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"This is the third time dreaming of giving birth. I'm not pregnant, and I don't have kids, what does this mean?"

Questioner: Thuli Masilela
Answered by: William Samuel Lee Jr
July 30, 2021, 4:21:28 PM

Dream interpretation is complicated, I’m not going to lie. I’m a channeler, not an interpreter of dreams, but I can give you some insight as to what dreams are.

Dreams, contrary to popular belief, have a reality all to themselves and maintain an independent existence even when you are not consciously perceiving them during your waking consciousness. Your dream realities exist within a separate nonphysical universe that you are conscious of within an altered state while asleep. This inner universe is just as real, and just as valid as your own.

Dreams are not something that the brain merely creates during sleep, but evidence of dream activity can be found there. Dreams are experienced when your waking consciousness (outer ego, intellect, personality) goes offline, and consciousness switches its focus from corporeal reality to inner reality. A portion of consciousness does remain with the physical body, but in a limited capacity.

Now, let’s dive a little deeper.

Dream interpretation can be complicated because you are switching between modes of perception. You are also switching between differing kinds of senses. The subconscious exists between your inner ego and your outer ego, in basic terms.

In channeling the last paragraph, the word “between” was highlighted as needing explanation. It should be understood that there are no hard lines “between” elements of each personality and that all terms—like inner, outer, subconscious, and conscious—are gradations of each other, blending, merging, and complementing one another. In many cases, these elements complement each other not by existing parallel to one another, but by existing opposite one another, similar to your color wheel, or, color theory.

Now, back to our regularly scheduled programming. Lol. The subconscious can also be looked at as a transit center among things—an access point between nonphysical and physical reality constructs—a Grand Central Station, if you will.

When inner consciousness explores different parts of the subconscious, it explores action as such, and therefore an inner ego is present as well. Anytime identity or self separates itself from action, it creates an ego. The ego is created from specific ways you, as a nonphysical personality, use to comprehend action as existing apart from it.

When you shift consciousness during your sleep state, you disavow physical perception in favor of nonphysical perception. The dream universe is close in proximity to your own “physical” universe and, therefore, accessible with relative ease. As your inner ego gets closer to the dream universe, it automatically starts to create a pseudo-image for that reality.

This pseudo-image is influenced by your waking conscious thoughts, desires, and day-to-day activities. In this dream reality, you meet other aspects of yourself—alternate or past lives or versions of yourself—as well as other personalities, both living and “dead.”

In your waking conscious state, you perceive time as being linear and maintained by physical objects and their subsequent movements, even down to the atomic level. In your dreaming conscious state, you perceive time as being psychological and attached to thought, creation, intensity, and emotion.

William’s hand is getting tired Boo-Hoo typing on his iPhone 13 mini! 🤭

Dreams are stored within the subconscious department of your overall personality. Think of icebergs: the top little half is waking consciousness; the bottom half is your subconscious. Get it? Good. When you wake up from the sleep state, or when your outer ego goes online, it creates a vortex—a vacuum—pulling in the dream emotions with the greatest intensity.

Side note: Emotions are some of the most easily translatable energies between dimensions of creation. Meaning, you can hold a loving emotion in the waking conscious state and take that same personal emotion—cut, copy, and paste it into an afterlife dimension—and that love will be understood as love and reciprocated as such. This applies to all forms of consciousness.

So, when you wake up, you notice you have memory of conscious experiences so powerful or profound that you now hold fragments at the waking conscious state.

Your ego, out of necessity, has to put them in context. The problem is, their native context is nonphysical, so they’re considered “not real.” Ego places a bias on these experiences but must also compartmentalize them to be understood by the waking conscious personality, which is the part of your personality to go online—even after the ego, speaking in linear terms.

You are decoding fragments through conscious dream interpretation.

To explore the dream universe, you should work with lucid dreaming methods or hypnosis. An alteration of consciousness is necessary to explore that reality, obviously. But more so, this will allow you the ability to create enough intensity to bring that knowledge into your waking conscious state.

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