In dreams, everyone is creative, intuitive, and guided by dimensions that are not usually perceivable while awake. In this book, Dr. Michael Lennox helps you explore your innate psychic abilities and teaches you how to develop them through dreamwork regardless of your skill level. With examples from both his personal and his clients' dream experiences, Dr. Lennox introduces you to the different types of dreams, including precognitive, lucid, shared, and visitation dreams. You will learn to foretell the future, receive messages from people who have passed away, and encounter all sorts of out-of-body experiences. In addition to past lives, night terrors, and multidimensional dreams, this book covers how to create a bedtime ritual to ensure good sleep and effective dreamwork.
This is an engaging read sharing many, many examples and stories with readers. It has an anthology vibe, as many of the chapters feature dozens of stories, and many stories are direct quotes from Lennox’s clients. I loved this method of story telling.
I do wish that there were more actual exercises though. It was more of a passive book than an active one; a couple of points of advice, but no exercises or rituals.
"Life is a mystery, and one of the most beautiful ways to live an extraordinary life is to have some relationship with this mystery"
"To contemplate our dreams is to contemplate our divinity."
I am so excited to have read this book. Thank you so much to Michael and all the submissions that led to this book. I am so excited to have some language to describe some of the dreams I have had in my life, visitations, demons, sleep paralysis etc.
I'm grateful to have read this at 26. I can't wait to keep learning from my dreams. Thank you Michael!
It was okay. Overall, the book isn't that well written. It doesn't make it impossible to read, but I think that the author could've benefitted from another editing run-through before publishing. As a skeptic, I admit that I was already not going to interact with this book with as much of an open mind as other readers might have. Still, I found the dreams shared interesting, and I think that there may be some truth to the idea that dreams can be intuitive. I feel like the book focused too much on anecdotes, and the author's interpretations of dreams can seem like a reach at some points.
Overall, I didn't particularly like this book, but it wasn't a bad read. I especially appreciated the parts about meditation, which can be helpful.
It’s just a collection of stories from other people, I was expecting some studies or exercises. The level of writing is also really simple and it was so difficult to remained engaged with the text.