Bashar: Channeled by Darryl Anka From "Our Motto" 1-12-87 "DREAMING" Bashar: Pleasant dreams to you, by the way. Questioner: I don't dream too well. B: Oh, yes, you do. Q: I'm not aware of it. I cannot remember my dreams, I've wondered about that, too. B: Oh, all right, thank you, thank you. Two ideas -- one, obviously, as many of you know, dream reality can, in your terms, be suppressed, because of things you fear to look at. But also, look at it from a positive point of view, many times when you begin to blend your physical reality and your dream reality...and understand they are really extensions of the same one reality...then you do not create as much of a difference between the two realms. When there isn't as much of a difference between the two realms, there's nothing to wake up from. Q: Thank you, very much. B: You are still dreaming, right now. Q: Yes. B: Literally, all of you are dreaming, right now. Q: Right. B: So, begin to relax about the idea of knowing that you are blending the two realms into one. The only reason you would create, what you typically call a dream, anyway, is because, if you believe the physical reality and the dream reality are two completely different things that have nothing to do with each other, the only way to bridge the gap you have created, and create any sense of continuity between the physical and non-physical realm is to create a symbolic memory you call a dream. " Oh yes, I know I was doing something while I was asleep, I remember it as the dream." Now, many times the symbols in your dreams can be literal, but very often they are not, because there aren't as many symbols in physical reality to represent the things in non-physical reality that you are doing when your body is asleep. So, your physical mind, your mentality, will do the best it can when you wake up back into physical reality. It will say, "Well, all right, now here's the experience you had as a non-physical being while you were asleep, and I only have a few symbols in which I can represent this experience, because it is so unlike physical reality. And so, well, this dream, I'm sorry to say," your consciousness says, "may not seem to make much sense, but it's the best I can do, because that's all I have to work with, to represent what you did when you were non-physical." So, very often the dreams that do not seem to make the most sense at all, are actually most representative of the truest non-physical experiences you have had, very, very far removed from your physical life. You are all very busy in your dreams, you are all doing real things, and you are existing and interacting and communicating on very real non-physical levels. Many times you are even laying out some of the things you will be doing the next day or so, in your physical reality. You don't necessarily want to know you have done that, because you want the benefit of the discovery, the spontaneous discovery of having not known that you laid certain things out, to experience it as if for the first time. After you go through the experience you say, "All right, it's all right now to remember that you actually dreamed this all out first, before you physically did it." And when you allow yourself that memory, what's it called? Deja vu. Q: Very good. B: So, understand that you are very active, if there is any reason for you to remember, allow yourself to relax, to know that you will remember what you need to, in the way you need to. You see, some individuals do not remember their dreams pictorially, many individuals remember their dreams kinetically. Which means, in the things they do during the day of their lives that they are active, they actually play out the dream they have without even consciously being aware of it. So you remember it, but sometimes it is remembered in your body consciousness rather than in your, quote/unquote, non-physical, self-awareness. Do you understand? Q: Yes, thank you. That was a question I dared not ask. B: Thank you very much. Q: But I felt it was true. Thank you very much.