Unlocking the Dream Landscape: Understanding the Nature of Dreams and Reality

The text hints at the intriguing relationship between space and time, asserting that they are not fixed or uniform. “Space itself accelerates in ways that you do not understand. Any point in space is also a point in what you think of as time, a doorway that you have not learned to open.” This points to the interconnectedness and fluidity of space-time.

Futuristic Japanese landscape with Mount Fuji and spacecraft.

My perspective on the Space-Time Continuum

This excerpt delves deeply into the nature of dreams, intertwining them with the concept of reality. It challenges the conventional understanding of space-time relationships, proposing that dreams offer a broader perspective beyond our waking life. The text suggests that dreams, often dismissed as random or meaningless, actually hold the potential for creative solutions and insights that may not be immediately apparent in our daily experiences. It invites us to reconsider the boundaries of reality and the possibilities that lie within the dream landscape.

Fantasy landscape with pink trees and mystical glowing portal.

Space-Time Continuum, a Seth session

(9:15.) The earth-tuned consciousness must deal within the space-time context, for only inside this framework can it clearly perceive events. In the dream state consciousness ignores space-time relationships to a large degree, and yet it is still firmly based upon the body’s corporeal mechanism. Dreams then are physically experienced.

You perceive yourself running, talking, eating, in quite physical activities — except that they are not performed by the body that lies on the bed.

Woman jogging through vibrant cherry blossom park.

[… 10 paragraphs …]

In waking life you perceive only certain portions of events that fall within your space-time continuum. In dreams you may have a greater glimpse. You may for example see in the past, present and future, objects that in your time will take up any given space. Often such a dream will be considered meaningless because at your “fact level,” past, present and future objects cannot appear at once in the same space.

(Very intently:) The space is not the same, or identical, in any case. It only appears to be so to you.

Space itself accelerates in ways that you do not understand. You are not tuned into those frequencies. Any point in space is also a point in what you think of as time, a doorway that you have not learned to open.

Cosmic-themed eye with galaxy colors and planets reflected.

[… 4 paragraphs …]

Your dreams are private, as your waking life is, and yet there is a mass waking experience and a mass dreaming experience in which each individual finds his or her own place, and accepts or rejects events. In your terms, the race at any given “time” simultaneously works out problems in the dream state, and those solutions are then physically materialized.

Because there is more freedom from time and space in the dream state, there is greater overall perspective; many solutions that may appear poor in the short range — as they are physically activated — will in the longer range be seen as highly creative.

[… 17 paragraphs …]

I said probabilities were realized (in the 653rd session in Chapter Fourteen) … and she is suddenly open to her (imagined) events as actualities.

Person gazing at celestial golden fantasy portal.

Because you are space-time oriented, her realizations, accepted momentarily as physical reality, cause gaps in what you think of as normal experience.

The Nature of Personal Reality, Session 671, June 21, 1973

All images are artificial generated by Dirk Bosman and licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC 4.0

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