Dreams How to enrich your waking life through your dreams
The hidden wisdom of your dreams reveals unconscious patterns for healing, self-discovery, and inner transformation.
Neuroscientific perspectives on the brain during sleep, the function of dreaming and other insights from scientific sleep research.

Chapter 1
Understanding Sleep (phases and stages)

Chapter 2
Parasomnias, Remebering & Forgetting

Chapter 3
Insights from Dream Research

Chapter 4
Sleep Hygiene: Better Night’s Rest
Dream cultures from around the world and cross cultural perspectives and insights from Hinduism, Tibetan Buddhism, Celtic mythology, Native American and Australian Aboriginal traditions.

Chapter 1
Hinduism & Tibetan Buddhism

Chapter 2
Native American & Australian Aboriginal

Chapter 3
Celtic Tradition
The way of the Oneironaut - awake in the dream: what is it, what do people do in lucid dreams and how can you learn it?

Chapter 1
Awakening in Dreams: Contextualizing the Field

Chapter 2
Exploring Potential: Healing, Creativity & Practical Benefits

Chapter 3
Oneirogens, Technology, Messaging & Potential Risks

Chapter 4
Bridging the Gap: Communication Between Wakefulness and Sleep

Chapter 5
Lucid Dreaming Induction Practice
On average, we spend one third of our lives asleep. That’s roughly 26 years of our time on earth. Of that time, we spend around 6.5 years of our life potentially dreaming.
Dreaming is a universal experience found across time and space in humanity and other species. Historically however, dreams have been of great interest to many different cultures. Importance has been attributed to them that ranges from messages from the divine and predictions of the future, to key insights for the individual and/or society at large.
How might our lives change if we engaged more consciously with our dreams? Today, the way in which dreams are commonly viewed largely falls into two spheres: those who are convinced dreams are valuable, insightful, wonderful, and interesting, and those who consider dreams something akin to a mere random firing of neurons - left-over daytime memory residue. Something many people are able to agree on is that dreams have the ability to point us to elements of our life that might require more attention from an emotional point of view: fears, desires, and - essentially - truth.
By combining experience and knowledge from an interdisciplinary oral history approach, hands-on experience in a laboratory setting, historical analysis and philosophical reflection - as well as a life-long personal dream practice - Marieke McKenna will guide you into a deeper understanding of the spectrum of dream consciousness.