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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

THE Dream Thread (merged)

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sat 19 Feb 2005, 14:43:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('k_semler', '
')Then wouldn't we have been pointing the rifles towards the inside of the perimeter, instead of out to the road?
One of the interesting notions in Freud's Dreams book is that spatial-temporal items can go any direction and that the key to discovering meanings which can come at you in a sort of 'A Ha!' feeling is to switch the directions of these things. And often the emotional content gets displaced from where it belongs onto something else as a kind of subterfuge.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 20 Feb 2005, 00:55:39

So there it is, dream interpretation. You can't look in the back of the book to see if you got it right and there are no experts. Science backed away because its not possible to prove or disprove a statement about what a dream means. Doesn't mean that they can't reveal interesting things though and that's where it stands. Take it or leave it.
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Unread postby BabyPeanut » Sun 20 Feb 2005, 09:50:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jesus_of_suburbia', 'I') give my three celebrity dreams.
The first one I can recall featured "The Good Girl" and "Chicago" star, John C. Riley. It was a regular high school day, only every so often, John would turn to me and say, "Hey, I'm Kevin." Why he did this multiple times, as well as why he called himself Kevin is unknown to me.

Kevin Costner?
Kevin Chamberlin?
Kevin Bacon?
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 20 Feb 2005, 12:32:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BabyPeanut', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jesus_of_suburbia', 'I') give my three celebrity dreams.
The first one I can recall featured "The Good Girl" and "Chicago" star, John C. Riley. It was a regular high school day, only every so often, John would turn to me and say, "Hey, I'm Kevin." Why he did this multiple times, as well as why he called himself Kevin is unknown to me.

Kevin Costner?
Kevin Chamberlin?
Kevin Bacon?
link
BP has a quirky sense of humor running through his posts but this seems straightforward and on the right track - follow up anything that comes to mind. Its a game of intuition and associations: mining for meanings.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 20 Feb 2005, 19:51:14

Constance Newland published Me, Myself, and I about her clinical LSD threapy in the early '60s for treatment of sexual frigity. Quoted by Daniel Pinchbeck in Breaking Open The Head.:

'Through LSD hallucinations, Newland plumbed the depths of her stereotypically Freudian unconscious. Backtracking through early traumas, she learned, "in addition to being, consciously, a loving mother and respectable citizen, I was also, unconsciously, a murderess, a pervert, a cannibal, a sadist and a masochist." These discoveries had a cheering effect on her psychic life. She got rid of her neurosis.'
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Lucidity in Life

Unread postby EnviroEngr » Sun 20 Feb 2005, 19:51:37

There is another way to work this.

One of my root teachers is Namkhai Norbu. He gave me this book to use in the process of developing consistent lucidity: Dream Yoga and the Practice of Natural Light

Here's a little background blurb I ran into recently: We Can Wake Up From Life's Dream While We're Asleep which explains it a bit.

Also, I'm hoping to get to Process Work. Their main website is pretty anemic, but here it is: http://www.processwork.org/FAQ.htm
This paradigm is practically based on dream work. Worth checking out. If I can get Arny, Amy or Max and Co. to write up a better précis, when I get it, I'll put it up.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 20 Feb 2005, 20:15:57

Some good reading here, enviroman. I like the notion that an important dream will not fade upon awakening. I've had some like that through the years that put me into a great mood that lasted quite a while. Not last night though. Something interesting was going on and I didn't have to do anyhting at all this morning so I could just lie quiet and try to remember. Not much could be resurrected from the fading though :x . Its true that Freud does seem to drag dreams through the mud. I don't know how much its warranted or justifiable to do that. Somewhat I suppose. No way he has the last word on the subject, that much seems clear to me. (interesting that nothing was going on here and we both posted in the same minute!)
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 21 Feb 2005, 00:22:46

Enviro's post with links to sites with a far more benign view of the meaning and use of dream information raises some points about the Freudian point of view. Now Freud wasn't included in the Great Books series found in probably every library in the US for any small reason. His was a seminal and enormously influential mind and thoughtful, historically minded people ought at least to know what his ideas were about. And they were about a grim view of what human beings carry around in their heads. Is it justified to have such grim notions of what a human is? Never mind what you may think about his theories of dreams and the hypothetical knowledge they bring about human nature, take a look at History and you have your answer. Cannibalism an oddity with no meaning for the rest of us? Homosexuality a genetic fluke that hits a minority? forget about it, says Freud, its there in all of us. Were the Nazis some otherworldly inroad of pure Evil? No, we are all potential Nazis, etc. His researches revealed to him that year old infants fear their fathers will eat them. On and on it goes. You have to read it to believe it and even then you might gag at credulity. The question of course is: IS IT TRUE? (by the way, I would like to thank peakoil.com for this forum as a chance for me to put together such a long vainglorious string of my own thoughts punctuated by sympathetic readers and their contributions)
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Unread postby GD » Mon 21 Feb 2005, 06:34:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', '(')by the way, I would like to thank peakoil.com for this forum as a chance for me to put together such a long vainglorious string of my own thoughts punctuated by sympathetic readers and their contributions)

Happy to punctuate you. :lol:
Just a curiosity: are Lucid dreams different to "normal" dreams in that the way they can be interpreted, or does it not matter?
Cheers,
GD :)
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 21 Feb 2005, 15:46:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GD', '
')Happy to punctuate you. :lol:
Just a curiosity: are Lucid dreams different to "normal" dreams in that the way they can be interpreted, or does it not matter?
Thanks GD :-D I think too much is made of the occasional dream in which one is aware of being in a dream. Far more interesting is the dream of clarity which is fully remembered upon wakening - and even more important - the feeling that something profound was happeneing in a particular dream. Some truly remarkable things have happened to people (scientists, artists, poets etc.) while they were dreaming. It could be the biggest curse of our hurry-up world that we can't spend time thinking about what happened in our night's sleep. But to your point: I don't know.
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Unread postby killJOY » Mon 21 Feb 2005, 22:18:32

Last night...
Last night an aircraft punctured the barn roof, exploded.
The plane was still there, smoldering, on the roof.
We were remarking how the beams stayed intact.
There were scorched corpses, frozen in positions bracing for the crash, stacked like firewood along the way as we walked along.
The corpses' legs were taut. Their heads on their knees, hands covering their heads.
They were frozen in this aspect of imminent crach. They were smoldering.
It was odd. They didn't stink :-D .
Peak oil = comet Kohoutek.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Thu 24 Feb 2005, 01:56:56

I had a dream the other night in which I was sitting in a secluded spot provided by my old high school while waiting for my mother to pick me up. I was reading something. My relationship to my mom hasn't been easy but it has been on the mend now for several years and I find she is a benevolent spirit in my dreams. She was there to reassure me that mostly idiots post at peakoil.com and it's time to move on.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sat 26 Feb 2005, 02:19:57

Nevermind that last post. I was peeved at all the Christian bashers. Just because you find their beliefs quaint doesn't mean you should mock them. Live and let live. Now, I had a terrific dream last night I would like to share, and this seems to prove Freud wrong on the question of wish-fulfillment being present in all dreams. Perhaps he was only being dogmatic on this point for strategic reasons and knew for himself that it wasn't exactly true. There is evidence to support this idea. Anyway, the dream: first, some background stuff, Mitragyna speciosa aka Kratom, is a tree that grows in Malaysia and Thailand. A tea made of it acts as a mild narcotic and it has been used to cure addictions to opium and alcohol. It produces a feeling of mildly orgasmic tranquility. You can get it legally through the internet. It has a peculiar side effect of causing tickling sensations on the skin. My dream: an order of Kratom came to me in the mail. The box was broken and the bag inside was opened and the leaf spilled and there wasn't as much as there should have been. I was holding the loose spilled shredded leaf in my hand. That's it - that was the dream. I remembered it clearly and thought about it while getting ready for work, having coffee, etc. I was driving on the freeway when I realized what it meant. I used Freud's dictum that it must be a wish fulfillment of some sort but I was puzzled because I was angry in the dream that I had lost some of the Kratom and was planning to call the distributer to make up the difference. So how could it be a wish fulfillment? Then, to my amusement I realized what it was about. The key was in trying to remember what had happenend the day before that night's dream. Usually dreams take their themes from something that happened the day before. Well, I had been substituting a High School senior English class. There had been a cute voluptuous girl in the front row who seemed to like the way I talked. She came to talk to me, asked me my zodiac sign and read my horoscope for me. Now I acted with professionalism of course, but an impression was made on my poor male psyche only to crop up in my dreams. The broken into box was her vagina, and the kratom leaf was her pubic hair in my hands. How is this not a wish fulfillment? The dominant theme of the dream was that I had been shortchanged, I didn't get all the leaf I had sent for. That of couse was the reality of the situation I had experienced in class that day. So rather than being a wish fulfilled, it was actually a reflection upon the reality of wishes denied. My dream was an attempt to reconcile me to reality rather than a wish fulfillment. In other words, perhaps young people have only wish fulfillment dreams, but older people make other uses of their dreams. Note that Freud insists that id impulses rule in dreams and that the reality principle is a part of our waking rational minds. My dream would seem to suggest that the rational reality principle can extend into night dreams.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sat 26 Feb 2005, 03:30:40

I told this dream and its meaning to the amnokave coworker today. I tend to talk too loud because of deafness and my coworkers know about my prowess at interpreting dreams.. I think I embarrassed them, the waitresses, because their ears perk up when I mention dreams. C'est la vie.
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Unread postby uNkNowN ElEmEnt » Sat 26 Feb 2005, 18:23:27

I had a dream the other night. A flyer was in the mail, survey like, asking people to sign up to adopt a senior. Taht's all there was. I saw it in with the rest of the mail and then my dream changed.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 27 Feb 2005, 00:02:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('uNkNowN ElEmEnt', 'I') had a dream the other night. A flyer was in the mail, survey like, asking people to sign up to adopt a senior. Taht's all there was. I saw it in with the rest of the mail and then my dream changed.
Well I know this means plenty but its harder to interpret female dreams for a male interpreter. Some dreams do seem to not be gender related. This one here doesn't ring any bells. What did your dream change to? maybe that would show something.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 27 Feb 2005, 12:46:02

Unknown Element, my guess is that you have not hit menopause yet? A note about being nice to old people in your mailbox could be something you are trying to work out about what's coming (if I'm right)
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 27 Feb 2005, 13:47:34

mailbox = womb. How do you feel about old women and how do you picture yourself as one? It's something to sort out. Like I said about my last dream, they don't neccessarily mean wish fulfillment. Sometimes there's work to be done while we sleep. That's my theory anyway.
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Unread postby uNkNowN ElEmEnt » Sun 27 Feb 2005, 16:31:55

I was a very troubled youth. it blew everyones mind that even though I stole cars, skipped school to go 4x4ing, got in lots of fights, I was a regular volunteer at the old folks home in town.

my feelings for old people have no relection what so ever on how I feel about my parents. I will never live in the same house as my parents again so adopting one of them won't happen. this is interresting because my father who has always needed someone to take care of him is going to be single again soon. his wife is dying (for the 4th time in a year). but he and I talk maybe twice a year, not the kind of relationship to do the dependant parent thing.

I haven't hit menopause yet and don't look my age. I don't really care what age I am, if it weren't for my 8 year old reminding me occasionally, I'd totally forget (as I ususally do). I've faced death more times than I'm sure anyone here would care to know, and that isn't a big enough fear to be coming out in my subconscious.

I don't remember what the dream changed to after. but this little part stuck with me. curious.
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Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sun 27 Feb 2005, 17:29:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('uNkNowN ElEmEnt', ' ')
I don't remember what the dream changed to after. but this little part stuck with me. curious.
It does seem to be a memorable, interesting image: a letter in the mail asking you to adopt an old person. Its the sort of thing that could possibly lead to an insight into what's happening in your own mind that you don't know about. You can find things out by trying to understand. One notion about dreams is that they can have multiple layers of meaning. There can be unrelated issues that come together under one symbol. A relationship to a parent is so complex and remains one of the most important facets of our psyches throughout our lives. Things going on when we were just the littlest children don't really ever go away, they just get overlaid with new experiences. Freud talked about something he called the Electra complex, after the Greek myth about a woman who killed her mother to avenge the death of her father. Little girls do love their fathers. It seems as though there may be some link here to your own father in this letter in the mailbox dream. Some old forgotten issues bubbling up to meet with new issues. Just the effort to figure it out can lead to resurrecting things you haven't remembered in a whole lifetime which is in itself an exhillarating thing. One other thing: psychological pain (old pains, forgotten) is inhibiting and can hold you back. In your case though since you obviously don't lack courage, maybe you can break through to something.
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