Archive for May, 2010


Dream Dictionary WMV


Dream dictionary video for Sudanese Playboys' Dream


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Why Do We Dream?

2 Why Do We Dream?My friend and I explaining the reason that we dream/sleep, based on Hobson and Freud. It's for our AP Psychology class.

Duration : 0:8:45

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2 Dream Interpretation Part 1 with Jane Teresa AndersonDream interpretation and how to improve your life through understanding your dreams, with Jane Teresa Anderson BSc, www.dream.net.au dream analyst, author and scientist. Discover how nightmares, recurring and bizarre dreams happen and what they really mean. (Part 1)

Duration : 0:8:47

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i love dream symbolism sometimes they're like a great detective stories...
so i pitched a tent in my backyard because i was angry at my mother and my sister came out to comfort me , i pulled the cocoon from her throat gently with surgical precision and a butterfly hatched from it.

we had been talking in the weeks before about butterflies in particular the viceroy which camouflages as a monarch butterfly to confuse predators.

anyone want to take a crack at decoding this. or what butterflies mean in dreams??
you guys are useless

That she took you under her wing to help you feel better.

You see something special in her that is just taking time to develop.

Until a few months ago this site offered free dream interpretation and now it contains an eBook. What happened to this site?

I guess free isdn't free anymore

I have a dream that I'm somehow, due to some quirk, back in high school for another semester and usually back on a sports team again, and think how good I'll be on that team with all my life experience.

I don't know what this means. I'm 36, went to college and everything, but this dream keeps coming back. Huh?

this is a dream that is telling you that you had something in high school that you didn't really get to finish and through your sub conscious you are trying to recreate the era to finish it through dreaming

The Bedside Dream Dictionary

51I 5wxZLwL. SL160  The Bedside Dream Dictionary

Product Description
Silvana Amar, a psychologist with extensive experience in dream studies, has created a invaluable guide with descriptions of hundreds and hundreds of the most important dream symbols. Her well-researched explanations cover our most common dream themes and symbols, including adultery, death, jail, money, running, smoking, water, worms, and zombies.  Designed to be kept on the nightstand where users can reference it quickly first thing in the morning when their dream... More >>

The Bedside Dream Dictionary

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5179HB7S2ZL. SL160  In Your Dreams: Falling, Flying and Other Dream Themes   A New Kind of Dream Dictionary

Product Description
Almost everyone wakes up in the morning and thinks ‘Why did I dream that?’ Until now, dream dictionaries offered only frustratingly inaccurate and overly generalized definitions of dream symbols. Now, the pioneering author of Living Your Dreams examines the most common dream themes – falling, flying, being chased, missing the bus, standing naked in the road, among others – and provides readers with practical tools for discovering the distinct meaning of thei... More >>

In Your Dreams: Falling, Flying and Other Dream Themes - A New Kind of Dream Dictionary

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Human Psychology and Dreams

The pious intelligence of human beings interrupts, only when our will power remains suspended, or unaffected to external states.

It has been proved that women dream more often and vividly than men, because their dream composition is less influenced and allied to external movements. A nightmare suggests to a dreamer, health and diet needs attention, relaxing is necessary, to sleep in a well ventilated room in a relaxed posture. Human dreams are basically of 3 types viz. spiritual subjective and physical. They relate to past, present and future and are also influenced by past or subjective, physical and spiritual causes.

The subjective dream possesses an element of caution and divination, though the true meaning is hidden in symbols or allegory. The subjective dreams are a result of the mental pictures of the dreamer related to his past falling on his conscious mind at present. It is dependant on the picture which the dreamer assumes and accordingly it brings the ill or good fortune.

Physical dreams are more or less not very much important. They are super induced by the anxious waking mind and when this is so, they do not possess any prophetic significance. But as the past and the present enter into shaping a dream i.e. the future, the reflection thus left on the waking mind should not go by unheeded.

Finally, the spiritual dreams are brought about by the higher self penetrating the soul realm, and reflecting upon the waking mind approaching events.

Developing the power of Dreams
Always retire to bed in a negative condition. This is possible once you your minds clear and free from all sorts of material rubbish as much as possible. A person can completely relax his mind and body to the receptive mood required for dreams to appear as realities, or true explanations of future events.

Dreams Exaggerated
The will is suspended during sleep, and so the dream mind is more a prey to excitability than the waking mind. Thus, when images appear upon the dream vision, they are frequently distorted into hideous malformations that fill our mind with fear and excitement.

The constant dwelling of the mind upon certain things distorts their shapes upon subjectivity, thus throwing dreams in exactly opposite channels to the waking reality. Yet, we always feel a sense of being awake in dreams like these.

When dreams are less prescient
Dreams are subjective symbols used to impress the material mind with the upcoming sense of good and evil. The spiritual part of we - the human beings is Subjectivity. Any kind of thoughts first enter our physical minds and then affect us.

Frequently, the soul becomes so much filled with material or present ideas, that the spiritual symbols are crowded out, and then it is that dreams seem to be contrary. Material subjectivity, that is all thoughts and ideas emanating from material sources, go to make up this section of dreams.

Abhishek Lodha
http://www.articlesbase.com/religion-articles/human-psychology-and-dreams-125450.html

Interpretation of Dreams

The interpretation of dreams by dream experts is probably as old as dreaming itself. We know that all humans, and many animals, dream every night, and humans have always been fascinated to learn what causes dreams and what they mean.
 
 The interpretation of dreams dates back at least as far as 3000-4000 B.C. We know that because the interpretations of dreams were recorded in permanent form on clay tablets. It's thought that many primitive peoples were unable to initially distinguish between the real world and the dream world. For more details visit to www.joint-venture-guide.com
In many cases, they looked upon the dream world as an extension of the physical world around them, and in many cases they saw the dream world as more powerful than the waking one.
 
Dream interpretation was such an important field to the ancient Greek and Roman world that dream interpreters often accompanied generals and other military leaders into battles. Dreams were taken extremely seriously, and the Greeks and Romans in particular often viewed dreams as messages sent by their gods.
 
Dreams also had a religious content in ancient Egypt, and priest their doubled as dream interpreters.  Dreams were among the items recorded by the ancient Egyptians in the form of hieroglyphics.  Those whose dreams were especially vivid or significant were thought to be blessed and were given special status in these ancient societies. Likewise, people who were able to interpret dreams were thought to receive these gifts directly from the gods, and they enjoyed a special status in society as well.
There are over 700 mentions of dreams in the bible, and people in biblical times saw dreams as very significant.  Dreams and their interpretations are mentioned in many of the most significant books of the bible and other holy scriptures.
 
In many cases, dreams were often seen as a form of prophecy. People often interpreted their dreams as omens or warnings, and adjusted their activities accordingly. Dreams were often thought of as omens from deities, as messages from spirits, or as messages from departed souls. In some cases, dreams were even seen as the work of demons, meant to confuse and trouble the dreamer.
 
Dreams were so important that they often dictated the actions of political and military leaders, affecting everything from the prosecution of a battle to the outcome of a political decision. Dreams were also thought to provide vital clues to healers, and they were used in the diagnosis and treatment of all manners of illness.
 
Dreaming was often looked upon by indigenous peoples as a way to commune directly with gods and spirits, and dreams are still used in this way by cultures around the world. Many people believed, and some still do, that during dream sleep the soul leaves the body and communes with the spirit world.

The Chinese were one culture who believed that the soul left the body each night during dream sleep.  They believed that if the dreamer were suddenly awakened the soul may not be able to return to the body.  That is why some Chinese are still leery about the use of alarm clocks. This is just one example of how ancient legends can linger into the modern world.
 
Some Mexican and Native American societies share this ancient view of the importance of dreams, and share the belief in a separate dimension that is visited during dream sleep. These people believed that their departed ancestors lived in their dreams, and that they were able to take forms like animals and plants. Thus dreams were seen as a way for them to commune with their recent and ancient ancestors, and to gather wisdom and knowledge that would serve them in their waking lives. To know more logon to www.jointwebventures.com .Dreams were also seen as ways to gather information about their purpose or mission in life.
 
The respect for dreams changed radically early in the 19th century, and dreams in that era were often dismissed as reactions to anxiety, outside noises or even bad food and indigestion. During this period
Of time, dreams were thought to have no meaning at all, and interest in dream interpretation all but evaporated. This all changed, however, with the arrival of Sigmund Freud later in the 19th century.  Sigmund Freud stunned the world of psychiatry by stressing the importance of dreams, and he revived the once dead art of dream interpretation.

AMRITPAL CHEEMA
http://www.articlesbase.com/article-marketing-articles/interpretation-of-dreams-675997.html

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