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Practices

There is a state of mind which is not accessible by thinking. It seems to require a participation with something. Something physical.
— Lynda Barry, What It Is

Practices

 
 

DREAM WRITING

Dream Writing brings dream and writing together. Dream writing invites the writer into the sensory landscape of the dream where surprising perspectives emerge.  We’re the dreamer and we’re also the car, the tiger, the table or the floor.  Creativity flows.

 

JOURNALING

Julia Cameron, in The Artist’s Way, says that three pages every morning changes us.  It did for me.  

The practice of journaling is about creating an intimate space to talk to Soul.

It becomes a ritual space to connect to your Soul-self.  Connecting hand to page, you begin to hear your own voice.  You become honest in unexpected ways.  On page three, what you didn’t know comes through your pen.   

Journaling helps to track dreams, Tarotpy and sense into your own patterns and releases. We learn about what helps us, what guides us, what allows us permission to give expression to our deepest desires. 

Also, you think you’ll remember the details.  Not so much, particularly years later.   

 

EMBODIED IMAGINATION

This beautiful method of dreamwork developed by Robert Bosnak, honors the dream as a living presence. The dreamer re-enters the sensory environment of the dream, discovering the magical, mystical nature of alive dream.