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Dreaming

February 21, 2012 by Sarahi Fry

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Numbers may be puzzling or stimulating when one

sees them in dreams. Almost always, dreaming

of numbers is related with lottery numbers.

Numbers appearing in dreams carry a personal

significance. Yes, it is possible that the numbers

may mean a lucky draw in the lottery. But this is

a rare occurrence.

There are dissimilar ways to interpret the meaning

of numbers in dreams. There is a practical aspect

to numbers. The other side is spiritual and esoteric.

Numbers in dreams are symbolic. It may be related

to events of the past, it may call your attention to

the present, it may be precognitive, calling your

attention to an indispensable date or place.

Practical interpretation:

A combining of numbers may be scaled down to a single

digit. This is the usual practice. Or, the numbers

taken separately may be of more significance.

Dream interpretation is very personal- the events

in dreams belong only to the dreamer. It may be the

dreamer’s pleasure to dissect and make an analyzation of the dream.

One

Success, accomplishment in current endeavours

Purposeful, focus on a single project

Two

Balance and caution in business or personal

relationships Harmony and integrity.

Three

Stability and success may be realized. Enthusiasm

and freedom.

Four

Security and solid foundation for your hopes

and dreams. Your home is your castle.

Five:

An necessary invention that will make a difference

in your life. Adventure, courage health .

Six:

Harmony, peace and loving relationship, Idealism

responsibility and faithfulness

Seven:

Your difficulties are not insurmountable. It is

up to you. Discernment, wisdom, fortitude

Eight:

Wonderful potentials knock on your doorstep.

Practicality, control , business sense.

Nine:

Do not over extend yourself, do not be

overconfident. Discretion, understanding,

lofty moral sense, genius.

Zero:

Holds within all the potentials.

Esoteric Meaning

One:

New beginnings, unity

Two:

Duality, balance, yin/yang, two sides, opposites

Three:

Triangle, freedom

Four:

The square, stability, reality, earth,

four sides of humane nature- sensation,

feelings, thoughts and intuition, four

elements of fire, earth, wind and water

Five:

Human body, humane consciousness, the five senses

Six:

Harmony and balance

Seven:

Cycles of life,magical, mystical and mysterious

Eight:

Death and resurrection,infinity

Nine:

Pregnancy, end of a cycle, spiritual awareness

Ten:

A new beginning- 10 is scaled down to one digit-1.

May likewise mean male and female together

Eleven:

This is a master number, perhaps the

eleventh hour.

Twelve:

Indicates time, a full cycle is within reach,

wholeness

Zero:

The feminine, the Great Mother, the sub-conscious,

or the absolute

Please note that as one progresses spiritually, this

creates the possibleness of using the vibratory effect

of numbers.

In numerous practices, combining numbers and drawing

on their vibrations may be effective to influence

the dreamer’s environment.

Feng Shui recognizes the importance of numbers

to fetch positive influence to the environment.

Reference:

Pamela Ball: 10,000 Dreams Interpreted


Dreaming

Lucid Dreaming: Gateway to the Inner Self is the account of an extraordinarily gifted lucid dreamer who goes beyond the boundaries of both psychology and religion. In the process, he stumbles upon the Inner Self.

While lucid (consciously aware) in the dream state and competent to act and interact with dream figures, objects, and settings, dream expert Robert Waggoner experienced something transformative and unexpected. He was capable to interact consciously with the dream observer-the apparent Inner Self-within the dream. At original this seemed shocking, even impossible, since psychology ordinarily alludes to such theoretical inner distinct elements as the Subliminal Self, the Center, the Internal Self-Helper in vague and theoretical ways. Waggoner came to realize, however, that conscious fundamental interaction with the Inner Self was not only possible, but actual and highly inspiring. He concluded that while conscious in the dream state, one has both a psychological tool and a platform from which to understand dreaming and the larger picture of man’s psyche as well. Waggoner proposes 5 stages of lucid dreaming and guides readers through them, providing counsel for those who have never experienced the lucid dream state and suggestions for how experienced lucid dreamers may advance to a new level.

Lucid Dreaming offers stimulating perceptivities and bright illustrations that will intrigue not only avid dreamworkers but any individual who is fascinated in consciousness, identity, and the definition of reality.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #18896 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-10-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .1 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages
ReviewIn this noteworthy book, Robert Waggoner has brought lucid dreaming to a level that is simultaneously higher and deeper than any former explorer has taken the topic. Both autobiographical and historical, theoretical and practical, psychodynamic and transpersonal, as well as adventurous and cautionary, Lucid Dreaming offers it is readers instructions and perceptivities that they will find nowhere else in the literature. They will learn how they may become awake and conscious while asleep, and how this talent may modify their lives. –Stanley Krippner, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Saybrook Graduate School and Research Center, San Francisco, Coauthor of Extraordinary Dreams and How To Work With Them

Lucid Dreaming IS a gateway to the Inner Self. Robert Waggoner s distinctive storytelling style is compelling reading an impressive exploration of the subject. The work is scholarly, fascinating, and, most of all, practical. –Christine Lemley, Executive Producer, DREAMTIME Series, WFYI/PBS-TV Indianapolis

Robert Waggoner admirably fulfills his aim of bringing lucidity to lucid dreaming. His book is discerned by it is wealth of first-hand experience, and his clear acknowledgement that, rather of seeking to control and manipulate our dreams, we ought to use the gift of lucidity to navigate a deeper reality and grow into connection with a deeper and wiser self. He offers practical proficiencies and arousing and attention holding travelers tales to give hope or courage to us to experiment with interactional and precognitive dreaming and to explore the routine of reality creation inside the dream matrix. This is an invitation to high adventure. –Robert Moss, Author of Conscious Dreaming and The Three ONLY Things: Tapping the Power of Dreams, Coincidence, and Imagination

About the AuthorRobert Waggoner is President-Elect of the International Association for the Study of Dreams (IASD) and a graduate of Drake University with a degree in psychology. He is likewise the coeditor of the online journal, The Lucid Dream Exchange dreaminglucid.com. He is a popular speaker at national and global dream conferences.

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71 of 75 people found the following review helpful.
5Definitely worth reading
By K. Cramer
I wholeheartedly recommend this book to anyone with an interest in lucid dreams. I’ve read nearly every book about lucid dreaming and I can say without hesitation this book is one of the best.

There are plenty of how-to books geared toward readers who seek to experience lucid dreams for the first time. While this book contains some techniques for that purpose, it offers so much more than that. Robert Waggoner takes lucid dreaming to a whole new level. Through his investigation of the profound inner awareness ever-present in our dreams, he demonstrates the vast potential for exploration and personal growth available to us lucid dreaming. This aspect of the book resonated deeply with me because it echoes my current approach to dreaming.

It is rare to find a book that approaches lucid dreaming from this angle, especially one that so thoroughly details the ways in which the dreamer can explore the hidden — and often meaningful — aspects of the dream. I wish this book had been around years ago when I first began my lucid dreaming practice.

Waggoner’s enthusiasm for dreaming is evident on every page. Whether you are an experienced lucid dreamer or new to lucid dreaming, I recommend adding this to your personal library.

33 of 35 people found the following review helpful.
5Just awesome
By Daniel Westman
I’ve read my fair share of books about lucid dreaming and there are certainly better how-to books, but I’m glad that this isn’t another how-to book. No other book on lucid dreaming has fascinated and inspired me as much as this one.

Before I read this book I just saw my lucid dreams as a playground where I could live out my fantasies. Now it’s so much more than that. It feels like I’ve just started out on a great adventure into the unknown.

All the others that gave this book five stars have said it better than me, this really is a great book. This book has earned it’s place in my lucid dreaming library, next to Stephen LaBerge’s books. But if you’re a beginner and want to learn step by step how to have lucid dreams, I recommend that you buy Steven LaBerge’s book Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming instead. If you can afford it, buy both books. They complement each other.

35 of 41 people found the following review helpful.
5Page Turner. Expect a lot more from this author.
By Seeing Eagle
“Lucid Dreaming, Gateway to the Inner Self,” by Robert Waggoner. Robert Waggoner guides you through his own personal learning experiences of over 30 years, as a trained psychologist, blazing a self-energizing path to enlightenment and advanced state of awareness. There is at least one additional chapter I would like to see Waggoner add to this easy-to-read page turner, the impact of the internet. The advent of the internet enables the most esoteric dream images and experiences to now be field-tested against our collective reality and knowledge base by the individual, as soon as one wakes up. The result of field-testing through the internet leads quickly to the transformational profound discovery that factual information that exists in our reality is knowable and instantly attainable merely through seeking it. The mass experience of internet confirmation of places, ideas, theories, and concepts holds the potential to quickly alter a species into an entire new level of consciousness and understanding.

Expect much more from Robert Waggoner’s generous and giving spirit in which he writes. His easy to read writing style focuses on reader understanding. I’m hooked.

All my physicists and scientists friends are encouraged to read his Chapter 12 with an open mind. Page 153, Waggoner quotes a passage from Jane Roberts in her 1977 book, ” The `Unknown’ Reality ” as Waggoner discusses discoveries made by scientists from many fields through their focused lucid dream explorations in which they set about to find scientific answers to frontier level questions of science through the lucid dream experience:

The trouble is that many in the sciences do not comprehend that there is an inner reality. It is not only as valid as the exterior one, but it is the origin for it. It is the world that offers you answers, solutions, and would reveal many of the blueprints that exist behind the world of your experience.

The true art of dreaming is a science long forgotten by your world. Such an art, pursued, trains the mind in a new kind of consciousness – one that is equally at home in either existence, well-grounded and secure in each. Almost anyone can become a satisfied and productive amateur in this art-science; but its true fulfillment takes years of training, a strong sense of purpose, and a dedication – as does any true vocation.

To some extent, a natural talent is a prerequisite for such a true dream-art scientist. A sense of daring, exploration, independence, and spontaneity is required. Such a work is a joy. There are some such people who are quite unrecognized by your societies, because the particular gifts involved are given zero priority. But the talent still exists…

A practitioner of this ancient art learns first of all how to become conscious in normal terms, while in the sleep state…

The true scientists understands that he must probe the interior and not the exterior universe; he will comprehend that he cannot isolate himself for a reality of which he is necessarily a part, and that to do so presents at best a distorted picture. In quite true terms, your dreams and the trees outside of your windows have a common denominator: they both spring from the withinness of consciousness.”

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