Can’t Remember Your Dreams? Try Journaling

Ever since I was a little girl, I’ve believed in the power of dreams. My mother always told me amazing stories about her prophetic dreams. She would tell me of events she foresaw with strange accuracy, such as my grandmother’s funeral or premonitions she would get about whether to drive a particular route home on a given day.

Inspired by her and my own curiosity about the realms of dreams, I have spent many years keeping dream journals. I’ve discovered more about myself or the meaning of a situation from re-reading dream entries weeks, months, even years later. I’ve also discovered that I’ve had a fair amount of my own prophetic dreams over the years, too, though I didn’t realize it at the time.

I love dream journaling for how it enriches my life, both sleeping and waking. I find that the more I write about my dream life, the more dreams I am able to remember, and the more I am able to dream lucidly. In my waking life, I find that revisiting what I write inspires my creative self and feeds me with artistic energy.

I’ve discovered a few surefire ways to recapture that thread between sleeping and waking to keep the dreams alive:

  • Upon waking, lie still for a moment and try to recall any dreams before moving or opening eyes. Quick movement can disturb a dream memory.
  • If a dream feels just out of grasp after waking, roll over to a previous position and try going back into a dream.
  • Keep a notebook and pen by the bed in case of waking in the middle of the night with a dream memory (or sleepwriting!), or being able to record it before sitting or standing.
  • Write any impression, no matter how small: jumping in air … lightbulbs … a general sense of blue.
  • Try to title dreams to capture a general impression: The Seismologist Roundtable, Hanging Beads in the House, Not George Clooney.
  • When writing dreams, write in first person, present tense: I’m traveling with a few girlfriends and we stop at a roadside gourmet coffee house.
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01.18.2009
Loretta Caskey
I have been recently introduced to dream reading. A friend of mine gave me this dream reader: "The Fourth Sapphire Tablet of Malkhytzedek Tuthamenhaten-dreams". I love this book and can't live without it. Trully my life have changed. Loretta
I also dream things that really come true. I seldom write them down because they are so life like the memory is unforgetable. I have told the persons involved of the dreams and they were able to confirm its authenticity. My maternal grandmother also had dreams that came true. I consider it a God given ability. I have written severl stories about my dreams and actual citings of spirits. I enjoyed your story. I think the documenting of dreams is a way to enhance your abilities and some times/day help others who are non-believers, for there are many.
Charmain, there have been times when I've woken to find a scribbled message on my notepad--a word or a phrase that I wrote in my sleep. Sometimes it's triggered the memory of a dream. Other times it's felt like my dream self worked very hard to get a message to my waking self.
Could you tell me more about sleep writing ?
03.27.2007
Suha Araj
I have recently started writing my dreams in a journal I keep by my bed. It somehow completes the night to write things down. I have been writing the details for the dream as well as how I felt afterwards and what I thought it meant. Keeping the journal has been very eye-opening.
It feels good to write.

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