Native American Dream Beliefs

The Headings Are:

Dreams as guidance in life

Sacred Fasting

Dream and visions

Healing Experiences

A Failed Initiation

Dream doorway to wider awareness

Tribal Elders

See also The Iroquoin Dream Cult

In considering the beliefs of the Native American peoples, there is not a single belief system. Each tribe developed their own relationship with their inner life as it connected with and contributed to their external environment and needs. In looking at the fairly pure statements of traditional Amerindians in such books as Black Elk Speaks, and Ishi, it is fairly obvious however that dreams were generally considered as a form of reality or information to be highly regarded. Black Elk became a revered medicine man of his tribe through the initiatory process of his dreams and their revelation. His dreams revealed rituals to be performed by the tribe which aided in healing social tensions. But these deeply perceptive social or psychological insights into his own people which arose in his dreams, are only one of many facets the Native American peoples found in their dream life. And of course Black Elk is only one of the men and women of the Native American people who were visionaries.

Dreams as guidance in life

Ishi explains how his dream of what turned out to be the coming of the railroad and the train, was central to his whole life and its tragedy. Nevertheless his dreams warned him of the presaging deadly events for his tribe, and helped him find strength to meet what came about.

As already pointed out, personal initiation was one of the most fundamental of the facets. Individuals, through prayer, fasting and lonely vigils, sought from their dreams, a vision of their destiny as an individual, and an image to aid a personal link with the Spirit pervading all life. With such a dream the young man or woman could feel themselves to be a real part of their group and their environment. But even this cannot be taken as a generalisation. R.F. Benedict reported in The Vision In Plains Culture (American Anthropologist Vol. 24 1922) that among the Arapahoe, the Gros Ventre and in all the Western Plains peoples north and south, puberty fasting for a vision did not occur.

Nevertheless, although details varied as to when and how such dreams were sought, the visionary dream was held as sacred. Sometimes the ways of seeking these visions were very quiet, as when retiring to ones lodge, and sometimes very drastic, when braves suspended themselves from poles on hooks.

Sacred fasting

Fasting has been used as a spiritual discipline by many past cultures, but it has not been really understood. For fasting is not primarily a form of personal cleansing or a self punishment for ones ‘sins’  but a way of learning to become a real human being who is no longer the slave of their animal appetites. For otherwise we are all addicts – addicts to eating too much or too little; addicts to wanting to be important; addicts to sex; addicts to power, money and ego, even to killing or maiming others – and many other things.

“When I fasted for 14 days without any food, just water, I slowly discovered what real quietness was. My energy for turbid emotions, for sexual activity, for thinking and trying to think things out, just faded away. They were all aspects not of my central self or spirit – which I discovered was a quiet awreness – but of my bodys animals desires.” See Ox Herding – Victim – Avoiding Being My Own 

When I fasted I was about ten years old, that being the age at which grandparents generally desire their grandchildren to fast. My parents never bothered me at all about fasting, and I don’t suppose I should have fasted at all if I hadn’t a grandparent at that time.

About the middle of the little bear month, that is, February, my grandmother came to my house to fetch me. I did not know what she wanted of me. After two days she told me why she had come. So the next morning I received very little to eat and drink. At noon I didn’t get anything to eat at all, and at night I only got a bit of bread and water.

There were about seven of us fasting at the same time. All day we would play together, watching each other lest anyone eat during the day. We were to keep this up for ten days. However, at the end of the fifth day I became so hungry that, after my grandmother had gone to sleep, I got up and had a good meal. In the morning, she found out that I had eaten during the night and I had to start all over again. This time I was very careful to keep the fast, for I didn’t want to begin on another ten days.

After a while, they built me a little wigwam. It was standing on four poles and about three to four feet from the ground. This was my sleeping-place. My little wigwam was built quite a distance from the house, under an oak tree. I don’t know whether it was the custom to have the young boy fast under a particular tree or not. I believe the wigwam was built in the most convenient place for the old folks to watch it during the day.

The first morning my grandmother told me not to accept the first one that came, for there are many spirits who will try to deceive you, and if one accepts their blessings he will surely be led on to destruction.

The first four nights I slept very soundly and did not dream of anything. On the fifth night, however, I dreamt that a large bird came to me. It was very beautiful and promised me many things. However, I made up my mind not to accept the gift of the first one who appeared. So I refused, and when it disappeared from view, I saw that it was only a chickadee.

The next morning, when my grandmother came to visit me I told her that a chickadee had appeared in my dream and that it had offered me many things. She assured me that the chickadee had deceived many people who had been led to accept this offering.

Then a few nights passed and I did not dream of anything. On the eighth night, another big bird appeared to me and I determined to accept its gift, for I was tired of waiting and of being confined in my little fasting wigwam. In my dream of this bird, he took me far to the north where everything was covered with ice. There I saw many of the same kind of birds. Some were very old. They offered me long life and immunity from disease. It was quite a different blessing from that which the chickadee had offered, so I accepted. Then the bird who had come after me, brought me to my fasting wigwam again. When he left me, he told me to watch him before he was out of sight. I did so and saw that he was a white loon.

In the morning when my grandmother came to me, I told her of my experience with the white loons and she was very happy about it, for the white loons are supposed to bless very few people. Since then, I have been called White Loon.

Not only did White Loon gain his name from his dream, and therefore his adult identity, and whatever respect gained by it from his family and tribe, but he also gained the image of himself as living into old age and having freedom from disease. These are very precious gifts no matter what period of history we consider, or what ‘tribe’. In a modern city, thousands live without any satisfying sense of connection with, or feeling they are respected by, their ‘tribe’. Many live under constant fear of serious illness or early death, and businesses are built catering to such fears.

The Pueblo Indians

Jung, writing about a meeting with some Pueblo Indians in the USA, explains that their religion rests upon the belief that through their frequent ritual, they help the sun to rise each day. Without their tribal attention to the sun, they are sure the sun will no longer rise. “This idea,” Jung explains, “absurd to us, that a ritual act can magically affect the sun is, upon closer examination, no less irrational but far more familiar to us than might at first be assumed. Our Christian religion – like every other incidentally – is permeated by the idea that special acts or a special kind of action can influence God – for example through certain rites or by prayer, or by a morality pleasing to the divinity.

The point Jung makes overall however is that through their beliefs the Pueblo Indians as a group of people, have an intense peace and satisfaction with their life. This deep peace and inner happiness is seldom shared by more ‘rational’ modern communities. I am not trying to argue for irrationality, but the comparison does, I believe, highlight something that arose from the Amerindian beliefs and use of dreams for guidance and spiritual sustenance. Namely how a belief system, no matter if it is irrational, acts as a psychic immune system against the ‘germs’ of despair, inferiority and meaninglessness.

This pride and sense of belonging that was often a marked feature of such tribal peoples prior to the coming of the white races, illustrates one of the main functions of the dreaming process – the psychological compensation or self-regulatory process – and how it acts on the personality if it is deeply accepted. Because the native peoples of America had such trust in the products of their unconscious in dreams and visions, the compensatory images presented were of great benefit, and fulfilled their task of keeping the balance in the individualised identity. Unfortunately the rational attitudes of the invading nationalities, questioning the power of the dream and vision as they did, offered nothing to take the place of the dream. At least, nothing that produced such an obvious sense of pride and tribal and personal identity.

Something that becomes apparent in looking at dreams such as White Loon’s is that the cultural attitudes and beliefs White Loon was educated in dominate the content of his dreams. The coming of the chickadee in early dreams was an accepted part of the vision fast, and can be found in many other such dreams of people in his culture while fasting. When an Indian became a Christian, through exposure to a different set of cultural ideas, his or her dream content changed radically. Nevertheless, many dreams were of a personal psychological nature also, showing the individual relationships with the culture and their own inner life. Even though White Loon’s dream of the birds is very deeply cultural, it is interesting that birds often have the same sort of significance in modern dreams. It was out of this sort of observation that Jung developed his theory of the archetypes and the collective unconscious.

Dream and visions

Something else that is apparent in comparing the visions experienced by native Americans with those of present day individuals – perhaps those using LSD or experiencing visions due to stress such as illness – is that the native Americans entered their visions with some understanding of what to expect and how to deal with the experience. Our own cultural attitudes frequently put us at odds with our own unconscious processes and visionary upsurge. Many people who are confronted by the opening of the unconscious and the events that follow, believe they are going mad, or that they will be overpowered by forces that are antagonistic to them, and will sweep them to their doom. Neither do many people, trained in modern Western ideals of behaviour, know how to exist in the land of vision. Just as few desert people know how to swim, and would feel fear if dropped into deep water, so the person who falls into an altered state of consciousness from the world of modern materialistic thinking, may feel great fear instead of pleasure and the ability to ‘swim’ in it. Even the many people who ‘interpret’ their dreams, have seldom moved beyond the level of thinking, and know nothing through experience of the deep waters of the unconscious. See: abreaction; active imagination.

Like other primitive cultures, dreams were seen by the Amerindians as having certain marked features that could be gained from them. There could be an initiatory dream such as we have already considered. There could also be dreams telling where to hunt; dreams showing a new ritual giving some sort of power such as warding off illness, or finding a new relationship with everyday life, or attracting a lover; dreams could show the use of a herb for medicine; dreams might be caused by some sort of evil within ones body, or an external evil such as someone wishing you harm or an evil spirit; there could be a shared dream with another person; the dream might be a revelation from someone who was dead and now in the spirit world; or a dream, as in the third example below, could be a map supporting and guiding the dreamer throughout their whole life. Dreams were often considered to be bad or good. If a dream were considered bad something had to be done about it, such as a cleansing or healing ritual.

As an example of an Indians attitudes to dreams, this statement of White Hair, a medicine man, is interesting. “Every dream that takes place is certain to happen. Whenever the evil spirits influence it, it is certain to happen. Whenever we dream a bad dream we get a medicine man to perform sing and say prayers which will banish the spirit.”

The following description by a medicine man explains how he had a dream showing him a new medicine. He says, “I saw a dog that had been shot through the neck and kidneys. I felt sorry for the dog and carried him home and took care of him. I slept with the dog beside me. While there I had a bad dream. The dream changed and the dog became a man. It spoke to me and said, ‘Now I will give you some roots for medicine and show you how to use them. Whenever you see someone who is ill and feel sorry for him, use this medicine and he will be well.’ One of these medicines is good for sore throat.”

The following is a fasting dream/vision recorded by Father Lalemont, a Jesuit priest working among the Indians.

At the age of about sixteen a youth went alone to a place where he fasted for sixteen days. At the end of this time he suddenly heard a voice in the sky saying, “Take care of this man and let him end his fast.” Then he saw an old man of great beauty come down from the sky. The old man came to him, and looking at him kindly said, “Have courage, I will take care of your life. It is a fortunate thing for you to have taken me for your master. None of the demons who haunt these countries will have any power to harm you. One day you will see your own hair as white as mine. You will have four children, the first two and last will be males, and the third will be a girl. After that your wife will hold the relation of a sister to you.” As he finished speaking the old man offered him a raw piece of human flesh to eat. When the boy turned his head away in horror, the old man then offered him a piece of bear’s fat, saying, “Eat this then.” After eating it, the old man disappeared, but came again at crucial periods in the person’s life. At manhood he did have four children as described. After his fourth, “a certain infirmity compelled him to continence” He also lived to old age, thus having white hair, and as the eating of the bear fat symbolised, became a gifted hunter with second sight for finding game. The man himself felt that had he eaten the human flesh in the vision, he would have been a warrior instead of a hunter.

Such dreams as the above, about the use of a herbal root for medicine, show how many herbal treatments, not only among the Amerindians, but from tribal people throughout the world, came about. In fact many tribes attributed the origins of many of their cultural artefacts, their religion, the use of fire, to a specific dream experienced by a past tribal member.

Because of the great many Amerindian tribes, and their different dream beliefs, it is impossible to summarise the views of life, death and human origins arising from their dreams and visions. The following description of the beliefs of the Naskapi Indians is so pure and simple however, that it probably holds in it many of the beliefs of other tribes. It is taken from Man And His Symbols by Carl Jung, published by Aldus Books, 1964. It is from the section on The Process Of Individuation by Marie L. Von Franz.

Healing Experiences

Frank Takes Gun, national president of the Native American Church, says: At fourteen, I first used Father Peyote. This was on the Crow Reservation in Montana, and I was proud to know that my people had a medicine that was God-powerful. Listen to me, peyote does have many amazing powers. I have seen a blind boy regain his sight from taking it. Indians with ailments that hospital doctors couldn’t cure have become healthy again after a peyote prayer meeting. Once a Crow boy was to have his infected leg cut off by reservation doctors. After a peyote ceremony, it grew well again.

This may be considered only exuberant witch-doctor talk, but reliable observers have confirmed that these economically deprived peoples are in better-than average health and that when they do become sick and turn to peyote, the drug seems to help them. Louise Spindler, an anthropologist who worked among the Menomonee tribe, said that the women “peyotists” often kept a can of ground peyote for brewing into tea. They used it in “an informal fashion for such things as childbirth, ear-aches, or for inspiration for beadwork patterns.”

Dr. Peck also made such an observation and, in fact, first became interested in LSD as a result of having seen the effects of peyote: When I went into general practice as a country doctor in Texas, I was very impressed that some of our Latin American patients, despite their poverty and living conditions, were extremely healthy. One day, I asked one of my patients how he stayed so healthy, and he told me that he chewed peyote buttons then, I became interested in these drugs that could promise physical as well as mental health.

A Failed Initiation

It is great to find a personal account of Native American initiation in the modern world. But here it is as reported.

The inward journey does not always turn out this way. The following account (published in Psychiatry, February 1949) of the phantasy of a Chippewa Indian woman of 34 living in Northern Wisconsin, furnishes an interesting comparison. It presents the con­trast of a widely different background, both of personality and environment. It brings in the same characteristic symbolism. And it shows how such an experience can remain unrealised.

‘The third time I went through the Midewiwin (the Chippewa Medicine Dance), I went through because I had a vision that I should do that. We were living out in the woods at that time. Everything was still and quiet there. I was lying on a bed. I got to thinking of things I’d done way back in my younger days. I thought about my relatives and my friends, my parents who were dead and gone. I had no one to call upon except for my old man.

I lay still, and my mind was working all the time. Then I said out loud, so that I could be heard: “What is there that I didn’t do right? Everything that I can remember I thought I did right. What is wrong with me that I have so many visions of different things and different people?” All that summer I had had visions of people and things. I said aloud again, “Maybe the Almighty has mercy on people who see all these visions.

Here, most authentically, is the first stage: the feeling that ‘there is something wrong about us as we naturally stand’. The way of develop­ment now lies open. As William James puts it: ‘The individual, so far as he suffers from his wrongness and criticises it, is to that extent consciously beyond it, and in at least possible touch with something higher, if anything higher exist.’

‘Then I had a vision that I was walking along a narrow trail through the brush-no tall trees. It was a beautiful day. No wind. Plenty of sunshine. I walked along this trail for about an hour until I heard the sound of tinkling bells in the distance. As I came nearer to the sound, I saw four men sitting around something that was round. Above their heads was something across the sky like a rain­bow. One of these men called me his grandchild. He said, “You are supposed to tell the people once in a while when you are in trouble about something you know, something that’s in you. Let them know what’s in you. Don’t pay any attention if people laugh at you. If they do, they’re not throwing jokes at you; they’re throwing jokes at themselves.” One real old white-haired man sat at the far end of that round thing. He pointed to his snow-white hair. He told me that my hair would be just like his some day, if I did what I was told. “We are the ones that asked you to come here, because you are in trouble and don’t know which way to turn. There are four things that I want you to remember-North, East, South and West. On all of these four there sits a man who waits and wants to receive your tobacco. You have a name that you bear, which means a great deal to me. Your name means a whole lot. As you go along, you’ll realise this. Your thinking power is working real hard. It will get you somewhere, if you listen to it.”

Here is the mandala symbolism, as in the vision of the sword and the cross-the four old men sitting around something that is round. The woman is told there is something she knows, something in her, that she should tell people. She is, at the same time, given her orient­ation-four things to remember, North, East, South and West. And she is reminded of her name.

‘Then another real old man     spoke. “It’s been a long time since you thought of your grandfather. I like to receive your tobacco once in a while too. I’m the one that suggested to this man the name that you are called by. Don’t be afraid of me because I’m big. I will tell you what you are supposed to do once in a while. You are supposed to put out food, like meat and corn, and put some tobacco into the fire or on the ground when I go by. You do your own speaking (i.e. to the spirits). Nobody else needs to do it. I am the one who will listen.”

Then I said, “Oh, I’m the one who made a mistake. I never thought that I would ever make such a big mistake. Sometimes when I think of the things I’ve done, I thought I’d done them right; but I didn’t.”‘

As later transpires, the mistake was that the woman gave no tobacco to the people she was named after, i.e. did not adequately realise the name, and consequently did not find her true being-again as in the sword and cross vision.

‘Me said, “Sometimes we see you in this certain kind of dance. You are holding the precious flag (the feather flag held by the person who addresses the spirits). That flag belongs to us. Before you speak or do anything, offer some tobacco. If you have no tobacco, you have to give the price for your tobacco.” That’s just what I do now. If I can’t speak, I have somebody speak for me.

Then I went on from this place along the trail a little ways. I bear and see some more. This man has his finger up in the air. He’s talking. He’s from the South. This is a different man. There’s a thing about four feet high-just a stick sticking in the ground. The man takes the stick and hands it to me. “If you lean on this stick,” he said, “you’ll use two of them later on, as you go along the road, if you do just what I tell you. (To ‘walk with two sticks’ is synonymous with long life). Go to your great adviser (the old priest to whom she is married) and tell him what you have seen.”‘

Mere is good counsel. The chief difficulty in all experience the other side of consciousness is adequate realisation. If the woman tells her ‘great adviser’, there is a better chance of holding the experience and bringing it into life.

“As I was corning back along this trail, I saw a great big snake about this big around (six inches). He raised his head about this high (four feet) from the ground. “Don’t be afraid of me,” he said. “Just go back and tell your adviser what you have seen. If you don’t you won’t be able to walk.” Then he pointed and said, “Look over there.” I looked and saw myself lying flat on my back. Then the snake said, “But if you do what I tell you and tell all that you know, everything will be all right. I want to come into that place (her home). I like that place. It makes no difference how it looks. I’m coming there just the same. I’ll go along now.” Then I walked back home along the trail. That was all. Then I made preparations for going through the Midewiwin.’

This is the encounter with the snake, the embodiment of the unconscious; and again the good counsel for realisation-’ tell your adviser.

‘One afternoon, after I’d made all of my preparations for join­ing the Midewiwin again, I was all alone at home. The door was open about four inches. I looked at the door and saw this person coming in. I felt kind of scared. He was an unexpected visitor. He came in a few feet and said, “I have come at last.” He looked around, turned over on his side and ,made himself at home. Then he spoke to me: “If you take care of me like you should, I will do a lot of things for you, because I am the one that suggested all this to you. When you start, have the prettiest dress you’ve got. I know that I am welcome here. Don’t be afraid of me, because I have come a long ways to see you.” That’s all he said. Then he became a snake and went out.’

This is the ‘bringing home’ of the embodiment of the unconscious, as a separate, uncanny but helpful presence. As the ensuing passage shows, it is the snake that leads to the way.

‘That’s just the way that thing (the hide) looked. I got a snake hide that third time I joined. He (the snake) is the one that put these things into my mind and set me to thinking. I’d wondered what was wrong, because I’d never kept thinking and seeing things like that before. He’s the one that suggested I join the Midewiwin. He also asked me if I wanted a drink. I said, No, not when I entered his house (the Mide lodge).

One of the old men spoke to me when I was in the lodge, the third time I joined. Me said, “When you come tomorrow, dress as nice as you can. That’s how this person wanted you to enter this house.” That’s just what I did. He said, “When you go along this road, do the best you can. Pay attention to what is before you, not what is behind you. When you speak, watch your tongue. After you get through here and know what to do, watch your step for the next two or three years. If you do, he’ll take you along this road just as he suggested. This road never comes to an end. ,pay no attention to the side roads. Pay attention to the road that s in front of you. This is his (the snake’s) road, and this is his home. 1f you take care of yourself, he will do the rest. Your thought be­longs to no one but you. Don’t listen to any kind of wind that’s blowing about you. Just turn the other way and do the best you can. He will know, because you’re the person he intended to enter his house. He has picked a person from our midst who happens to be you. He thought that you were the most wonderful thing that God has created. That’s why he picked your home to be his home; he liked that place. And this little thing that I’ve got in my hand (a tiny blue and white shell) belongs to him.”‘

Here is the deep centre (the equivalent of the jasper stone in the sword and cross vision), the something from the depths which ‘be-longs’ to the snake. The old man continues:

“Whatever you say and do-he knows all about it. Don t think that he doesn’t hear whatever you say, because he does. He has become one of the wonderful members of your household.” Then this old man pointed to my head. “See how your hair is today. As you go along this road, your hair will change to a different colour. This thing (the blue and white shell) will take you along the road that we are going to teach you about.” Then he touched the tip of my ear. “These things you own yourself. They belong to nobody but you. The thing that has happened to you is the most wonderful thing I have ever heard of. I have heard of that happening in olden times. Back in my days I heard that people had such a vision like that. It is the most wonderful thing that can happen to a person on this earth. Don’t be afraid to give what you’ve got; because later on, in years to come, you will get paid for it. As you go along this road, you will be using one stick. Maybe by that time you will have grand-children, and you will be able to tell them about this wonderful thing that has happened to you. As you go along to the end of this road, you will be using two sticks. You will still be walking toward this wonderful house that you have seen. This (the shell) is the one that owns it.” ‘

In the Midewiwin third initiation a shell is supposed to be magic­ally ‘shot’ into the candidate from a snake hide, which is referred to during the ceremony as a ‘gun’. Here is the authentic symbolism of the deep centre: that which takes her along the road; that which owns the wonderful house towards which she is travelling; that which enters into and transforms the personality. The old man concludes:

‘”In maybe five or six years from now, you will be entitled to join again. I hope that I may still be here to see it and know what it’s all about. I’m telling you this again, to impress it on your mind. Don’t regret the things that you did in your younger days. You have made only one mistake. Don’t let it happen again.”

(The interviewer asks: What mistake was that?)

“I didn’t give no tobacco to the people I was named after . . .”

When you join the Midewiwin the third time, they tell you that the snake is wrapped all around the earth. He may scare you, but he doesn’t mean to. When I joined that time, they told me that if I had anything nice that grew from the earth-like black­berries-I should give a feast. But I didn’t do it, because the berries were all gone by then; and three months later I gave my hide away; so there was no use in giving a feast to the snake.’

The end is failure. ‘Three months later I gave my hide away.’ The experience has passed her by. The woman to whom these images came saw them as she might a film. She was aware of the archetypal processes with the natural awareness of the quasi-primitive, but she had not the means of incorporating their value into consciousness. The revelation itself was admirably complete: the mandala; the name; the snake; the deep centre. The way she is shown is, in effect, the reso­lution of the fundamental opposites of consciousness and the uncon­scious. ‘This road never comes to an end. Pay no attention to the side roads. Pay attention to the road that’s in front of you.’ But she could not hold the experience. All the transforming symbols were there but not the necessary realisation. Quoted from Experiment in Depth by P. W. Martin

Dream doorway to wider awareness

The inner centre, the Self, or the guiding spirit of a person “is realised in an exceptionally pure, unspoilt form by the Naskapi Indians, who still exist in the forests of the Labrador peninsula. These simple people are hunters who live in isolated family groups, so far from one another that they have not been able to evolve tribal customs or collective religious beliefs and ceremonies. In his lifelong solitude the Naskapi hunter has to rely on his own inner voices and unconscious revelations; he has no religious teachers who tell him what he should believe, no rituals, festivals or customs to help him along. In his basic view of life the soul of man is simply an ‘Inner companion’ whom, he calls ‘My Friend’ or ‘Mista peo’, meaning ‘Great Man’. Mista peo dwells I the heart and is immortal. In the moment of death, or just before, he leaves the individual, and later reincarnates himself in another being.

Those Naskapi who pay attention to their dreams and who try to find their meaning and test their truth can enter into a greater connection with the Great Man. He favours such people and sends them more and better dreams. Thus the major obligation of an individual Naskapi is to follow the instructions given by his dreams, and then to give permanent form to their contents in art. Lies and dishonesty drive the Great Man away from one’s inner realm, whereas generosity and love of his neighbours and of animals attract him and give him life. Dreams give the Naskapi complete ability to find his way in life, not only in the inner world but also in the outer world of nature. They help him to foretell the weather and give him invaluable guidance in his hunting, upon which his life depends…… Just as the Naskapi have noticed that a person who is receptive to the Great Man gets better and more helpful dreams, we could add that the inborn Great Man becomes more real within the receptive person than in those who neglect him. Such a person also becomes a more complete human being.”

Tribal Elders

Becoming a tribal elder is a natural accompaniment of soul growth: As the individual grows in stature and in grace, bringing the personal will ever more into alignment with the Creators will and developing the talents it had earned in its long journey of earth sojourns, the personal evidence would mount for the promise of being and expression of the Creator.

These elders perceived as a matter  of fact and direct consciousness the redeeming presence  (within each unit-member of the group) of the larger life  to which she or he belonged. This larger life was a reality–  “a Presence to be felt and known”; and whether he or she called it by the name of a Totem-animal, or by the name of a Nature-divinity, or by the name of some gracious human-limbed God or what-not–or even by the great name of  Humanity  itself, it was still in any case the living  incarnate Being by the realization of whose presence the little mortal could be lifted out of exile and error and death and  suffering into splendor and life eternal.

FemaleTribalElder TribalElderMale

 

MariaSabrina

In American Indian education, within each tribe elders, “are repositories of cultural and philosophical knowledge and are the transmitters of such information,” including, “basic beliefs and teachings, encouraging…faith in the Great Spirit, the Creator”. “The fact acknowledged in most Indian societies: Certain individuals, by virtue of qualifications and knowledge, are recognized by the Indian communities as the ultimately qualified reservoirs of aboriginal skills.” The role of elder is featured within and without classrooms, conferences, ceremonies, and homes.

The following definition is from a study of the role in a specific tribe:

A point of reference: those people who have earned the respect of their own community and who are looked upon as elders in their own society…We have misused the role of elder through our ignorance and failure to see that not all elders are spiritualleaders and not all old people are elders

— Roderick Mark (1985)

Here is a persons experience in becoming an elder: “What arose was the sense that I need to move into being an elder in my tribe. I need to become more of a father figure, letting go of personal possession. There was a real sense of loss, of saying goodbye to something that I longed for. But gradually it came, and I felt I could let go of wanting to possess my woman, and being willing to act as a father or a loving friend. This felt like a huge development. It felt like an initiation that I was passing through, and if I could not have let go I would not have passed the initiation. As it happened, I did let go. I did pass the initiation. I did become an elder of my tribe.  So, to tell you what I feel Life spoke to me, I need to stand in the right space, a place you have not met me in yet. In this place I am the elder of my tribe. This is my lodge and I welcome you in. Welcoming is not a courtesy. It is offered to you because of who you are. My name in this place is both Pathfinder and Recorder. They are names given me by the spirit years ago. I listen now as an elder, as a man, and as the spirit of things.”

See: Iroquoian dream cultSpirit-Child: The Aboriginal Experience of Pre-Birth Communication.

Comments

-White Star 2015-07-04 9:39:45

Hello, I am white star I am looking for answeres. My other name is Dream Girl I dream every time I sleep & remember. Sometimes I think it’s a curse that I can’t sleep without a dream & to remember my dreams sometimes it’s more then one dream in one night. It feels so real at times I wake thinking it really happened, I feel as if it’s a curse at times it may sound crazy but to me it’s normal to me. I looked online for answers why this is happening to me for years. No explanation, my dreams get to me sometimes with inappropriate interactions that I can’t control. I do have good dreams too a lot is with traditional 1800 or even farther back with my people. I keep Alotta these to myself sometimes it affects my day of being awake feeling sad or mad etc… I don’t know what to do about these dreams I never met anyone that dreams every night & remembers every dream when they wake up. Is it a curse or a gift? I will never know…

-Valerie 2015-05-26 14:58:13

I had the most phenomenal dream of my life last night. I remember every detail of it, unlike awaking and my memories gone the more i think of what happened in the dream. I would explain but it would take forever! I wonder how it started? I did not oversleep, yet i had a job interview yesterday and the woman asked me if i was of native decent. Unfortunatley, i know from family history i am not… Maybe the family tree is wrong? Maybe this dreAm means i am not ready to settle down with my partner after 4.5 years, and yet he was in my dreams the entire time along with a handsome young native man. The dream was so culturally inspiring, so real, so traditional. The boy and i had a girl alongside our company with my partner most of the time… And we did many things.. The native boy and i fell for eAchother, we did not kiss we only felt eachothers skin. He burned a hummingbird outline into my hand and he had a matching one, he gave me a necklace that was aquamarine And fully beaded.. By hand. Traditional jewlery and explained how traditions are important, we hunted skinned and ate rabbit, we drank by the fire and danced, the whole time it seemed as though he was some handsome tour guide showing my partner and i the old ways of life, the meaningful things in life… The dream carried on forever.. Until i heard the sound of water licking pebbles at the shore… I opened my eyes and saw i was in bed with this young man who was now older and had a distorted face of a bear, at first i thought the bear was the blanket but he explained it was him. We were in a beautiful small and quaint log home … And for the first time we then made love.. And i felt a connection to the natives i have never felt before.. And i awoke.
I am from Vancouver British Columbia born and raised. Maybe this dream is the Indigo child in me connecting me with our people. Whatever the significance i will never forget it 🙂

-Isabel 2015-05-08 13:21:43

Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any ideas about a dream I had last night.

It was a very simple dream and occurred right before I awoke wide awake.

I dreamt of a red bug, it was small and slowly crawling, calmly. I just watched it crawl, I felt no ill feelings as I watched, as usually I detest all creepy crawlers.

What made this dream stand out to me was that as I watched the bug slowly make its way, I heard a man’s voice, very deep, doing a mixture of chanting and singing. Once again, I didn’t feel it was a negative atmosphere and I woke up feeling calm.

Any ideas? Thanks!

    -Anna - Tony's Assistant 2015-05-08 19:32:57

    Dear Isabel – Your dream is almost entirely about giving attention to, being aware of, being confronted by, considering or realising, some aspect of the enormously wide range of experience which human consciousness meets. Therefore, what appears in your dream – the red bug and “The Voice” in you – shows you are giving some thought to, feeling or confronting, what is depicted. During each day we meet, in sensory impressions, in memory, in emotion, in thought, a huge variety of things. It is therefore of great interest what comparatively few subjects our spontaneous dream response chooses to give attention to out of all the range. It seems likely these chosen areas are important to us.
    Generally, the purpose of chanting is to set one’s mind in a particular state for a specific ritual or meditation.
    Singing I see as an expression of a sense of harmony with your inner world.
    In your dream I see both as an expression coming from your “Inner Voice”; the best in you.
    It is important to connect with the best in you, with the mass of unconscious life experience and intuition you hold within, with the shoreless sea of life of which you are a part. It is a meeting with the extra stores of wisdom in yourself. But do not think of the information or insight you gain as if it were an oracle, or prophecy. You are the creator of your life.
    You can also ask for inner help to gain more insight in other things, more information from which to make wise decisions – not to search for something to hand decisions over to.
    See http://dreamhawk.com/inner-life/seeking-inner-guidance/
    In your dream you did become aware – while listening to your Inner Voice – that it is easier to face “what is bugging you” when being in a state of mind without “ill feelings and detesting what you look at”.
    You can only love others when you learn to love all the aspects of self, everything from the lowest to the highest. That sort of love balances itself. You can only love others when you love in that way, because other people are so varied, from sinner to saint, and even the ordinary person is different to you, and so to love them you have to love all the differences in yourself otherwise you cannot love another person completely.
    See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/love-of-self/
    To explore what the red bug symbolises you could use http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/acting-on-your-dream/#BeingPerson and/or http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/practical-techniques-for-understanding-your-dreams/#TalkingAs
    Good Luck!
    Anna 🙂

-Dee 2015-03-30 7:05:20

I am not Native American, but I’m having this recurring dream that I just don’t understand. It’s bothering me and a friend thinks I need to look into dream interpretation. I’m a little afraid of what it means. Can you help? I’m in a large clearing. The sun is high and on my right. The wind is blowing gently. We’re surrounded by forest. From the opposite side of the clearing is a Native American man with beautiful long black hair. He is walking towards me, but I can’t tell if I’m walking towards him or I’m standing still. I’m very attracted to him (I’m married 20+ yrs to my husband and never strayed). As he’s getting closer I notice either a very large dog or a wolf walking along with him, keeping pace with him. As he gets close to me the canine nuzzles my hand. This is the dream I’ve been having for months.

Then last night now it changed a tiny bit. The man smiles at me and tells me to come with him, raises his hand, and I guess he wants me to take his hand. I was shocked this happened I gasped and woke up as if from a nightmare.

Do I need to see a psychiatrist?

    -Anna - Tony's Assistant 2015-05-08 17:14:08

    Dear Dee – I am sorry that I only just saw your interesting, beautiful dream. A Native American is a symbol of natural wisdom; self acceptance and wisdom based on this awareness of ones links with the world and the intuition or wisdom of the irrational or unconscious. It can represent realisation of tribal wisdom and the link with intuitive initiations into stages of growth and entrance into the house of the ancestors.
    He is your guide in the world of dreams; in your unconscious mind and he is inviting you.
    Your reaction is normal, because we all tend to be afraid at first of the unknown.
    See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/what-we-need-to-remember-about-us-3/#Reaction
    Since this patient, gentle man is a part of your inner world, perhaps it will help you to get to know him better?
    So try “Being the man” or “Talking as the man”, for it gives you a chance to explore this dream while you are awake.
    See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/acting-on-your-dream/#BeingPerson and
    http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/practical-techniques-for-understanding-your-dreams/#TalkingAs
    You can use the same approach with the wolf/dog.
    In some dreams the wolf is a protective companion on your life journey – what in the past has been called a spirit guide or totem animal.
    Both the man and the dog/wolf are wonderful companions on your inner journey to explore the “Huge that you are”.
    The inner journey of individuation is not only that of becoming a person, but also expanding the boundaries of what we can allow ourselves to experience as an ego. As we can see from an observation of our dreams, but mostly from an extensive exploration of their feeling content, our ego is conscious of only a small area of experience.
    So try to accept his gentle invitation!
    See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/individuation/
    and
    http://dreamhawk.com/inner-life/the-spiritual-path/
    Good Luck!
    Anna 🙂

-Shiann 2015-02-28 5:46:24

When I was about 12 years old I had a dream that has never been far from my thoughts. I have the Sight, or intuition, Sixth Sense whatever you want to call it. Whatever its name, I still can see spirits and “sense” power/importance of objects or just areas. But no matter how much I have studied this dream I cannot understand it. I dreamed that a man with olive skin held me in his arms. Behind us a great golden light filled the sky and enveloped us. All around us the seemed to vibrate with “rightness” as if that was the exact place and time we were meant to be. Is this a prophetic dream of some sort or just dream about needing to connect with my inner self. Can you please tell me?

-Joseph 2015-02-20 18:10:41

Can you intrepit Dreams

-Teri Taylor 2015-01-24 3:09:36

Last night I dreamed I wwas laying on the ground , Ibelieve in our chicken yard. Chicckens were biting my fingers and toes . I remember being annoyed and kicking them away. Just then 5 Braves came riding up from the creek bottom and told me to get up and come with them . We went to another. Part of my yard by a fence and they built a fire and started singing. I started singing also and then there was a light in the sky , bright and glowing, and from it came down a great Chief, glowing and bright. I remember clinging to him as a child would to its parents legs . He turned and wrapped me in his arms and said , I will be
with you always . Then I woke up .Any thoughts . Cannot stop thinking about it .I am not Native American.This is the second dream I have had of this nature , the other a few weeks ago .

-sara 2015-01-18 13:41:36

Perhaps you could offer some insight….

I have what I call “landmark” dreams. Once I see something from the dream, the dream I once forgot during waking life unlocks and opens up to me and only then I can recall the entire dream. These dreams usually end up sending me a message warning of something…or making sure I’m not surprised when something bad happens. I’m truly thankful for them but wonder how I can keep them unlocked.

However, lately I have have had the inclusion of very tall native American people in my dream. All stoic tall, beautiful and quiet. A week before I became pregnant, I dreampt a young boy with what I think was warrior paint on his face jumped off a ledge into me!!! A old woman with white hair told me he was a warrior then vanished…I’m due any day now worried this little guy is going to tear out of me! I have no idea how to interpret this….

I also dreampt of visiting a beautiful village and entered a lodge where 3 very tall (9foot) native America men were selling beautiful leather goods. I admired the craftmanship but in the back of the lodge were beds. I was so tired in this dream I slept and awoke more rested than I usually do in my normal life. These tall beings surrounded me and handed me a phone….it was horrible news my father passed away while I was so sound asleep. I wept but the beings/men just stared on in silence.

It was just two months later my father in law would pass. I wonder about the connection and why I’d be greeted like this.

Generally in these landmark dreams I fly over the place of where they take place and not met by individuals. I wonder what these new type of dreams with now individuals greeting me signify.

-Christel Scholtz 2014-12-05 4:39:44

I would like to know why I’m continuingly having this Native Indian in my dreams. I am 43 years old and even since middle school I remember him. They are such real dreams that I can smell him. The smell is like leather and dirt mix. Usually I’m at a place that looks like the Grand Canyon. I can even feel and smell the surroundings. He is a little different in each dream. For instance, one time his hand was glowing, another time part of his leg is cut off. Sometimes I’m lost in a cave( that’s when his hand glowed),sometimes he or I or both fall or jump off cliff(grand canyon). His mouth never moves, but sometimes I can hear him talk to me. I don’t mind him, I don’t want him to go away, I just want to know his purpose. Please let me know what you think and how I can connect more to him. I don’t know if I have Indian in my blood. My moms side is all German, my dad’s mom is supposed to have India Indian in her mostly, but my dad doesn’t know who his father was. Although some dreams are scary, but he makes me not feel alone. I could talk for hours about the dreams and the details. Please I would like to know your input. Thank you

-connie 2014-11-29 19:41:18

Most of the time I don’t need to look up my dreams, being part Navajo and part Eskimo I usually just talk to an elder in my family. This website struck my interest this morning. I woke up in tears today from a dream I had last night and i had to find some kind of clarity after not being able to contact anyone.

My dream starts out with me and my husband on a train. We over heard the conductors speaking to eachother about how we were going to crash. The conductors said not to tell anyone because they didn’t want people to panic. so my husband left me behind to search for his friends and family.more and more time passed and he never came back for me and I looked up and it was just seconds before we crash. So I jumped off the train by myself and was walking down the hill when I had spotted my husband and his family. I was heartbroken because my husband had left me to die on that train and he picked his friends over me.I shout for his name and he sees me and walks towards me. We couldn’t get to each other because there was a really tall chain link fence that separated us. I was crying and screaming at him and when I felt hands grab me from behindit was Mexican men. They drug me down by these docs and they beat me and was trying to rape me. I fought with everything I had so they had plunged my head underwater and I couldn’t breathe. When I open my eyes I seen a fish it seemed to be the color of jade but it was not a living fish it was more like an object fish. It started to glow and the sight of it light rays calmed me down and I had woken.

my family has always told me if you dream of fish you are pregnant or someone is pregnant in the family. But I highly doubt that is the case. I would like to know the meaning of my husband leaving me and the meaning of the glowing fish and the men who had beaten me. If you could shed some light on this dream it would be much appreciated. Like I said this website caught my interest because of the intro of the website talks about the train and dreams vision. And when I looked up fish and it said pregnancy I knew that these beliefs were similar to mine and my family.

    -Tony Crisp 2014-11-30 15:19:51

    Connie – It is usually lots of little fish that represent pregnancy, but like a word in a sentence the meaning changes with the nearness of other words or objects.

    I see your dream of the train is about the life choices and direction you took together. But some thing has happened, or your inner awareness has grown or changed, that it felt as if your marriage would fail and that your husband has chosen a different direction. But I think this is a feeling you have because of what is happening within you, and it has caused a lot of pain and feeling of isolation or desertion.

    But for some reason you have opened up to the path of initiation, perhaps without knowing it. This has tested you and you have felt attacked, yet even so you fought. But such attacks are ways of making you feel pain and to lead you to face death – being put under water. These are all marks of initiation, so the fish you saw was a symbol of your first initiation triumph. You saw the light that Creator leaves in all of us, but often it is covered up and so pain has to rip away the false things we believe.

    The fish is a living presence that it out of sight normally – unconscious – and only becomes revealed when we dip under the surface of our normal consciousness.

    I suggest you read http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/questions-2/#Summing and you imagine being the fish as described in http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/acting-on-your-dream/#BeingPerson

    Blessings on your journey.

    Tony

-Nicole 2014-10-12 15:42:46

10-12-14

This morning I dreamed of something that is often recurring in my dreams. Native Americans.

I am not Native American myself, but I believe, perhaps I have some past life connections.
Many of the times in which I had Native American
dreams I have been male, which in real life I am female. But this time in dream, I was female.

But anyways, this is my dream,
I belonged to a Native American tribe , but this time we where along the side of the ocean, since we were facing west, it must have been the west coast.
I had acquaintances there.
One of them, to my surprise was my ex-girlfriend,
And to be honest I do not miss her at all, but along with her was her new boyfriend, who is somewhat of an annoyance to me.
The other girl was a girl I somewhat knew. But she was somewhat of an annoyance, too.
But this is for the other half of the dream.

Originally, I was told my father had been killed in battle, his spine had been visciously ripped out.
It horrified me, and I felt sick.
But it was how war went.
Awhile after, it seemed just a few days perhaps, I was told that my father was alive and well, and coming home. I was quite happy.
A few days after reciving the message I saw him.
Reddish brown bronze skin and long black hair.
He was not wearing pants but something of the sort, I cannot remember. But my eyes went wide and tears spilled, with a smile on my face I ran to him and we embraced eachother, but before I did I said either “papa” or just simply “dad”
He grinned down at me happily.

The second part of the dream, was when that group of people before, along with myself had to climb a mountain because treacherous flooding had occurred. We all formed a team and started climbing.I didn’t eat but the boyfriend did, he ate beautiful birds, which disturbed and disgusted me. Eventually I scolded him for what seemed as ignorance. We kept moving until we found a place to sleep. That morning it was still raining, but we went on anyways. What we were looking for, I am not sure.

-May 2014-10-04 13:01:20

Hello! My cousin just told about her weird dream. She said that in her dream she can’t see anything but black then suddenly she heard someone with a deep manly voice saying “join us” ..can you tell me what is the meaning of this please…

-April 2014-07-20 5:05:27

It was a evening like any other evening when getting ready for bed and taking care of three children. At that point I was exhausted and needed some time and a little space so I went to lay down in my partners (the father of all three of my children) little cabin he built. Right before I fall asleep I look at the clock as I always do and then fell fast asleep. I closed my eyes and almost right away I began to dream…I dreamed that it was dusk (orange in the sky) and almost eerie outside as if right before a storm was going to roll through the hill side. I wasn’t scared. I was content with its beauty. As I am dreaming I sleeping in my dream but I was able to see all around me. Almost if I were to watch myself sleep. As I am watching my self sleep I notice this shadow (it wasn’t dark, it wasn’t cloudy, it was what it was, very strong and what felt like a Shaman’s touch. Or at least what I think a touch from a Shaman would feel like. Spiritual and passionately Native feeling.) sweep over my body (I am laying on my belly with my head turned to the side) and hold me down. I was struggling for to get free and kept trying to call out and couldn’t do either or. So I tried to wake my self up because I knew I was dreaming, which felt like an eternity. I noticed that my German Shepard mix was laying next to me on a bench and knew if I could move my arm to get my hand placed on him to feel him and his heart (love, soul, loyalty, etc.) I would know I was safe. During the dream he never left my side and curled up next to me to watch over me. When my hand finally felt his fur it was like a weight had lifted off my shoulders. But was still paralyzed. Finally after all the help I had been asking for arrived when a friend of mine walked in the door. He didn’t say anything to me, knew I was sleeping and waited for me to acknowledge him as he sat in a chair across the room. When I finally did he asked if I was ok and I said yes (I was still be held down) but still struggling. He then proceeded to walk back out the door and go about his business. Once I was able to wake from my dream I looked at the clock and only minutes (3, 4, 5 minutes maybe) had passed from the time I went to sleep.

I live in far Northern California in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest on the Pit River. A very beautiful place! The river flows and all the sounds of the forest are speaking clearly tonight. (majestic) I moved here almost 8 years ago for a man who eventually became the father of my children. I was born and raised in Texas. My partner was raised here from the time he was around 7 and knows EVERYONE. My partner has many friends whom he calls brother and in return to him. Living in a place where most of our friends are Native and are always over. One of my elders whom came over quit a bit had stories to tell of his people. He would always tell me my home is protected and is safe. Families thrived here and his people loved. “A happy place. Singing. Dancing. Family. Loyalty. But be careful of the people around you. Respect the river and the land it flows through.” He was not the only elder who has clung to my family and has loved me as if I were their own blood. The year before he passed I had him over for his birthday and we celebrated! I still think about the things he said to me to this day.

I want to get back to why I may have had the dream. A couple of days before my dream I was swimming in the river to show a friend a rock you can jump off of into the water. this time I dove and did not jump. as I come back up for air I feel like something is swimming with me. I swim as fast as I can to the bank without showing my feelings and as I am getting out of my water my German Shepard runs up to me in excitement and right before he gets to me he get spooked and runs away from me. I looked behind me to see what it was…nothing. Then it was a day or two later when I had that dream. There is so much more I need to say and need someone who knows the native way and their beliefs. I want to understand…I do not feel I am haunted or even a bad spirit is attached but I do know that something is trying to tell me something. What do I do, what does my dream say??

    -Tony Crisp 2015-01-25 14:08:16

    Dear April – There is so much to learn about the inner life. The Native People are very wise in it, but they still explain it in symbols and you are from Texas with a different inner life that needs educating. See http://dreamhawk.com/inner-life/inner-world/

    As an example of this your feeling of paralysis is explained by native people as the power of a being. But we have found that paralysis happens every time we dream, but we are seldom awake enough to realise what is happening. So please read http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/sleep-paralysis/

    When this happens we often feel that another force or even an evil force ha got hold of us. But it is simply us, our personality that has got near to waking. Also we have to realise that our conscious self is a tiny thing and is not aware of so much that gives us life. Please read – sorry about the many links but there is too much to learn – http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/what-we-need-to-remember-about-us-3/#Important

    There is one more link I would like you to read, which I hope explains why many things are still explained in symbolic language when talking about the inner life of dreams and the spirit. See http://dreamhawk.com/approaches-to-being/questions-2/#Arising

    Tony

-silvija 2014-07-12 10:09:36

Hi, sorry for me english.. but I would like to ask few things..
Very often when I start to fall asleep I have a feeling that someone is dragging me somewhere. I know that I’m dreaming, but usually I get scared and trying to wake up. Few times I saw a shaman woman (sometimes man) in my dreams (I have any relation to American Indians). She/he coughed me and dragged me somewhere I would like to name it parallel reality . It felt like diving trough the layers of time.. I don’t have words to describe this feeling.
Not so long ago I dreamed one girl, who asked me to fallow her to the stairway of the building. As soon I stepped in to the house, someone grabbed me by the armpits and wanted to lift me up. The feeling was so real that I got scared again and woke up.

Any ideas what that could mean? It is very intimidating and sometimes I’m afraid to go to sleep..

Thank you!

-Kendra bigsky 2014-07-08 21:22:33

I asked the creator for a sigma if I was pregnant or not and that night I dreamed that I took 5 tests and they all were positive what dose that mean please tell me

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