Tuesday February 7th, a new six-week dream group series

Playwright Henry Miller had this to say about working with his dreams:

The realization that there was a pattern to my life, one which made sense, came about in a curious way. Shortly after moving into the Villa Seurat I had begun to record my dreams. And not only the dreams but the associations which the act of transcribing them induced. Doing this over a period of months, I suddenly began to see, “To suddenly see,” as Saroyan says somewhere. A pregnant phrase—to anyone who has had the experience. An expression which has only one meaning: to see with new eyes.

Come learn to see with new eyes, hear with the heart and open the mind by working with your dreams, hearing the dreams of others and learning about the realm of the dreamtime. As for Henry Miller, the patterns of your life and of life itself are magnificently unveiled through dreamwork.

On Tuesdays from 7:00 to 9:00 beginning February 7th a new dream group will be meeting in our cozy cottage living room at 7 Georgia in Weaverville. The cost is $150.

Please let me know as soon as possible if you will be interested to join the group, as space is limited.

Feel free to call me, or visit my website www.tayriaward.com for more information.

Tayria
home office: 828-627-0755
cell and Weaverville office: 828-329-0853

From Dreamways of the Iroquois by Robert Moss:

“Long before the first Europeans set foot on American soil, the Iroquois taught their children that dreams are the single most important source of both practical and spiritual guidance. The first business of the day in an Iroquois village was dream sharing, because it was assumed that dreams were messages from the spirits and the deeper self, and that they might contain guidance for the community as well as the individual.”

“The early Iroquois regarded someone who was not in touch with their dreams as the victim of serious soul-loss.”

“Today, it is popular on the Iroquois reservation for people to supplement their dreams with readings of tarot cards, tea leaves, or shreds of native tobacco bobbing in a simmering saucepan.”

From Listening to the Oracleby Dianne Skafte, Ph.D.:

“Oracles speak from a mysterious source beyond the personal self. We always experience these communications as coming in from elsewhere. One may imagine that oracles issue from a domain of the human psyche, or perhaps they exist independently from us, but their nature will always remain a mystery.”