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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Spirituality of Dreaming: Unlocking the Wisdom of Our Sleeping Selves (edizione 2023)di Kelly Bulkeley (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaThe Spirituality of Dreaming: Unlocking the Wisdom of Our Sleeping Selves di Kelly Bulkeley
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. This book, the spirituality of dreaming is great for anyone starting on the journey of diving into dream meaning. I enjoyed reading, about this topic. I found the book informative , without being bogged down by too much science and fact. My favorite part was the excerpt of MLK describing his dream. This book is eye opening , would recommend to a friend who was interested in the topic.Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. I have erratically kept a dream journal for more than forty years but The Soirituality of Dreaming may make me more consistent. This is a psychologist’s take on using your dreams for spiritual development. It’s not heavy on interpretation which causes some dream guides to be little more than fortune-telling. It suggests thinking about your dreams as a opportunity for growth.Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. This was a good primer on dreams, especially relating to their deeper meanings in our lives. "The Spirituality of Dreaming" doesn't delve into any single area of sleep science too deeply, making it a better choice for readers who are new to the topic. I loved the inclusion of Tricia Hersey's concept of "rest as resistance" and found myself inspired to read a few other books mentioned in this text. While it was a little more dense and slow to get through than I had hoped, and had a little less on dream interpretation than expected, there is some good content to be had here, as long as the reader is willing to wade through a wide breadth. Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. The Spirituality of Dreaming by Kelly Bulkeley is divided into three parts: Practices, Realms and Aspirations. There is an introduction at the beginning of the book. The introduction is fairly long and the author thoroughly explains why they wrote the book, what they have learned about dreams through the years and what you can hope to learn through the book.The author is a psychologist of religion interpreting dreams and he talks about Joseph in the Bible interpreting dreams in the introduction. I was interested in Lucid dreaming and he talks about that. It is an interesting book for those who are interested in learning more about dreaming as a whole. I have read some other dream books and this one reads differently and i found it interesting. I want to keep a dream journal by my bed and study my dreams more after reading this book. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
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"What if our dreams could offer spiritual insight for personal growth and social transformation? Leading dream expert Kelly Bulkeley brings us time-honored methods to stimulate our innate dreaming capacity, including the latest research on dreaming and strategies from seasoned, vivid dreamers"-- Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
Già recensito in anteprima su LibraryThingIl libro di Kelly Bulkeley The Spirituality of Dreaming: Unlocking the Wisdom of Our Sleeping Selves è stato disponibile in LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Discussioni correntiNessuno
Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)154.6Philosophy and Psychology Psychology Subconsciousness In SleepVotoMedia:
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Kelly Bulkeley is a dream and philosophy of religion researcher who believes dreaming and attention to our dreams can be a spiritual practice. I should mention at the outset that the “spiritual” here is not necessarily connected with a particular religious tradition but rather to the “spiritual” aspect of our lives. That said, the author does reference dream accounts from the Bible (Joseph, Jacob, and Samuel) as well as other religious texts as well as numerous patients and other contemporary persons. He contends that attention to our dreams connects our conscious and subconscious lives, allowing us to live with greater self and social awareness.
He explores how we sleep. Surprisingly, in many societies, it is together with others rather than alone. He also notes our society’s aversion to sleep and proposes the idea of sleep as a form of resistance to our “always on” society. He discusses the neurophysiology of dreaming and the four categories into which many dreams fall: aggressive, sexual, gravitational and mystic and the metaphorical character of dreams that helps in our understanding. He explores dream sharing including the dream-sharing groups he facilitates. He also offers some cautions about sharing dreams and an alternative to imposed interpretations. He suggests if we do nothing more than to begin to attend to and reflect upon our dreams, we will find our dreams, our sleep, and ourselves changing.
The second part of the book describes some of the work Bulkeley and others are engaged in in developing analytic tools to study dream accounts collected in the Sleep and Dreams Database (SDDb), an open access digital archive. In successive chapters, he considers dream content relating to animals and nature, gods and other spiritual beings, and dreams of the dying and those visited in dreams by the recently deceased. He notes how many dreams of the dying have journey themes and the comfort this affords those who are dying.
The third part explores some cutting edge developments in the field of lucid dreaming. This is a state in which one becomes aware that one is dreaming, and some would introduce training to achieve this ability use brain monitoring to further enhance this experience or even control the dream experience and content. It’s obvious that the author has ethical and mental health concerns of anything beyond self-awareness of lucid dreaming as interrupting healthy sleep cycles or even being potentially manipulative. Instead he urges the idea of dreaming as creative play, using the example of Mary Shelley’s dreams and the creative social commentary that emerged in her Frankenstein. In the end Bulkeley eschews technology for the dream journal and the approach of collecting and subjecting to content analysis the accounts of dreams. He offers an example of one dream contributor, unknown to him, whose dream content over time offered an accurate and insightful account of her life. One can see how tools like the SDDb could enhance dream journaling.
The book’s subtitle may be overstated: “Unlocking the Wisdom of Our Sleeping Selves.” My sense is that we often look for sources of “hidden knowledge.” I wonder if self-awareness or attunement might be a better descriptor–understanding the fears, longings, life-experiences and more that are expressed in our dreams. There may be a kind of “wisdom” in that, to be sure. And this is the value I found in Bulkeley’s book. I fear we are often disconnected from ourselves, and dreams help us find our way to ourselves. His descriptions were helpful of dream sharing groups and the playful approach to our dreams, as well as some warnings of rabbit holes one might fall into (similar to unsupported use of psychoactive drugs by unstable individuals).
Like many, I know I dream, but forget most of these. This book makes me wonder about keeping pen and paper by the bedside. As a Christian, we are told that “old men will dream dreams” (I qualify). I am prompted to wonder if I miss things from God, or even my own subconscious. Bulkeley’s book has at least made me curious.
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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book for review from the publisher through LibraryThing’s Early Reviewers Program. ( )