Recurring Dreams

If we keep a record of our dreams it will soon become obvious that some of our dream themes, characters or places recur again and again. These recurrences are of various types. A certain theme may have begun in childhood and continued throughout our life – either without change, or as a gradually changing series of dreams. It might be that the feature that recurs is a setting, perhaps a house we visit again and again, but the details differ. Sometimes a series of such dreams begin after or during a particular event or phase of our life, such as puberty or marriage. There are several types of dreams such as recurring body dreams, recurring sex dreams, recurring death, etc. These are all similar in how to deal with them, but you might find other information under – Dream BodyBody – Parts ofBody DreamsSex and DreamsSex and IdentityEnergy, Sex and DreamsSexDreams of Death and BeyondDreaming of DeathThe Archetype of DeathRudolph Steiner’s Philosophy of Life and Death

The theme of the dream can incorporate anxious emotions such as the example below, or any aspect of experience. One woman, an epileptic, reports a dream that is the same in every detail and occurs every night.

In general dreams recur because there are ways the dreamer habitually responds to their internal or external world. Because their attitude or response is unchanging, the dream that reflects it remains the same. It is noticeable in those who explore their dreams using such techniques as described under Practical Ways of Understanding Dreamsprocessing dreams, that recurring themes disappear or change because the attitudes or habitual anxieties that gave rise to them have been met or transformed.

Also we often dream about the same place again and again. It is because we each have an inner life that is real in its own way. We built and revisit such places again and again because we learnt or experienced something connected with it, and so gradually add to it or need to revisit it. See Inner World

Example: A woman wrote to me that she dreamt the same dream from childhood. She was walking past railings in the town she lived in as a child. She always woke in dread and perspiration from this dream. At forty she told her sister about it. The response was, ‘Oh, that’s simple. Don’t you remember that when you were about four we were walking past those railings and we were set on by a bunch of boys. Then I said to them, ‘Don’t hurt us our mother’s dead!’ They left us alone, but you should have seen the look on your face.’ After realising the dread was connected with the threatened loss of her mother, the dream never recurred.

People often dream about a place they knew over a period of years, like a school, college, the house they grew up in or experience things that are marked in their memory. They have recurring dreams about these places because we are all largely created as a personality by the things we experience and remember. It is out of such memories that our dreams are created, and the recur because they have contributed to things we face in the present, for from them we develop attitudes, skills or even negative feelings, all that influence us.

Sometimes people are puzzled by dreams about a country they lived in during their youth and now have lived in a totally different country and environment. In our youth or in the past we have absorbed so much and experienced so much that laid the foundations of our responses and behaviour, so dreams use the place again because there are problems from the past we need to review, or simply because we are always upgrading the past from present experience.

 Example: ‘This dream has recurred over 30 years. There is a railway station, remote in a rural area, a central waiting room with platform going round all sides. On the platform mill hundreds of people, all men I think. They are all ragged, thin, dirty and unshaven. I know I am among them. I looked up at the mountainside and there is a guard watching us. He is cruel looking, oriental in green fatigues. On his peaked cap is a red star. He carries a machine gun. Then I looked at the men around me and I realise they are all me. Each one has my face. I am looking at myself. Then I feel fear and terror.’ Anon.

A recurring environment in a dream where the other factors change is not the same. We use the same words over and over in speech, yet each sentence may be different. The environment or character represents a particular aspect of oneself, but the different events that surround it show it in the changing process of our psychological growth and experience. Where there is no such change, as in the example above, it suggests an area of our mental emotional self is stuck in a habitual feeling state or response.

Some recurring dreams can be ‘stopped’ by simply receiving information about them. One woman dreamt the same dream from childhood. She was walking past railings in the town she lived in as a child. She always woke in dread and perspiration from this dream. At forty she told her sister about it. The response was, ‘Oh, that’s simple. Don’t you remember that when you were about four we were walking past those railings and we were set on by a bunch of boys? Then I said to them, ‘Don’t hurt us our mother’s dead!’ They left us alone, but you should have seen the look on your face.’ After realising the dread was connected with the loss of her mother, the dream never recurred. Another woman who repeatedly dreamt of being in a tight and frightening place, found the dream never returned after she had connected it to being in the womb.

Recurring dreams such as that of the railings, suggest that part of the process underlying dreams is a self regulatory homeostatic one. The dream process tries to present troublesome emotions or situations to the conscious mind of the dreamer to resolve the trauma or difficulty underlying the dream. An obvious example of this is seen in the recurring nightmare of a young woman who felt a piece of cloth touch her face, quoted under nightmares. See: nightmares; processing dreams.

But recurring dreams can arise because there is a need to learn something. Also the growth instinct is incredible powerful one and pushes us through growth, sometimes unwillingly. And if we resist it can cause recurring dreams. Here is an example

Example: A young girl kept coming up to me and placing my hand upon her breast. She was just developing her breasts, and they felt so very beautiful.

Still asleep I asked myself what the dream meant, and saw that the young girl is the divine female that I long for. At present she can only relate to me as a young girl whose breasts I caress, due to the fact that my sexuality is still developing. In other words, I have not yet developed out of my sexual stage of growth. But if I simply allow this stage to go on being experienced, it develops into a new relationship with her. She herself develops or grows as I grow, and this suddenly threw a new light on all my sexual dreams in the past.

recurring body dreams When we have recurring body dreams it can point to a psychological problem, because the body is often used parts of the body to represent such problems. See Body – Parts of to find the psychological meanings.

Problems we have not resolved show up in our dreams first. If the mental problem is not dealt with it may then show as a physical difficulty.

recurring themes If there is an overall activity such as walking, looking, worrying, building something, or trying to escape. Define what the action or theme is and give it a name, such as ‘waiting’ – ‘searching’ – ‘following’.

 Example: Feeling tired – exhausted – just lying drained of energy. I am conscious of people talking, saying I was ill. I thought I was just tired. Then asked what the matter was. I was told it was my heart, ‘dry and hard like a boiled egg’ they said. Found I couldn’t talk. Tried to write, wanted A. to know that I loved him, but the pen kept drying up. Finger and feet began to get cold. An icy coldness slowly spread all over my body. A liquid warmth was then all around me. I thought I was hemorrhaging. A needle was stuck in my left arm and my chest was being cut open – it didn’t hurt. There was a lot of activity. They said I had gone. I was trying desperately to let them know I was still there. Then I was in a bag and sliding off a table. The bag was tied above my head. Then from the confined darkness I was free. There was a brilliant light all around. I could still see the sack with a body still in it far behind me. I was incredibly happy and full of energy. Trish L.

Well, what do you make of the dream? What is suggested by Trish’s hard-boiled heart? What does it imply that Trish is ‘gone’ but still there?

There are several themes here that are worth noting. The first is the theme of tiredness. Then there is the theme surrounding her heart and the inability to express her feelings. Perhaps we can contain those two by saying it is about ‘emotional dryness’ or coldness. Then there is the theme of death/life, neatly packaged together. And something that we might miss is that overall an enormous change is going on. Trish changes from feeling exhausted and dying, to being ‘incredibly happy and full of energy’.

So if such themes recur often it suggests there is something needing attention because you are stuck somewhere. If you feel stuck in your life in some way see Stuck in Life

recurring nightmares Are those that happen again and again, weekly or even more frequently, and have the same basic plot. These are of course the same as ordinary nightmares. Their recurrence however is something to consider.

Dreams appear to present clear indications of what you are facing in your present life. They reveal past experience that through trauma may need to be met in order to live your life more satisfyingly or efficiently. There is neurological evidence that brain cells undergo a learning process during dreaming. In the area of personal growth, inquiry into dreams such as recurring nightmares shows them to be an attempt to bring to consciousness and release past traumas such as abandonment in childhood, involvement in war environments, or car accidents.

Hundreds of ex-soldiers suffer recurring nightmares about battle scenes. The dreams re-presented the original experience, often accompanied by the original body movements made to escape the horror being faced.

 Example: ‘I dream night after night that a cat is gnawing at my throat’ Male from Landscapes of the Night, Coronet Books.

The dreamer had developing cancer of the throat. These physical illness dreams are not as common as the other classes of nightmare.

A young woman told me she had experienced a recurring nightmare of a piece of cloth touching her face. She would scream and scream and wake her family. One night her brother sat with her and made her meet those feelings depicted by the cloth. When she did so she realised it was her grandmother’s funeral shroud. She cried about the loss of her grandmother, felt her feelings about death, and was never troubled again by the nightmare. The techniques given in processing dreams and Being the Person or Thing will help in meeting such feelings.

 

Comments

-Daph 2018-02-23 3:00:13

Hi. I’m currently confused of my dream. I knew i had this last time. I knew I experienced this in my dream. I had dreamt this twice already. Someone borrowed my dog and I said yes. Although I knew that there will still be possibilties that she’ll brought it to the pet’s house where a woman wearing lab gown would do something strange but I allowed her to do that. Later, I felt something so me and my sister decided to go there. I called my friend who brought my dog to that house. She went outside carrying my dog. By the way, my dog’s name’s maxi. Maxi was so weak. I asked her what did they do to him. They were just laughing/smiling. I was just so mad. I remembered I told my sister that we will be buying him his vitamins. An thennnn i don’t know what happened next. The last thing I could recall was that I ran while carrying him, i brought him somewhere down the forest. We hid there while these people (i’m referring to these strange people who hurt pets) were attacked by random people/creatures I don’t know where did they came from. Im just confused of what this dream would like to tell me. Pls help me.

-Sprouts 2017-10-13 15:30:01

Hello, and thank you for opening your heart to my experiences and question:

A few months ago, I dremt I was sitting at a table with someone I just met and a young native american boy of about 12. The little boy told me, “You should study the octopus.” I have always have a fear of open water but this suggestion did not create any negative or positive feeling in me. It felt like a statement of fact, and I knew that this suggestion would lead me forward on my spiritual journey, should I choose to accept it.

In waking life, I have spent time meditating on the octopus, creating octopus art, went to the aquarium, etc.

Since this dream, I have begun having additional dreams about octopuses. Most recently, I dremt I was wearing black pj pants with octopuses all over them and told my mom I was searching for them. However, I’m always searching for them and never actually see them.

It seems clear to me that, I am missing something. I havnt internalized what I am supposed to be learning and, I’m not sure what else to do to connect and integrate octopus energy into my life.

Is there something I can do in my dream life to open this door? What are you thoughts?

With Thanks, Love + Happiness.

    -Tony Crisp 2017-10-15 9:48:42

    Dear Sprouts – Yes, there are so many things you can do to connect/enter your dreams, for dream images are like icons on a computer screen – you have to ‘click’ on your dream images to make them come alive. Thinking about them doesn’t work. You need to open yourself to the magic of them. To make them into the wonderful gateways they are you may have to learn certain skills. A couple of things are http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/acting-on-your-dream/#BeingPerson and http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/acting-on-your-dream/

    Octopus are amazing life forms, but dreams use images of things to represent things about yourself, or activities or feelings going on in you – so, all the people, animals, places you see in your dreams, are simply your own feelings, fears, hopes and wonder projected onto the screen of your sleeping mind as images.

    In dreams, and octopus can represent feeling trapped by the influence of one’s mother; dependence upon mother; one’s own possessiveness or desire to cling to someone in a relationship or to possess them. Hadfield in Dreams and Nightmares says that a baby often seizes upon its mother’s breast with this feeling, so it may represent the desire to posses or devour others. The octopus can also symbolise any unconscious fear which may drag us into its realm of irrational terror, or any influence you fear will engulf you.

    Example: “If she killed the monster or let it kill her she would learn what it meant. If not it would continue to plague her. And plague her it did. That week she suffered octopus nightmares by the dozen. At the next session, a week later, out of the courage of desperation, she faced the octopus. First she tried to kill it, but found that the knife fell out of her hand. She did not really want to kill it. Then she looked directly in its eyes, at the therapist’s suggestion, and saw her own eyes peering out at herself. She finally understood that the octopus was some denied part of herself. Since it no longer seemed so menacing, she decided to let it eat her, and once inside its stomach she realized her own desires to devour and possess others. She had had them all her life but had never been willing to admit it to herself. The significance of the octopus was now clear and it vanished from her fantasies.”

    It might be of interest to look at http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/features-found-on-site/

-Gloria Yearian 2017-06-27 19:02:55

I have recurring dreams about my ex husband who was extremely abusive and was murdered shortly after our divorce. I loved him so much. He just wouldn’t get help. On the other hand he was a hard working and providing man for his family. We were always out and about. I remarried and 27+ years and 2 more children. My husband is not the MAN that I expected. I have battled with leaving him for the last 20+ years. Also I have been talking with a counselor about this and have come to the conclusion. I have to do for myself whatever I need. I had a dream last night that I was going to my house that I lived in with my previous husband and the area was run down and haggard, not nice like it used to be. When I got to the house everything was the way it used to be on the outside but the door was different and the doorknob was shiny and new and when I opened it my ex was sleeping in the bed with a baby bed flush beside and my grandchildren were sleeping in it. He woke up and then I woke up from my dream. There are times I have this feeling while I’m waking that he’s really not dead and I feel like him being dead was just a dream but then I wake up to reality. What is going on here? Can you please help me? This seems to affect my whole day after I have these dreams. Please help!!!

-Dee 2015-12-18 16:16:24

I just had the same dream over and over again last night. The odd part about it is that each time it was a little different. I can not find anything that talks about it changing in the same night. Is there anything you can tell me about it?

    -Anna - Tony's Assistant 2015-12-18 16:42:58

    Dear Dee – Did the environment stay the same? What did change?
    Did you read this part in the entry recurring dreams?
    “A recurring environment in a dream where the other factors change is not the same. We use the same words over and over in speech, yet each sentence may be different. The environment or character represents a particular aspect of oneself, but the different events that surround it show it in the changing process of our psychological growth and experience. Where there is no such change, as in the example above, it suggests an area of our mental emotional self is stuck in a habitual feeling state or response.”
    Sometimes we go through these changes in one dream in one night and this process might take a lot in linear time in our waking life; http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/what-we-need-to-remember-about-us-3/#Seed
    So in one dream (or in dreams) we may be integrating new experience with what we have already gathered and digested. In this way our abilities, such as social skills, are gradually upgraded.
    See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/function-of-dreaming/
    Anna 🙂

-jann 2015-10-20 17:12:47

Iv had this dream since i was a child and it never changed im hiking i cant see who im with but im with some one and we go to look over a clif and i feel a push on my back and i fall and fall it just does not stop then just as i hit the ground i wake up sweaty and panicked heart racing what does it mean

    -Anna - Tony's Assistant 2015-10-24 16:26:16

    Dear Jann – I feel it is important that you explore this dream for yourself.
    You could do that by first gathering information about the symbols in your dream, like:
    http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/cliff/
    and
    http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/fall-fallen-falling-fell/ etc.
    Then you can explore your dream by using Power Dreaming; http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/secrets-power-dreaming/
    Your dreams are a unique area of self-expression. They are a safe area to experiment and experience things in any way you wish. Often we introvert, or take into our dream life, rules and fears that have no place there. For example, while dreaming, you may fall into the sea and be terrified you will drown. But that is impossible because you are only experiencing images of your feelings and thoughts. All you can do is to feel fear. You can easily breathe under water in a dream, or fly, or die and be re-born. So remove such limitations from your inner life by visualising such changes into your dreams when awake. Imagine yourself being what you can in your dreams.
    Anna 🙂

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