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Waking up and becoming lucid inside of a dream is a second order
change, where you literally snap out of a hypnotic trance in which
you were identified with being a separate, contracted self, or ego,
cut off and disconnected from the rest of the dreamscape. You have
an expansion of identity; in full-blown lucidity you realize your
identity with not only the entire dream, as it is recognized to
be just your own energy projected outwards, but also with the dreamer
of the dream, what I call the deeper, dreaming Self, which is who
you've now discovered yourself to be. The question I want to investigate
is how you would dream the dream onwards if you became fully lucid?
When I ask some people this, they respond by saying they would
dream that they would lose twenty pounds, or get a million dollars,
or something of that nature. I respond by saying that these are
all dreams of the smaller self, which is the dream that they've
now woken up out of by becoming lucid. I remind them that in becoming
lucid they've discovered their identity with the deeper, dreaming
Self, so the question becomes, how would you imagine this deeper,
dreaming Self wants to dream the dream?
Please try and imagine this as we proceed. You've woken up in the
dream, becoming enlightened, so to speak, but now that you've seen
through the illusion of the separate self, you've realized that
there is no such thing as enlightenment until everybody gets it.
For when you become lucid in a dream, the boundary between yourself
and others dissolves, as you realize the interconnectedness and
nonseparation between yourself and everybody else (all six billion
others) in the dream.
And so many of your fellow dream characters are so asleep, not
recognizing the dreamlike nature of their reality; it is as if they
have fallen under an enchantment. They've become absorbed in the
dream and have become so identified with their roles that they've
forgotten who they are. They are truly suffering a case of mistaken
identity. And they are all just aspects of you. This is the point
where you step into your bodhisattva-nature, as you begin to realize
that to be of service to others is to literally help yourself, as
who are these others but your own true Self?
Once you've become lucid you see that this isn't a dream that you
are just passively watching in a detached way, but one that you
are actively participating in and co-creating with. You realize
that you can consciously step into and co-operate with the dream,
helping it unfold to it's highest, wherever that may be. This isn't
done from the point of view of the separate, egoic self, whose moment
by moment expression is efforting, straining, and striving, continually
strategizing and manipulating the dream so as to fill its imagined
sense of lack. This realization stems from a totally different center
of one's psyche, an all-embracing place of fullness, an experience
totally unimaginable as long as one is identified with any reference
point whatsoever.
Over time, or better yet, when you snap out of the illusion of
time itself, you realize that the boundary between dreaming and
waking dissolves until you recognize that life itself is the dream
that you are waking up in. You begin to have the astonishing realization
that the universe is actually dreaming itself awake through us,
through you and me, and it takes the most awake and visionary among
us to recognize this and help further the momentum of the process
till it builds up a life of its own, which it already has in us.
You become an agent, or representative of this awakening process,
as you've realized your place in the universal dream, offering your
life in service as a conduit for this incarnating deeper, dreaming
Self.
Upon completing this article, he turned on the television only
to hear the words "This is your dream and you deserve to have dreams
come true."
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