this dream is that in
it she still had her cold but her voice sounded much better and it
seemed that her cold was alot better. Anyway, I woke up and that dream
was so real to me. I really believed that it happened.
|
1383.21 | apple pie and cinnamon roles | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Open the heart to enchantment | Tue Nov 27 1990 15:04 | 20 |
| Re .13 and others on familiar 'aromas'
During the several years I've spent working with spirit communication
I've learned and experienced on several occasions that those friends
and loved ones in spirit will often stimulate the olefactory sense to
communicate their presence.
Interesting to note that many researchers have recently verified that
for many people familiar aromas (like those found in grandmother's
kitchen or in uncle's wood carving shop) reconstruct memories faster
and more complete than any other sense, including sight.
So yes, it is a fairly common occurance for people to experience familiar
aromas (seemingly out of the blue) associated with a friend of loved one
who has passed to another plane of life. And in my opinion, some of these
experiences are due to those folks stopping by to bid a fond hello and
letting us know they are nearby. One thing you can do, if you'd like,
is smile and say hello back.
Kb
|
1383.22 | I've asked John to fly me to the Bahamas tonight! | AYOV27::TWASON | | Tue Feb 19 1991 12:16 | 32 |
| I wasn't sure where to put this and I thought, hopefully this would be
okay.
Last week my husband and I went to see a psychic/spiritualist. She was
very good, and the very last thing she told my husband was, that she
could see him lying sleeping in bed but he was also hovering above
himself, she the proceeded to tell him that he was in fact an astral
traveller and when he goes to sleep he visits places, and that this all
tends to come out in his artwork. (could this mean the places he thinks
he is imaging for his paintings aren't imaginery after all???)
He has told me of numerous dreams that seem too real to be true. Is there
any way we could help enhance this for him, or make it easier for him
to remember possibly where he has been.
It is very exciting for him, he was also told that he did have a lot of
dejavu but doesn't quite realise it yet.
Your help would be much appreciated.
Tracy W.
p.s. Just as a side note, we decided to tell John's mother, and
although she laughed at nearly everything we told her she gasped with
surprise when we told her about the dreaming. She then went on tell us
of an experience she had a long time ago, about being able to see
things way up high on top of cupboards (being 1.52 m tall this is
impossible for her) and places she had never seen before without using
a stool or ladder. She is a very straight-laced person and we were
very surprised when she told us this, this weekend we are going to try
and coax some details from her.
|
1383.23 | Just allow it to happen, | DNEAST::BERLINGER_MA | LIFE IN THE ASTRAL PLANE | Wed Feb 20 1991 12:05 | 19 |
| re.22
Tracy,
I know of no way to "enhance" dreams or
dreaming. If John wants to be more aware of what he has drempt I
would suggest he keep a dream diary. Every day make notes of what
he has drempt and/or how he felt when he awoke. More advice would be
to ,at first, allow his dreams to happen rather than force them to
happen. After a while he may, at bed-time, ask that he have a par-
ticular dream or gain a certain insight.
Plesant dreams;
Later,
Mark
|
1383.24 | Habit of recording dreams | DWOVAX::STARK | solv� et coagula | Wed Feb 20 1991 16:06 | 20 |
| re: .22,.23,
I agree. Often the dream is already very elaborate and
detailed, but we don't remember much about it.
Yes, a dream diary usually works. The trick is to be very
careful to always record something in it immediately upon awakening,
even if you don't remember the dream. Record "I don't remember what
I dreamt" if nothing else. After a week or so of that, the mind
begins to get the message that you want to remember the dreams,
and the habit begins to be established to transfer the dream to
waking consciousness. The details become easier to remember with
time, too.
There are also some commercial hypnotic suggestion tapes that
purport to enhance dreaming and the ability to remember and
become more consciously involved in dreams. The effectiveness
of these seems very dependent upon the person. I would think that
the daily diary would be the best place to start.
todd
|
1383.25 | How was your trip? | MOOV01::ROSE | | Thu Feb 21 1991 06:57 | 31 |
| re: .22
Tracy,
You asked (assuming your husband is an "astral traveller") if he's
depicting places that he's actually visited during his sleep. Is
your husband doing what his mother appeared to do when she saw objects
on top of cupboards? The psychic/spiritualist you went to described
what is called an OBE or out-of-body-experience, which some researchers
think is a variation of a type of dream called a "lucid dream." This
type of dream is usually very vivid, and it seems to me you may be
describing this vividness characteristic when you speak of dreams that
seem "...too real to be true." Your husband may be on the verge of be-
coming truly "lucid" which, in this context, means to become conscious
that you're dreaming *as* you're dreaming. It's easy to automatically
wake up at this point, but the "lucid" experience *can* be enhanced.
Try to obtain the paperback book "Lucid Dreaming" by Stephen LaBerge,
Ph.D. of the Stanford University Sleep Research Center, published by
Ballantine Books, New York.
You also ask if your husband is really travelling in his sleep. I
think that he's probably not. He may be accessing images of real
places - not imaginary ones - but the images are most likely already
in his brain. How the images or information might have gotten into
his brain is another most fascinating question....
Virginia
|
1383.26 | Wake up and remember.... | TORREY::WALSH | | Thu Mar 07 1991 16:45 | 16 |
| re: (.22)
Tracy,
I've had some success with asking my guides to allow me to wake
up as soon as a dream is over. This way it's fresh in my mind
and I can write it down in intimate detail. For obvious reasons
I don't do it very often <:-)....
I was really suprised when I first tried this method. It actually
worked. I do have a difficult time being disciplined enough to
actually write it down and not just say "Oh, this is clear in my
mind, I'll remember it....<:-)", yeah, right, SURE I will!
Pleasant dreams...
Susan
|
1383.27 | Dreams...... | AYOV27::TWASON | | Fri Mar 08 1991 02:45 | 24 |
| Hi All,
I've passed on all your helpful info to John, and for some strange
reason since doing this he's finding it even more difficult to remember
his dreams. I have started asking him every morning "what did you
dream last nigh?" but no joy.
One early morning last week I was slipping in and out of sleep when
John started, not exactly talking, but murmuring in his sleep. It was
quite frightening as though he was maybe trying to escape from
something, someone - but of course when I asked him about it, no he
couldn't remember.
What I would like to know is, I have at times had conversations in bed
with John which he has completely no recollection of at all and is very
insistent that they never took place and that he was sleeping, would it
be safe for me to interrupt his dream the next time - I don't mean
wake him up but more try to talk to him while he is still dreaming and
question him as to what is happening? and then I could write it all
down.
What do you think.
Tracy
|
1383.28 | Ask for permission first. (IMHO) | DNEAST::BERLINGER_MA | LIFE IN THE ASTRAL PLANE | Fri Mar 08 1991 12:26 | 13 |
|
Tracy,
It is an interesting concept. I tryed it with one
person, but did not have good results. I did not first ask (while awake
or asleep) for her permission to intervene, and as a consequence our
conversation had to be integrated into what she would have drempt had
I not spoken during her dream. For what its worth.
Later,
Mark
|
1383.29 | ...joy happens... | MOOV01::ROSE | | Tue Mar 12 1991 05:37 | 38 |
| re: .27
Tracy,
I'm afraid that your interesting idea won't work. The problem is
that you're assuming that when John is talking to you he's dreaming.
But he's probably *not* dreaming. He's probably talking in his
sleep. Sleep talking - and sleep walking - take place during the
deepest stages of sleep, characterized by delta brain waves, an ab-
sence of eye movements and - even if aroused - by very poor and frag-
mentary recall which (according to LaBerge) is "...more thoughtlike
than dreamlike."
Dreaming, on the other hand, takes place during REM or rapid-eye-
movement sleep, and the dreamer is very close to waking consciousness.
Eighty to ninety percent of arousals from REM sleep yield recall of
dreams.
The next time that John talks in his sleep, note the time. Then
figure out how much time has elapsed since he fell asleep. The
first cycle of REM sleep starts about 90 minutes after falling
asleep and lasts for 5-15 minutes. If he's carrying on that con-
versation with you before the 90 minutes elapses, he's probably
not dreaming. (Later in the night, after the 2nd or 3rd REM cycle,
no delta or deep stage sleep appears at all, so he wouldn't be
sleep-talking then.)
John's brain may be busy now processing new information or points
of view. He may be trying too hard to remember dreams that are
still half-baked, so to speak. If he just disengages his mind
for a while, his unconscious mental apparatus may be freer to get
on with its task of rearranging new and old material. Take a
break. Then see what happens.
Virginia
|