dream sharers. There are several options for those interested in creating a format for sharing dreams. In fact, you may have already startedby sharing your dreams informally, regaling your household members at the breakfast or dinner table with tales from the dreamworld, checking in with a friendly co-worker during a midmorning coffee break, or sharing a dream story with your child on the way to school. Social dreamwork can happen at any time, in any place, with any number of people. It's just a matter of your being willing to share, and someone else's being willing to listen.
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Dream Sharing with a Friend
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"I had the wildest dream last night . . ." So often, we turn to a friend or co-worker to recount the tale of a dream adventure. Dreams can be entertaining, puzzling, or disturbing, and it's natural to recount them much as we do our waking experiences. Whether shared informally in this way, or presented with a plan for gaining insight into their meaning, dreams are appealing food for thought and discussion. There are special advantages, however, to setting up a regularly scheduled "dreamtime" with a friend, a time in which each of you has the chance to recount dreams and explore their possible meanings in the company of a committed listener; that is, someone who agrees to support you fully and attentively, without interruption (sometimes called an "active listener'').
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Co-author Phyllis Koch-Sheras has been doing dreamwork with the same friend for more than seventeen years, meeting every other week for a one-on-one session that has netted some wonderful results. Although she does not have professional expertise in dreamwork, Koch-Sheras's dreamwork partner has similar goals and interest in working on dreams. They developed their own format for working together, which is outlined here:
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