
Jul 26, 2009
Methods, Approaches, and Theories:
Freud teaches us to pay attention to punning in the dream. Dreams love puns!
Dreaming of a Lion in your living room? Listen to the sound of the world “lion” and wonder, is this dream in any way about someone telling lies? Is the Lion at work? Is someone “lion” down on the job?
A woman who in her past worked as an erotic dancer had a dream that ended with the thought “its just hormones,” that she used to minimize all the content that came before. Upon further exploration, it became clear that she didn’t believe she had a right to take herself seriously because her concerns where just “whore moans.”
Punning in dreams can be a potent way to listen into resonances of the dream, to open it into new layers of meaning.
Try this: Tell your dream to a friend you trust with the idea that they will listen for puns in the dream. See what happens. It can be a very insightful way to begin wondering about dreams and what they are saying, how they apply to life now, what they are attempting to inform you about.
Enjoy!

Jul 26, 2009
There are at least three ways to look at an image in a dream.
- Pay specific attention to the image in the dream. What is it doing specifically? How do you feel watching it? How does it seem to be feeling? What is it up to and who or what else in the dream is it in relation to?
- What is the behavior of the dream figure in the waking world. If its a biological being, what is its nature? How does it function in nature? What are its skills, attributes, qualities?
- What are the mythic resonances of this image? This incudes cross cultural, but also your own associations. What do you think about when you think of this image? What stories come to mind?

Jul 25, 2009
Dream Art:
The process of writing or drawing a dream can be very powerful and revealing. Both practices help to integrate the material in body, mind, and emotion.
http://www.ondreaming.com/dream-imagery/index.htm
Take a meander through this site.
Does it give you permission to play a bit with your dreams?
Don’t be shy, Get out the crayons!

Jul 24, 2009
This is just a brief intro of some of the vast resources out there.
The opions shared on the linked pages are those of the page authors. their being listed here is not necessarily an endoursement of every opinion or claim made by others. As with all of life, you are encouraged to thoughtfully consider the information you find in these places and decide whether or not its right for you.
Reources that list more resources
International Association for the Study of Dreams (IASD, also known as the ASD) : They publish a journal and a magazine, and host an international conference annually. There is lots of information to be discovered here.
DreamGate.com: A site hosted by Richard Wilkerson. This site opens to a ton of resources. Find links to electronic and print resources at his Electric Dreams page and his writtings on Post Modern Dreaming.
Nightmares
The IASD has two pages, one a brief overview on nightmares and second, moreresources on nightmares
Lucidity
The Lucidity Institute. The project founded by Dr Steven LaBerge. Dr LaBerge is associated with Stansford University and is the nations lead dream reasurcher on lucid dreaming.
LD4All is an online lucid dreaming recourse authored by an individual, and has discussion forums.
Recurring Dreams
I am no way implying that recurring dreams are necessarily about shame, but so far in my beginings researches, this is the first interesting link I’ve found, so I offer it.
Recurring Dreams and Shame: a brief thought on recurring dreams and shame by Timothy Tate.
Sweet Dreams
http://www.ondreaming.com/#merrily
A Jungian Primer: Dreamages, A Primer by Timothy Tate and Barrett Golding: a very sweet series of pages, poetic in their post-Jungian reverie. The rest of the site can be accessed by following links.