168 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
168 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
Dream News
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NUCLEAR NIGHTMARES: With the threat of nuclear war hanging overhead, it is not
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surprising that our dreams might reflect this source of anxiety. In fact,
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reports peace psychologist Randy Morris, PhD, many children in our country, not
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to mention in other nations, have had nuclear imagery in their dreams. Are
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such dreams simply another example of how daily anxieties are reflected in our
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nighttime ruminations? Possibly, but Dr. Morris offers anothe explanation.
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"Could it be some kind of collective survival mechanism to come as close as
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possible to experiencing, in order to reject, our self-destruction?"
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. "I believe," he states, in answer to his question, "that nuclear
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nightmares represent an impulse on the part of this collective psyche to
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confront directly the horror of nuclear war, literally, to 'imagine the
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unimaginable,' and by so doing to take the first step toward healing this
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festering rupture in the family of man. These dreams, as expressions of pure
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emotion, have the power to motivate people to work in new ways for peace
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movement." Dr. Morris notes that the threat of nuclear war is increased by the
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number of people who simply cannot imagine that it would ever happen. Nuclear
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nightmares tend to be very "real" in their feeling, and thus may be a natural
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counterbalance to the ostrich syndrome.
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. Anyone who has had a nuclear nightmare, or any kind of dream involving
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nuclear imagery, is invited to write a letter to Randy Morris, PhD, Hiroshima
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International School, 2-2-6 Ushita-naka, Higashi-ku, Hiroshima 730, Japan,
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leave a message in ANECDOTAL PSI or PREMONITIONS REGISTRY.
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SUDDEN DEATH SYNDROME: SUICIDE BY NIGHTMARE: A healthy adult goes to sleep at
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night but then never wakes up. The medical examiners can find no cause of
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death? What happened. No one knows, but it happens enough to have earned a
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name, "sudden death syndrome," and to warrant having the Atlanta Center for
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Disease Control monitor the incidence of such cases. One population group,
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Laotian refugees, has a higher than average mortality from sudden death
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syndrome. Dr. Joseph Jay Tobin, reporting in the American Journal of
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Orthopsychiatry (July, 1983), presents a case study that leads him to suggest
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that this phenomenon may be suicide by nightmare.
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. The patient was a male refugee from war-torn Laos, who had been recently
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relocated with his family to their own apartment in an American city. Shortly
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thereafter, the man complained of difficulty sleeping. He reported nightmares
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in which something (once a cat, once a dog and once a woman) came to him in his
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bedroom, sat on his chest and tried to prevent his breathing. Dr. Tobin
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arranged for a Laotian healer to perform a "spirit cure," which was consistent
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with the patient's world view. Afterwards, Dr. Tobin investigated further into
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the patient's background.
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. Examination of the patient's history revealed that he was suffering from
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"survivor's guilt." This post-traumatic malady, first identified in survivors
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of the Holocaust, combines depression and paranoia with the nagging feeling,
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"why was I saved when so many others died?" Dr. Tobin also discovered that
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among South Asian persons there is the belief in something akin to "voodoo
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death," called banqunqut, or "Oriental nightmare death," in which a person is
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believed to be killed during sleep by a spirit which squeezes out the breath.
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Apparently a similar belief was held in Europe during the Middle Ages. At that
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time, the name, "incubi" was given to the presumed spirit, from the Latin word
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for nightmare, incubus.
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. Previous medical research has indicated that heart attacks can be
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precipitated in dreams and that certain psychosomatic disorders can be
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dangerously aggravated during the sleep state. Other research focussing on the
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healing potential of dreams, nevertheless receives indirect support for the
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physical potentcy of dreams by the suggestion that they might also be a vehicle
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of death.
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DREAM AFTER SURGERY RESTORES INTEGRITY OF PERSONALITY: Major surgery is a
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harrowing experience, a trauma to the personality, for the person submits their
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life, while unconscious under anesthesia, to the operation of other people's
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hands upon their vital organs. The most critical aspect of the surgery
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experience--the operation itself--seems beyond the reach of the patient's
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personality to integrate, as would be needed following any traumatic
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experience, because of the anesthesia. Patient's occasional reports of
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"witnessing" their operation, and statements, by psychics such as Edgar Cayce
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or philosophers such as Alfred North Whitehead, that the mind never sleeps,
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that it registers everything, would suggest that despite the anesthesia, it
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should be theoretically possible for the post-operative patient to regain
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access to the surgery experience so that it could be digested and the recovery
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made more complete. Dr. Paul W. Pruyser, of the Menninger Foundation,
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reporting in the Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic (June, 1983) suggests that
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such an integration of the surgery experience may occur through a dream!
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. Dr. Pruyser writes about his experience undergoing emergency, triple
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coronary bypass surgery and how his recuperation was helped by a dream he had
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five days after the operation. In his dream, he visits a little-known,
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secluded part of the hospital grounds, a ruins site from the 19th century,
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where he encounters a heavy metal door. The door opens with eerie creak and he
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enters a dimly lit cave. He finds three strange, two-story, cubical habitats,
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each with leaky and rusty pipes meant to furnish heat to the inside from a
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centrally located, old-fashioned wood-burning cook stove that was very
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dilapidated.
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. When he awoke from this dream, he reports that he felt elated and
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immensely satisfied, because, in his own words, "my mind had found access to an
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experience I was not supposed to have undergone at all beause of the total
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anesthesia." He believes, for example, that the creaking of the door was
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actually the sound of his rib cage when it was opened by the surgeon. He
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provides background information to develop an interpretation of the details of
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the dream, which in essence refers to his confrontation with his heart and its
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clogged arteries and with his ancestral history of coronary deficiency. More
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generally, he ascribes to his dream an act of restoration of the integrity of
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his personality--"a guarantee of the continuity of selfhood"--after being thr
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eatened by his near brush with death. The ability of dreams to spontaneously
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provide this otherwise missing ingredient to total recovery deserves further
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investigation. (Author's address: Menninger Foundation, P.O. Box 829, Topeka,
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KS 66601).
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GROUP DREAMING: What happens when a group of people attempt to dream about the
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same thing? The December, 1983 issue of Omni Magazine reports the work of
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Henry Reed (DreamNet Sysop) on an intriguing approach to studying the psychic
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potential of dreams. A group of dreamers would be gathered together, he would
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introduce them to a stranger said to be suffering from an undisclosed problem,
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and ask the group to dream for this person, to see if they could dream up a
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solution to the person's problem. In the morning the dreams were analyzed, the
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person's problem was revealed, and the pieces of information from the several
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dreams were pieced together to develop a solution. Most of the dreams
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evidenced psychic information in the dreams. Pooling the dreams enhanced the
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visibility of the psychic effect. Having a good reason for dreaming
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telepathically seems to increase the probability of psychic material in the
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dreams. For further reading: "Dreaming for Mary, "Sundance Community Dream
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Journal, #3 (See Mail Order Services).
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EXPLORING YOUR DREAMS: For a "hands-on" guide to the "New Dreamwork" see the
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October, 1983 issue of New Age Journal. It has a comprehensive special section
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on what's happening in the world of the new dreamworker. It gives several
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different approaches to dreamwork, has articles on some of the prominent
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dreamworkers, as well as general discussion of current developments and
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controversies.
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NEW LUCID DREAM INDUCTION TECHNIQUE: Robert Price and David Cohen, of the
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University of Texas at Austin, report that they have accidently discovered a
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method for inducing lucid dreams. It happened while they were researching the
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ability of a subject to control, while asleep in the dream state, the sounding
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of a tone being played in the dream laboratory. A biofeedback setup was used,
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such that whenever the sleeping subject entered the dream state, with rapid eye
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movements (REM), a loud tone would be played. This tone would interrupt sleep,
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but if the subject could increase the amount of rapid eye movements, he could
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terminate the tone, and sleep in peace. They found that their research subject
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could learn this task. Then the subject began to report lucid dreaming, that
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is being aware in the dream state that he was dreaming, and reported that he
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tried to move his eyes as a means of signalling to the experimenter. A
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"communication" system was thus set up between the experimenter and the
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dreaming subject. The researchers suggest that such a biofeedback situation
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may be an effective way to learn lucid dreaming. Reported in Lucidity Letter,
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November, 1983 (See Mail Order Services).
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TELEPATHIC DREAMS IN COUNSELING: A counselor whose dreams provide psychic
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information about clients has a powerful addition to his kit of clinical tools.
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Kenneth Orkin, Ph.D., has written an article entitled, "Telepathic Dreams:
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Their Application During the Counseling Process," describing his experiences
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whith psychic dreaming about clients. He is in private practice in Miami,
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Florida. He recounts several types of psychic dreams, including precognitive
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dreaming about the problems of a client who would be coming for a consultation
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in the future, with the dream providing information about the source of that
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person's problem. He also recounts a story about a dream that provided
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past-life information about a client. His article appeared in the November,
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1983 issue of A.R.E. Journal. You may write to the author c/o A.R.E., P.O. Box
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595, Virginia Beach, VA 23451.
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