The Most Common Dream in Every Country
mornings.co.ukSaved by Sarah Owen
The Most Common Dream in Every Country
Saved by Sarah Owen
In addition to smelling and paying attention, we have also been losing our ability to dream. Many cultures believed that what people see and do in their dreams is no less important than what they see and do while awake.
But the snake of my imagination is female: Serpent Woman, another name for la Llorona whose ghostly body carries el nagual
Snakes have always been known to respond to the magnetic field of the earth and its erratic changes.
dreams are symbolic. Your dream maker seldom has access to the directed thought and straightforward language of your conscious, waking mind. The dream maker is an ancient part of us that speaks in image, metaphor, and symbol, and relies on intuition and feeling instead of linear thinking and explicit expression.
In most indigenous cultures, dreams are a powerful communication medium; people discuss their dreams and draw meaning from them, consult their dreams before making important decisions, and consider their dreams a means of communicating their desires and intentions and in making them known and real to others.