dave_a_mbs
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Alysia - Dreams are like an exhaust system? Having gone through several years of Freudian training, including "On The Interpretation of Dreams", I particularly like your analogy. But I can almost hear the ground rumble as Freud rotates in his crypt. LMAO.
Orlando- The confusion that we experience in the dream state seems to come from two or three simple sources. First, the function of dreaming appears to be a memory device by which incoming data get universally related, to yesterday's rain shower, Aunt Maggie's pots and pans, and your left shoe.
Second, according to Freud, the motivation to have specific dreams is (Trumpets please ... Ta Daaa ) wish fulfillment. Freud's example is a case in which he dreamed of vigorous horseback riding. However at the time, he had a boil on his scrotum which totally prevented any such activity. (Hey - it's in the book.) Thus he was fulfilling a wish by symbolizing himself to be capable of bouncing about on horseback. To view this as an exhaust system for unsated desires absolutely tickles me!
Third, it seems to me that we are not generally very stable in the face of upsetting events, relying typically on external circumstances to save us. Thus, when we turn off the "exhaust system" and wander through our dreamworld in meditation or sleep, which is the same state of mind in which we are open to being aware of spirits and other subtle influences, we tend have a wash of sensory inputs, upsets, and counter upsets, all mixed up in a confused manner. For meditators, this goes away with development of meditation and stabilization of focus. My experience is that as my meditation became more clear and focussed, so did many of my dreams.
The Bardo Thodol tradition tells us that this same kind of confusion is what we face at death, having no specific grounding, and being at the mercy of our own interpretations and exaggerations of what's happening. The solution is to either recognize the totality of everything at the moment of death (which is why Tibetan monks tell you that what they are doing is preparing to be dead) or to adopt a path by which universal accord with everything will occur, so that you work it out on the spot in spirit or in a later life.
Your criticism about functioning while switching off critical faculties is to the point - that would solve it all, of course, but the majority of our critical faculties fall off with the dead body. What remains seems to be made up of life energies and changes in the world, all ending in the corpse. The "viewpoint" generally seems to identify with expanding cone of influence of these energies and changes, and "rides on them" by superposition as they move outward into the world, mixing with other states etc. The core energy with which we would infinitely prefer to mix is obviously the essential nature of reality, hence the "core vibration" of the Creator, which is the fundamental of all the overtones and harmonics that make up the world.
Based on my experience in regressions, it seems that for this "urge to merge" we retain a sense of nominal logic, capable of concrete operations, but not much more. So we more or less can follow any sequence of steps that do not involve self-contradictory elements, providing that we can find a place in the collection of energies and forces of the everyday world onto which we can project (or more literally, superpose) this sequence as a "secondary interpretation" of the patterns of activity that we see.
A "stuck soul" is like the Dutch boy with a finger in the di ke, fearful letting in the flood of "other stuff". OR, in Alysia's terms, maybe his finger is stuck in his "exhaust system" (Ummm - honi soit qui mal y pense, hein?) and he is totally dedicated to preservation of his beliefs and fearful to move, because there is no visible logical escape path. As an extreme example, in everyday life we see such people pushing shopping carts full of cans and bottles down the street, fighting with unseen enemies, stuck with definitions of reality that don't fully work, with no way out. In spirit it only takes a sense of embarrassment, or dedication to duty, or fear, love, guilt etc - strong emotions that override the limited critical abilities remaining. But this is just like dreams in which the ghost is chasing us, and the harder we try to run the more we feel paralyzed, barely able to move an millimeter - until we slide downhill toward a regenerative panic - and awaken. (Spirits can't wake up - they either get eaten or keep running, feeling terrible existential dread.)
It's a bit awkward to try to deal with all the possible "worlds" at once when we try to envision them as "places", as opposed to states of awareness. Actually, there seems to only be the everyday experience of the physical world, and the place you see when you close your eyes. All the rest is some modification brought about by focus of the "viewpoint". Some people, like Bruce, are sensitive to more subtle events, and easily see beyond the afterimages of the day. Others take mind-altering substances and tell horror stories of being chased by "ghoulies and ghosties and things going boomp" in the night, others meditate and work our way into greater awareness. And then there are the ones who buy a copy of Bruce's "Home Study" and learn to perk up their mediumistic skills. It's all very similar.
dave
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