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ARE MOST DREAMS A DECEPTION... OR NOT?



We all know the saying: “I make a wish and pray.”


But what if that's not true? What if we still dream after waking up – just on a different level of consciousness?




The web of consciousness

According to ancient wisdom and modern insights, we live in a holographic universe, an energetic network in which everything is connected to everything and everyone. Everything is consciousness in motion. This motion is driven by thoughts, feelings, and beliefs. You can find more on this in an earlier blog post on this channel.


On average, we have about 6,000 thoughts per day, and with nearly eight billion people on Earth, that's billions of waves of intentions, emotions, and energies constantly shaping and reshaping the web of reality. (480,000,000,000,000 thoughts per day, extrapolated to each year, that's 175,200,000,000,000,000.)

Every thought creates a vibration—a possibility, a potential. And each of these potentials exists as a parallel reality.


Multiple realities

Some people experience moments when they think, “I know this already.” This feeling of déjà vu could be a glimpse into a parallel version of yourself, another path in the web of possibilities.


I can give you a practical example: I can take away pain with my hands, for example. Now you might think, “Ah, Jesus is back.” No, of course not. What I do is help you reach a higher vibration or reality where there is no pain. The heart chakra and its associated electromagnetic field generate a higher vibration through focus and attention, nothing more and nothing less. When we return to this reality, the pain is unfortunately back, albeit weaker than before. Logically speaking, however, these are two different realities.


During sleep, our brain activity drops to lower frequencies – from beta and alpha to delta, deep sleep. In this phase, we take a brief rest from our everyday world. Our consciousness glides through more subtle planes of reality – those of dreams. There, in this inner space, feelings, memories, and experiences weave together into stories. Sometimes logical, often not. But they always reflect something of ourselves: our fears, desires, beliefs, or unconscious processes.


The language of a dream

A dream is rarely just a random remnant of the day. It often weaves the past, present, and future into a single symbolic narrative. What is suppressed in everyday life is given the opportunity to express itself in dreams. That is why a dream can be both confusing and healing—a message from the subconscious to the conscious mind.


As early humans believed, dreams have a divine origin, a meaning. Freud tried to explain them scientifically, but even he admitted that they open a gateway to the depths of the psyche.


Waking up in an other dream


What if dying were like waking up from a dream? What if death is not the end, but merely the beginning of a new experience of consciousness? Perhaps the moment of death is no different from the moment when you wake up from a dream and think, “What was that all about?” You laugh briefly, realize that it was just an experience—and move on.

In this sense, consciousness is eternal. The body is merely the vessel in which it moves.


The dream called life

Perhaps dreams are not deceptive, but reality itself is a dream—a collective dream that we experience together, shaped by our thoughts, feelings, and intentions. When you realize this, something fundamental changes. You see that every thought has an impact. Every emotion weaves itself into the fabric of reality. And that at any moment, you can slip into a different version of yourself—healthier, more loving, freer.


We don't dream to escape reality. We dream to understand it.


“The dream you live also lives you.”


All is one, you are the dreamer and the dream.

 
 
 

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