Dream Work
Sarah’s Dream Practice
In these times of alternating collapse and invention, the Dreamtime is calling each one of us to pay closer attention.
“We have always worked with dreams: our ancestors knew how to make meaningful connections with their dream time, and that memory is in our DNA. This is a place of regenerative creativity that is fed by the waking life and then again by dream life, each serving the other endlessly. In dreamtime the world never ends and destruction becomes new growth. It expresses outside limitation and allows us to imagine a different expression of life here and now. It is a world accessible to all through simple practice and respect. What if the Dreamtime needs us right now to bring forward the new dream, something other than what our present experience is? Before there is objective experience there is a dream, an idea, a non-physical component that precedes. No dreamer is like another, nor are dreams the same, so it takes all of us and our dreams to materialize together to create a world that sustains our grandchildren’s grandchildren. Our Western Dream has reached a precarious place and does not support all the forms of life there are now, so Dreamtime is calling us into her terrain and inviting us to reconnect and return to a reciprocal relationship.”
Dreams have played an intricate part of Sarah’s life since childhood; she developed a more defined practice in the late ‘80s. She has worked alongside indigenous dreamers as well as in Jungian circles and with Druid dreamers.
In these times of alternating collapse and invention, the Dreamtime is calling each one of us to pay closer attention.
“We have always worked with dreams: our ancestors knew how to make meaningful connections with their dream time, and that memory is in our DNA.