7 REASONS TO RECORD
            YOUR DREAMS
        BY
        TOM T. MOORE
            COPYRIGHT 2014
        Back  in 1979, I started to record my dreams each night and morning as I awoke.  About two weeks after I began, I had an  extremely vivid dream of an explosion with awoman and men somehow involved.  My wife and I, at that time, owned an  international, wholesale tour company, and were planning a trip to Manila for a  world congress of travel agents.  We both  decided to delete the Manila portion of the trip and added days to Taiwan and  Hong Kong.  On the first day of the  congress, terrorists blew up a bomb near the front of the stage where we would  normally have sat, injuring ten travel agents.   Later, a woman that worked in the Philippines cultural office in Los  Angeles and four other men were arrested.   Afterwards, I vowed to record my dreams the rest of my life.
        Below are seven reasons why you should record your dreams  each day, one of which I touched on above.
        
          1. Dreams are  messages from our souls.
        
         The dream state is much more  complex than you might imagine.  When  entering that quantum state during dreamtime, most of the time our dreams  appear symbolically.  Some people are  much better at interpreting these symbols than the rest of us.  I found a paperback book titled The Dreamer’s Dictionary by Lady Stearn  Robinson and Tom Corbett, which seemed to interpret my dreams better than other  similar dictionaries.  I’ve probably worn  out six or eight of these paperback dictionaries over the years.  Our souls send us messages couched in these  dream symbols.  They can be warnings of  upcoming challenges, or encouragement when we need it that things are going to  be better soon.
        
        
          2. As  noted above, dreams can be precognitive.
        
        Besides many, many personal precognitive dreams,  I’ve had a number of dreams about upcoming events, usually couched in dream  symbology.  As an example, in 1985 I  dreamed about a delta-shaped aircraft crashing a week or so before Delta  Airlines Flight 191 crashed at the Dallas-Ft. Worth International Airport.  Shortly before the Space Shuttle Challenger  exploded on takeoff in 1986, I dreamed of being in a glass capsule high above  the earth and then suddenly beneath the ocean.   Before 911, I had three dreams: The first one was a biplane  crashing—symbolizing two wings.  The  second one was a passenger jet crashing to the east of Chicago; and the third  one was a tornado (my symbol that something bad is going to occur) going across  an office building with a line of people sitting in invisible chairs following  behind.
        By the same token,  we will also have many pleasant precognitive dreams, like money on the way, a  great change of location, or the love of our life who will soon appear.
        
          3. The practice  of recording dreams will help in meditation.
        
         It will help you to receive images  in an altered Alpha state.  I never  really thought I would be able to communicate with “spirit” as I’m able to do  now with my own Guardian Angel (GA) that I call Theo, and with Gaia, the soul  of the earth.  But I look back at the  thousands of times I have recorded my dreams when I was in that same Alpha  state before becoming fully awake, and I realize that staying in that “zone” is  great practice for what I call my “active” meditations.  It helps us to recognize images as they  appear during meditation, or to receive “thought packets” as my GA Theo calls  them. 
        
          4. We see whom  it is that we assist in the dream state.
        
         Theo tells me that when we are in  the dream state, we travel all over the universe to help other beings in  solving their problems, since we solve more problems in one day on Earth than  many beings encounter in one universal year.   There is a group of whole souls, that we call “dream angels,” who  receive these requests and assign one of us to solve the problem during our  dreamtime.  Only rarely do we notice that  the beings we serve do not appear human.   This is done so that we don’t become frightened by their  appearance.  Most of the time we appear  during their dreams to help them solve a problem.
        
          5. Ability to  view other parallel lives.
        
        Have you ever remembered a dream  where it seemed to be the present day, but perhaps you were in some different  situation?  When we sold our tour  business in the early eighties we started an international film and TV program  distribution business.  Nevertheless, for  years I would continue to have dreams of running tours and making those  business decisions.  Theo explains that  there are twelve parallel lives going on for each of our lives on Earth.  He calls them “time lines,” with the 12  divided into four frequencies and then into twos.  We’re on Time Line 6—a middle frequency, tied  closely with Time Line 5.  He told me on  Time Lines 4 and 5 I’m still in the tour business.  It was the same for Time Lines 1 and 2, but I  died of congestive heart failure.  On the  upper time lines, I became a science fiction writer right out of college,  eventually writing esoteric books.   Consequently, this all goes to illustrate that we can explore those  other parallel lives during our dreamtime.
        
          6. Ability to  view our past and future lives.
        
         When I first started recording my  dreams, I had many violent dreams of past battles in history.  Obviously, I was reliving some of these lives  where I was in the Crusades, World War I and many other ancient battles.  This went on for about a year, and after that  the dreams became much more “normal,” as I call them.  But I’ve also had dreams of being on space  ships and very futuristic settings.  Theo  tells me that my next life on Earth will be as a pilot on board one of 17 Earth  starships in the 3400 era.  Remember that we are in a special  space-time continuum, and all of our lives on Earth are occurring at the same  time as time is an illusion to us.
        If you have a disturbing dream,  you can say (or whisper) out loud, “I request a Most Benevolent Outcome for  anything this dream pertains to in my physical life, thank you!”  I’ve even requested these MBOs, as I call  them, in the middle of dreams.  It will  mitigate and lessen the challenge that perhaps is coming your way.
        In many of these dreams, I’ve  found that we mix past, present and future when we are in a quantum state.  This is done to give us information—those  messages from our souls that I previously mentioned.  Even now, there are still dreams that I have  no idea what they mean, but I write them down anyway; and I try and go back periodically  and read them as the mere physical act of recording the dreams helps us  understand the messages on a subconscious level.
        
          7. Recording  our dreams prepares us for an easy transition.            
        
         The astral body at death, I’ve been told, is the  same as the one you use during your travels across the universe.  You are just no longer tethered.  Recording your dreams helps you to feel  comfortable and not frightened when you transition.
        Let’s now look at the practical steps to remembering your  dreams.  I’ve heard many people say they  don’t dream, but that’s not true—everyone does.   It’s just that they don’t make it a priority to remember the  dreams.  First, go to your local variety  store or supermarket and buy a notebook containing the largest number of  pages.  You are making a physical  commitment.  Next, use a penlight with  brightness large enough to see in a dark room and a pen with ink dark enough to  see on a dimly lit page.
        Each night before bed, open the notebook and write the next  day’s date and what town or city you’re in—again, reinforcing your desire  physically to remember your dreams.  I  normally set my penlight on top of the dream dictionary.  At this time, say out loud, “I wish to  remember my dreams tonight,” or even better, “I request a Most Benevolent  Outcome to remember my dreams tonight, thank you!”  This lets all your guides know you are  serious about remembering your dreams.
        Then, if you awaken in the middle of the night, get up and  take your notebook, light and dictionary into another room so you won’t disturb  your bedmate, and write the dream, or dreams, down.  Use the dictionary to look up the  symbols.  You might only remember an  image, or a couple of words—that’s fine, write it down.  I still have nights where I don’t recall any  dreams, but the most dreams I remember writing down in one night were  nine.  Some dreams will be very detailed  and you’ll write a whole page about them, yet others, just a sentence.
        Recording our dreams each night will open up a whole new  understanding of the amazing world we encounter each night in our dreamtime.
         
        About the Author:
            Tom T. Moore is the author of the three The Gentle Way books and a frequent radio guest.  If you would like to learn more about  requesting benevolent outcomes and living The Gentle Way, visit his website at www.thegentlewaybook.com.
         
         
        About the Author:    Tom T. Moore is a speaker and author of The Gentle Way:  A Self-Help Guide For Those Who Believe In   Angels and The Gentle Way II: The Story Continues (ISBN #s 1-891824-60-0, 978-1-891824-80-7, Light   Technology). He’s also the CEO of an international film   distribution company. For more information visit www.TheGentleWayBook.com.