Lucid Dreaming
Lucid dreaming is consciously perceiving and recognizing that one is in a dream while one is sleeping, and having control over the "dreamscape" or the faux-reality dream world within a dream. It is defined as simply realizing that one is dreaming while in a dream.
Not only is dreaming associated with learning and memory, but it also appears to play a somewhat broader role in the processing of information in the nervous system, including coping with traumatic experiences and emotional adjustment.
Learn in the articles that follow
how lucid dreaming can be the potential for wild adventure and fantasy fulfillment,
lucid dreaming may well be the basis of the most effective therapy for nightmares.
use lucid dreaming to rehearse for success in waking life
many lucid dreamers report using dreams for problem solving and artistic inspiration
patients have often used soothing and positive imagery to alleviate pain
The Sixth Sense
Everyone is aware of their five basic senses, seeing, feeling, smelling, hearing and tasting. What everyone is not so well aware of is their sixth sense, that sense of otherworldliness, a connection to something more and greater than their physical senses are able to perceive.
This is the entrance to the world of the unseen encounter, the unheard communication, the unfelt touch of someone from the spiritual world trying to make a connection with someone in the physical body.
Find how to develop your sixth sense in the articles that follow.
The Unconscious You
The unconscious mind (or subconscious) is the aspect of the mind of which we are not directly conscious or aware.
The unconscious is arguably not the most intuitive idea, so why bother with it? What's the evidence? What might the unconscious explain?
Our own motivation tends to be something we are not consciously aware of, a good example of which is: Falling in love.
Learn more about the unconscious you and get answers to what the unconscious has in store for you.
Dream Interpretation
Dream interpetation is a part of psychoanalysis that intends to look beneath the manifest content of a dream, i.e., what we perceive in the dream, to the latent content of a dream, i.e., the meaning of the dream and the reason we dreamt it.
Why we dream the most before being born; why the amount of dreaming decreases at old age; why mammals born prematurely, such as rats, dream more than mature animals.
Why depressed people dream more.
Why we may have evolved to dream.
Get answers to the above and learn how to interpret your dreams.