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Q:
What is a dream?
A: A dream is an event transpiring in that world
belonging to the mind when the objective senses have withdrawn
into rest or oblivion.
Then the spiritual man is living alone in the
future or ahead of objective life and consequently lives man's
future first, developing conditions in a way that enables
waking man to shape his actions by warnings, so as to make
life a perfect existence.
Q:
What relationship is sustained between the average man and
his dreams?
A: A dream to the average or sensual person,
bears the same relation to his objective life that it maintained
in the case of the ideal dreamer, but it means pleasures,
sufferings and advancements on a lower or material plane.
Q:
Then why is man not always able to correctly interpret his
dreams?
A: Just as words fail sometimes to express ideas,
so dreams fail sometimes in their mind pictures to portray
coming events.
Q:
If they relate to the future, why is it we so often dream
of the past?
A: When a person dreams of past events, those
events are warnings of evil or good; sometimes they are stamped
so indelibly upon the subjective mind that the least tendency
of the waking mind to the past throws these pictures in relief
on the dream consciousness.
Q:
Why is it that present environments often influence our dreams?
A: Because the future of man is usually affected
by the present, so if he mars the present by wilful wrongs,
or makes it bright by right living it will necessarily have
influence on his dreams, as they are forecastings of the future.
Q:
What is an apparition?
A: It is the subjective mind stored with the
wisdom gained from futurity, and in its strenuous efforts
to warn its present habitation-- the corporal body--of dangers
just ahead, takes on the shape of a dear one as the most effective
method of imparting this knowledge.
Q:
How does subjectivity deal with time?
A: There is no past and future to subjectivity.
It is all one living present.
Q:
If that is so, why can't you tell us accurately of our future
as you do of our past?
A: Because events are like a procession; they
pass a few at a time and cast a shadow on subjective minds,
and those which have passed before the waking mind are felt
by other minds also and necessarily make a more lasting impression
on the subjective mind.
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