November 25, 2024

Dreamwork offers a path of evolution for humankind

I have been a professional dreamworker for over 20 years and have never heard a dream that didn’t excite me.  Dream work is always a path of personal growth and will stimulate creativity for all members of the dream group. At the Love and Power Institute our dream groups use a method of group work sometimes called the “if it were my dream” approach.  Participants are taught to preface all commentary with this statement and to keep  the observations in the first person. Doing so allows each person to take responsibility for their own observation based on their experience and does not require any special training or knowledge.  The benefit of this approach gives permission to every group member to fully participate in interpreting the dream thus benefitting as much as the dreamer themselves from the emerging meanings.  Each member thus has an opportunity to personally reflect on the themes presented by each dream in light of their own lived experience. For example, in a recent dream group, a dreamer –let’s call her Sarah–presented a dream that had the image of a fish: “I am with a few friends, and I am helping the local people dress the fish they caught for eating.  Apparently, I am quite knowledgeable on the subject and they come to me for advice,” she recounted. Using the preface “if this were my dream,” group members offered comments based in their personal reaction to the fish image.  One said the fish brought to mind  the idea that a fish does not know it is living in water, just as we rarely notice that we breathe air.  Another said the use of the expression, “dress the fish” reinforced the dream’s statement that the dreamer was “knowledgeable, as though she were a chef or an experienced cook, especially of fish.   Another said he associated the image of fish with Jesus’ loaves and fishes miracle in the sermon on the mount and thus the dream might be about communal nurturance.  Sarah herself confessed that she had been recently troubled by doubting her competence in her work and the dream was telling her that she need not be so troubled  and so on.  This work, which may take up an hour or more on this one dream, brings three gifts to the group participants:  First, every member of the group, whether they contributed directly to the work or not, has an opportunity to reflect on how the comments are true in their case which can lead to individual “ah-hahs.” This can be life changing.  Second, the work itself stimulates creativity which a musician once likened to the experience of a group jam session.  And third, the experience itself generates community among the participants which is deepened the longer the group stays together to work their dreams. There are many, and I am among them, who believe that dreams are not just the royal road to the unconscious, as Freud said, but is also the path to the evolution of humankind.  We are, after all, part of nature and share an instinctual base as members of the same species.  At the end of work on a dream I will ask the group members to apply the wisdom of the dream to the whole of humankind as though the dream carries a message for us all.  The image of the fish, therefore, may be telling us and all of humankind that we need to nurture all of humanity in order to survive.

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How can we develop a new emotional manhood in a men’s group?

Introduction The men’s consciousness-raising movement, also known as the “Men’s Liberation” movement, emerged primarily in the 1970s alongside the second wave of feminism, when men (like me in 1972) began forming groups to discuss and analyze the societal pressures and expectations associated with traditional masculinity, inspired by feminist critiques of gender roles. Men began sharing personal experiences, which was quite novel at that time, and tried to understand how societal expectations impacted their lives, similar to the consciousness-raising groups of feminist women at the time.  The few hundred men I’ve guided and shared self-reflection and paths of personal development have progressed in self-awareness and changing gender roles. But our emotional dimensions remained in the background until 2019, when my Love and Power Institute cofounder, Marsha Hudson, and I led a weekend workshop on vulnerable emotions. Since then I’ve led a small zoom men’s group with a steady focus on the vulnerable emotions-shame, distress/anguish, fear and their frequent consequence, joy. And now we’re beginning a systematic project of improving our emotional intelligence. Why and How would we expand our emotional versatility as men? First let’s consider “why.” The major motive for “why” is that we need to help save the world we inhabit from us. Us includes both men and women. For men have spent much of their time for millennia making war against other animal predators, then other tribes of humans, and also with and against other animals and plants that we’ve eaten and exploited as well as natural resources we have weaponized to subdue and exploit each other and the rest of the planet. Now the planet and every species on it may go extinct except ants, cockroaches and some germs and microbes that can survive global climate catastrophes. Many more men than before need to make love not war and get better at it. And many more women than before need to raise less babies and devote more nurture to nature to rectify the balance of populations between us and zillions of other species. In order to adjust our roles and goals we all need to expand our awareness of the emotions that have guided our actions from within, whether we knew it or not. Now on to How We’re expanding men’s emotional intelligence by starting with the traditional men’s group practices of self-reflection, discussion of issues and exploring the aspects of normal masculine actions and attitudes that women have discussed and then researched. To this we’ll add confidential sharing in pairs to explore what has helped and harmed our relations with those that matter to us. We’ll also begin a deep exploration of one specific emotion through short readings, experiential exercises and private journal writing for two weeks at a time. Thus we’ll actually create a hybrid of the Love-and-Power-Institute’s Emotional Versatility Training course and the best of what a 10-week men’s consciousness group can offer. After getting to know a little about each other, we’ll spend a session delving into the first emotion, interest, curiosity, excitement, with its benefits and challenges. This emotion is so important that Darwin and all his followers through the last 150 years, including the brains behind Inside Out 1 & 2, have never noticed it. Yet interest/excitement powers human freedom and all of our population expansions and our discoveries, creations and achievements, both valuable and problematic, and it keeps on adding more innovations and new perspectives to our experience. Among the most precious gifts of interest is our curiosity that can make studying all the other emotions fascinating, even for the ugliest and scariest, like shame, anger, fear, distress/sorrow and contempt. Being interested rewards us so we can learn from difficult emotions and get more comfortable with each one as a force both for and against us in our lives.  Our 10 men’s group sessions will give us two weeks for each emotion. We will begin by exploring an emotion’s dimensions with its benefits and challenges and how we have reacted and experienced it in our lives. After a week of paying attention to that emotion we’ll share what we’ve learned with each other and use these discussions to deepen our trust and community with each other. Our Men’s Groups guarantee each person safety, confidentiality and equal participation. Expanding emotional versatility can lead to many other gains in personality. We’ll build closer friendships and loosen the shell of inner guardedness that keeps many of us from benefitting from sharing what’s important in our lives. When we understand our emotions, we can explore what helps and hurts us and practice repairing damaged and threatened relationships. For example, there are many fascinating pair-relations between emotions, such as interest and shame. For when we’re interested enough in a person to call or text them on our cell phone and all we get is an answering device or no response at all, we may feel awkward, a mild form of  shame, and start second-guessing whether the person likes us or not. We may stay uncomfortable or just switch our attention to something else. A different form of shame is “hurt feelings” that may actually warn us that a damaged personal connection needs some work. But if a supportive  men’s group is interested enough in understanding what happened to role-play the scene with the person involved, they might take notice of small moments of interest, disappointment, depression and irritation. and come to respect each of them. By slowing down this real-life experience the group could benefit from examining all four of these emotional moments or more in sequence with interest and respect. Then they could experiment with different feelings and ways to act towards the other person to begin the work of mending this relationship. Everyone involved could then consider and discuss similar approaches to their own comparable situations. Our men’s group experience and enhanced emotional intelligence will  bring brighter colored experience and wisdom into our lives. This communal practice can also lead to longer lasting men’s groups and train men in new habits that promote more lasting,

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