Tag Archives: toilet

Episode 126 The Dream Show: Predator

Thank you for your help

 

Predator

Renee is my guest with a dream that gifts her with multiple insights about her life once it is interpreted. Renee’s dream is dramatic, laugh out loud funny at some points, magnificently cinematic at others, and compelling throughout for dream detectives fascinated by the way our dreams express key aspects of our waking lives.

You’ll enjoy hearing Renee’s ahas, gasps, and peels of laughter as her personal dream symbols and metaphors begin to click. She’s a bird flying high, she sees oceans and cities and the borderlines between them, she escapes an alien predator, visits a bathroom stall, discusses issues of fitness and fatness with dream characters, and meets a crazy toy shop owner – hmm, but is she so crazy after all?

The Dream Show, a free monthly podcast with Jane Teresa AndersonThere’s also a reference to four months, and you’ll love Renee’s sudden recall – right at the end – of what happened four months ago and how it fits the big picture.

Enjoy and share.

Listen here

Listen to more episodes

Related articles you might enjoy

Cleaning up the shit

Cleaning up the sh*t

Who would have thought?

Who would have thought?

 

TwitterLinkedInDiggStumbleUponTumblrShare

2012 Wake up call

2012 Wake up call

What’s your recurring dream? If you’ve been following my blog, listening to my podcasts, and reading my books, and you’re still experiencing a recurring dream, today’s post is your wake up call. It’s time to put what you’ve been learning into action if you want to enjoy life changing results in 2012!

Let’s review the basics:

1. A dream is the experience you have, during sleep, while your brain processes your conscious and unconscious experiences of the last 24-48 hours.

2. Think of this processing as like updating your hard drive. Your brain and mind compare your latest experiences to all your past experiences, drawing conclusions – beliefs – about how life works. Mostly you consolidate your oldest beliefs. Sometimes you modify your beliefs. Sometimes you completely overwrite an old belief and wake up with a transformed personal view of how the world works.

Imagine a painter trying to capture your mind’s fast processing of experiences, emotions, and beliefs, as an abstract picture.

Imagine a painter trying to capture your mind’s fast processing of experiences, emotions, and beliefs, as an abstract picture.

3. During dreaming, you are more in touch with your unconscious mind, which is why dreams seem surreal. Imagine a painter trying to capture your mind’s fast processing of experiences, emotions, and beliefs, as an abstract picture. She might use metaphor, analogy, colours to represent emotions, shapes to represent belief structures, any number of creative techniques to help you ‘get the picture’ – or, at least, to store it in your archives under ‘update on how life works’.

4. The magic begins when you know how to ‘get the picture’ – how to interpret a dream – because this helps you to understand your unique mindset. You get to understand your unconscious beliefs, both the ones that work for you and the ones that work against you in your everyday life.

5. You can then see which beliefs need to be changed to get the kind of waking life results you desire. If you stop there, you probably won’t see those results. You need to apply a deeper magic – dream alchemy.

Dream alchemy is a way of working with your unique dream symbols to reprogram your unconscious beliefs.

Dream alchemy is a way of working with your unique dream symbols to reprogram your unconscious beliefs.

6. Dream alchemy is a process you can use to transform an unconscious belief. It’s a way of working with your unique dream symbols to reprogram your unconscious. It works because your unconscious mind relates to your personal dream symbols – after all, it created them!

7. Now, back to your recurring dream: Since dreams reflect the last 24-48 hours, your recurring dream reflects a recurring waking life issue. Have you noticed that most recurring dreams are unhappy, frustrating, or unresolved? That’s because they reflect an unhappy, frustrating, or unresolved issue in your life.

8. To resolve that issue, apply the formula: Dream interpretation + Dream alchemy = Success + an end to your recurring dream.

Ok, that’s your wake up call. Do your dream alchemy to make 2012 your best year ever!

Listen as DK asks me about his recurring dream of driving a car that goes way out of control ... and more.

Listen as DK asks me about his recurring dream of driving a car that goes way out of control … and more.

On a more light-hearted level, here’s an hour’s entertainment about recurring dreams. DK, host of At the Watercooler on Z Talk Radio, invited me onto his show. In this podcast, he asks me about his recurring dream of driving a car that goes way out of control, and, excited by the discovery, moves on to ask me about another recurring dream featuring buildings.

Listeners ask about their dreams and we cover lucid dreaming, falling and floating dreams, a variety of toilet dreams, dreams of snakes, dream sharing, and the question of astral travelling. Oh, and we also talk about dream alchemy and much more.

Listen here. Note: the interview starts halfway through the podcast, so move the slider halfway, or enjoy DK’s interview with the guest before me, Jane Congdon, author of It Started With Dracula.

Consultation services

Related articles you might enjoy

Dream interpretation A suitable toilet

Dream interpretation – A suitable toilet

The right question

The right question

 

TwitterLinkedInDiggStumbleUponTumblrShare

Dream interpretation: Recurring dreams

Do you have a recurring dream theme? I asked this question on my Facebook page on Monday, to gather some material for today’s blog and to provide some glimpses into what these dreams mean. So thanks for your contributions, guys, and read on!

First up, remember that a dream reflects your conscious and unconscious experiences of the last 24-48 hours of your waking life. So, when a dream theme recurs it’s because your waking life experiences are recurring. If there’s an unresolved issue in your life that keeps coming up, you probably have a dream theme that goes with it, appearing one to two nights later.

So if you have a recurring dream theme, look back over the previous two days each time you have the dream until you see a pattern. Your quest is to note the issue that precedes your dream. You’re halfway there before you even interpret your dream.

Next, ask yourself when you first had this dream. Think back to that time. It’s probably when the issue first raised its head, or when it really became important.

Let’s have a quick look at some of the dream themes listed on Facebook:

Kellie dreams she's forgotten about the fish and they're barely surviving.

Kellie dreams she’s forgotten about the fish and they’re barely surviving.

 

This recurring dream has plagued Kellie for years. She finds one or two fish aquariums that she’s forgotten about and the fish are barely surviving.

Everything in a dream reflects something about the dreamer, so Kellie might ask herself, when she has this dream, what she has been neglecting to nourish in her life.

Daniell dreams she’s just had a baby but keeps losing him in odd places like a couch or another state. I’d say that Daniell has plenty of ideas and ‘births’ new projects but loses touch with them, or holds back for fear of losing interest. A clue might be to look back to the first time she had this dream to identify what was new in her life then and why it didn’t work out as she had planned.

Talking of lost opportunities, Renee’s recurring dream is of a delivery man who delivers her a package. She’s signed for it a few times, but never opened it.

Renee might like to look over the two days prior to each return of the dream and ask herself what opportunity she signed up for but didn’t pursue.

Of course, dream interpretation goes much deeper than this, but in each example, the dreamer gets to ask a question that helps them identify the waking life issue.

Here are some more:

For the past year Cathie has had a recurring dream that her husband is going to die from cancer. She wakes with a deep heartache and sobbing. So, first of all, Cathie can ask what change occurred in her life a year ago, as this probably triggered the dream. Death in a dream is often about something ending in our life, not the death of a person, but an end of an era, attitude, belief, study course, hope, goal … anything. There are times for letting the old die so the new can enter into our lives, and there are other times when we may let things end prematurely and need to energise them back to life. Either way, there is grief to feel, and that is why Cathie wakes up sobbing. To move on, we need to release grief for our old hopes, plans, attitudes or ways of life. Again, this is a superficial interpretation, but a starting point for Cathie as she contemplates her dream.

Bonnie Belle looks for toilets or even pees in public in her dreams, often accompanied by celebrities, so she’s releasing or letting go of some issues around the difference between her public and private life, I’d say.

Beverley used to have her dream “very, very often” but not so much now. She might like to look back to when the frequency of the dream began to slow, and ask herself what changed in her life then. Whatever changed softened the waking life issue, so that it only comes up now when it occasionally becomes more pressing. There’s a big clue for Beverley here. In her dream, she is happily doing craft with children when a man arrives and she’s happy to see him: a classic case of finding your passion (being creative, in the flow).

Barbara dreams of lots of cameras. I’d need to hear more about the dream, but it probably reflects the way she frames her experiences, different perspectives and views. What would she see if she stepped back from life to look at the big picture? What would she see if she focused on one area? Why is she not in the picture herself, perhaps taking an objective view of her life? If Barbara answers these questions she’ll gain some insight into a recurring waking life issue. 

Christine comes face to face with a harmless crocodile after rescuing a baby that turns out to be herself from its mouth.

Christine comes face to face with a harmless crocodile after rescuing a baby that turns out to be herself from its mouth.

In her dream, Christine comes face to face with a harmless crocodile after rescuing a baby that turns out to be herself from its mouth. My feeling is that Christine may have had recurring dreams of crocodiles but this dream looks like a once-off, a healing dream, the end of the issue. Christine overcomes a sense of danger that has been holding her back in some way, and feels able to move forward without ‘bite’ and without fear of being bitten.

Jennifer has several recurring dream themes, one being living back in the Bronx (NYC) and walking up a hill, rather unsuccessfully, back to the apartment building where she used to live. The issues going on in Jennifer’s life whenever she has this dream most probably began when she used to live in that apartment building. That’s the key to healing the issue, yet Jennifer resists exploring those times: the hill, and the difficulty climbing it represent her hesitation and fear.

These are tip of the iceberg interpretations only! Listen to The Dream Show podcasts to get a feel for how to explore your dreams deeply and meaningfully.

Come over to my FaceBook page and join the conversations.

Consultation services

Related articles you might enjoy

Radio 2UE Rat race or mouse trap

Rat race or mouse trap?

Dream interpretation A suitable toilet

Dream interpretation – A suitable toilet

TwitterLinkedInDiggStumbleUponTumblrShare

Dream interpretation: A suitable toilet?

The usual dream scenario is that every toilet, no matter how promising it appears to be, turns out to be

The usual dream scenario is that every toilet, no matter how promising it appears to be, turns out to be unsuitable

Some people say it’s probably just as well that most toilets you find in your dreams are unsuitable to use because, otherwise, you might end up wetting your bed – or worse.

This may be the case when your bladder is bursting and the physical sensation is impinging on your dream creating the whole, urgent, ‘Where’s the toilet?’ scenario. Body sensations can and do affect your dreams, and since most people need to get up and empty their bladder during the night, the common occurrence of this dream is not surprising.

However, how many times have you woken from this dream without a pressing bladder? And has your physical bladder ever emptied itself while dreaming of peeing? Probably not. These dreams are common, and symbolically meaningful.

The usual dream scenario is that every toilet, no matter how promising it appears to be, turns out to be unsuitable. Public toilets are locked, or there are no doors or walls on the cubicles, or the toilets are too filthy or overflowing to use. Another variation is that you do get to pee or empty your bowels but you can’t get the toilet to flush, or it starts overflowing while you are using it. In more fulfilling toilet dreams, you get to fully and happily relieve your bladder or bowel, sometimes even in public or out in nature, and then continue with your dream with no further pressing need to find a toilet.

Do you ever feel there's too much 'crap' in your life, blocking good things from coming to you?

Do you ever feel there’s too much ‘crap’ in your life, blocking good things from coming to you?

The tip for interpreting these dreams is to see emptying the bladder or bowel as releasing toxins and waste products from your system. These are times for letting go of things in your life that need to be let go.

When the let go in the dream is easy and good, and the waste products flow away, you are letting go of issues in your dream. Too often, though, we feel surrounded by ‘shit’ and ‘crap’ that clogs up the natural flow of life. When this happens, you may dream of overflowing or dirty toilets. And when that ‘shit’ is building up within you, when you just can’t seem to find the right conditions to let it go, you encounter unsuitable dream toilets.

This dream is also to do with not getting enough privacy in your life, particularly for processing and letting go of emotional issues and related ‘crap’. There’s always the feeling of someone looking in, when all you need is time to yourself. When you have this dream, plan some quality private time, or ask why you feel unable to discuss and process some of your issues in public.

[Extract from 101 Dream Interpretation Tips, Jane Teresa Anderson]

Consultation services

Related articles you might enjoy

Dream interpretation Slo-mo with glue feet

Slo-mo with glue feet

Episode 41 The Dream Show Mirror, mirror, on the wall

Mirror, mirror, on the wall

TwitterLinkedInDiggStumbleUponTumblrShare

Cleaning up the sh*t

"I was walking around carrying this sh*t with nowhere to put it," said David.

“I was walking around carrying this sh*t with nowhere to put it,” said David.

“I was cooking for everyone, serving them, clearing away piles of dirty dishes, and even, at the end of the dream, picking up some faeces after someone crapped in a cupboard. I was walking around carrying this faeces – this sh*t – with nowhere to put it,” said David, a client who found his dream interpretation so insightful that he offered it for the blog to help others.

“Would you say,” I asked, “that you’ve been feeling like you’ve been catering to other people’s needs, handling other people’s sh*t?”

“Yes,” David replied, “especially with my business, and what really frustrates me is I’m not getting time to do what I want to do.”

Now, we could have left the interpretation there, and David could have thought of ways to take on less of other people’s sh*t, and free himself to do more of what he wanted to do, but we all know it doesn’t work like that, don’t we? Unless we understand why we act in the way we do, we’re unlikely to change.

This is where the brave delve deeper.

Step one is relating a dream to how you’re feeling about your waking life. David did this.

Notice I didn’t say, “Step one is relating a dream to what’s happening in your waking life.” I said, ” … how you’re feeling about your waking life.”

Dreams reveal how you see life, rather than how it is.

Here we go, here’s the powerful delve deeper step:

Step two is to see everyone and everything in a dream as reflecting something about yourself. So it’s David’s own sh*t (stuff, beliefs) that’s stopping him from doing what he wants to do.

We were able to go through David’s dream and identify his unconscious beliefs and feelings that were holding him back. We added some alchemy and – hey, presto! Suddenly David has room for doing his own thing, as if by magic, and his business relationships have become so much easier now that he’s dealt with his own sh*t.

“The people I work with had seemed so complicated, so demanding, but now I see I was too blinded by my own sh*t, by my own view of what needed to be done, instead of meeting their actual needs, which were really quite simple all along,” David mused.

Change begins within.

Change begins within.

When you sort out your inner world, your outer world reflects the change. Change begins within. When you interpret your dreams, look at every symbol as informing you about your own sh*t. That’s where you strike gold.

Consultation services

 

Related articles you might enjoy

Dream interpretation A suitable toilet

Dream interpretation – A suitable toilet

Future blessings

Future blessings

TwitterLinkedInDiggStumbleUponTumblrShare

Episode 41 The Dream Show: Mirror, mirror, on the wall

Thank you for your help

 

A new podcast every Friday. Listen here or subscribe on iTunes.

A new podcast every Friday. Listen here or subscribe on iTunes.

Episode 41 of our free weekly podcast, THE DREAM SHOW, is now up.

Kitty, my guest today, brings a dream featuring an unusable toilet (how many times have you dreamed of a toilet you can’t use?), a vertical ladder that’s hard work to climb and impossible to exit at the top, and a feeling of increasing anger and frustration.

What does it mean, and what does Snow White (“Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who is the fairest of them all”) have to do with the interpretation?

If you like a good mystery, join Kitty and I as we do the detective work, following the dream clues to an enlightening conclusion.

You can listen here (Episode 41)

Listen to more episodes

Related articles you might enjoy

Dream interpretation A suitable toilet

Dream interpretation – A suitable toilet

The mirror and the compass

The mirror and the compass

TwitterLinkedInDiggStumbleUponTumblrShare

The Dream Show: Episode 4 Undressed

Thank you for your help

 
The Dream Show with Jane Teresa AndersonNina dreamed of toilet seats that needed cleaning and fixing, new clothes, and her daughter’s state of undress. But why was her adult daughter only 6 in the dream, and still at school? Dreams are not what they seem! Listen as we discuss the interpretation and hear Nina’s responses.

Listen.

(This episode of The Dream Show was released in May 2009.)

Listen to more episodes

Related articles you might enjoy

Dream interpretation A suitable toilet

Dream interpretation – A suitable toilet

Dream interpretation Naked in public

Naked in public

 

TwitterLinkedInDiggStumbleUponTumblrShare