http://prelude.PSY.UMontreal.CA/dreams_foundation/
D.R.E.A.M.S. Foundation
Richard Catlett Wilkerson (RCW): Craig, you seem to be involved in just about
every aspect of dreaming from the high technology of cyberspace and the lucidity
dream-mask development to the natural ecologies of dream focused
canoeing/outdoors trips to the establishment of research foundations. Is there a
central thread in all this, or are you more like a dolphin who just pops up
where there seems to be some action happening?
The central thread, if there is one, is following my dreams - both the
nighttime ones and the daily life ones - and there may not be any difference -
the waking effect of which has been to follow my bliss, like Joseph Campbell
would say. Early in life, I latched onto the idea from author Richard Bach that
nobody was going to make an adventure out of my life unless I did it myself, so
I might as well get to it. I never looked back. My interest is in truth, and
I've explored wherever I thought it might be found - from high technology to
people to the wilderness. My variety of interests has also been a central theme
throughout my life, and I feel very grateful that I have natural ability in many
different areas. It is my belief that the goal of the technology and
consciousness revolutions now taking place is basically ecological. That is to
say that, our dreams, increasing awareness, and all our technological tools are
here for us to learn to live more in harmony with the natural environment, which
of course includes other people, and ultimately for us to re-integrate our
natural or what you might call instinctive knowing in a conscious way.
(RCW): What got you interested in dreaming in the first place?
Well, I would say that dreaming got me interested in itself. I was going to a
French university in Quebec City, swimming on a swim team over 20 hours a week,
doing a B.Sc. in Physics and Electrical Engineering when all of a sudden, Wham!
During Christmas break, I started remembering 8-10 dreams a morning. Being the
scientist I was, I was intrigued enough to record them, just to see what might
happen. I also happened to pick up Richard Bach's newly published book
"Bridge Across Forever" in which he and his new wife did something
akin to lucid dreaming. I thought this was a fun idea and decided to try with
the girl I was seeing at the time. Without ever having heard of Stephen LaBerge,
and hence without knowing that he was pioneering it at the same time, I
spontaneously used the MILD technique (which at the time I called setting off
"memory bombs"), and had a lucid experience the first night I tried,
much to my utter amazement and shock at the time. The rest of that year was a
very powerful inner awakening with numerous dream and spiritual experiences. I
had no idea what the heck was going on, but it was fascinating, so I went with
it. The best way I can explain what happened is that I went so deep into the
academic/intellectual way of being that, just like going through the little
circle inside either half of the Chinese yin yang symbol, I swung right into the
other side and was guided (or forced is what it more felt like at the time) to
explore the whole dream/intuitive side of life. Fortunately, since then I've
understood much better what happened and have integrated these two polarities to
a much greater extent, so that this may explain my interests in the opposite yet
complimentary realms of science and spirit. All in all, dreams chose me to
discover them.
(RCW): How did you get involved with the development of the lucid
dream technology?
In the Spring of that year at University, I fell upon LaBerge's newly
published first book, "Lucid Dreaming", and was excited to find that
other people were learning about this too. I would say that LaBerge's scientific
approach was probably very timely for me too, because I as very quickly becoming
disillusioned with the education in science that I was going through since there
wasn't even the slightest talk of any of the experiences that I was going
through, except for maybe a passing reference to Freud or Jung. I had quite a
number of lucid experiences that summer, and have probably clocked over 1000
lucid dreams since that time. I became a member of the newly formed Lucidity
Institute, and stayed a member for quite some time. I remember phoning them once
to see if LaBerge was doing any research on automated lucid state recognition
using EEG signals, which I wanted to do as my thesis. At the time, whoever
answered the phone told me that he wasn't (though I much later found out that he
was - I guess the time for us to meet wasn't yet ripe). I ended up doing my
thesis on computerized recognition of epileptic seizures (which is quite closely
related). A couple years, later, I had finally let my Lucidity Institute
membership expire, yet by interesting coincidence, I'd done more than three
newsletter research experiments and someone at the Institute (Jennifer Dole -
the same one I'd spoken to when I first phoned) spontaneously decided that
anyone who'd done three experiments or more was entitled to a free subscription,
so I continued receiving the NightLight newsletter. It was in the Spring issue
of that year that I saw a job offered at Lucidity Institute for office help. I
was interested enough and applied, hoping that some of my engineering and lucid
dreaming skills might also find a home there. The rest is history, and I moved
from Montreal to work at Lucidity Institute and at Stanford with LaBerge. The
timing was impeccable too, because the Institute was struggling financially and
had just finished designing the DreamLink, a cheap DreamLight - flashing lights
on a timer without any smarts. Well, it seemed like my life experience had been
designed to bring me exactly to that place and time, and I designed the
NovaDreamer, a smart, cheaper lucid dream biofeedback device. I had started
leading dream workshops before I moved, and now continued alongside LaBerge. It
was a time of tremendous challenge and growth for me, since although I was in a
very exciting position, using almost all of my abilities alongside a brilliant
man such as LaBerge, working with him proved very difficult at times.
(RCW): Do you use the Lucid Dreaming technology yourself?
I must say that even though I designed the NovaDreamer and had a part in the
conception of its add-on peripherals, I don't support the device, nor do I
really encourage anyone to use it. In the year that I designed it, I learned a
lot, and one of the things that I learned from my experience in using, giving
workshops with and providing customer service and support for this new
technology was that, for the most part, it wasn't making that much difference
for most people after the first few weeks, and if anything, it was disempowering
people by having them transfer their own innate ability to successfully have
lucid dreams onto a technological device which then soon stopped helping, if it
even had in the first place. I know that most of the DreamLights, DreamLinks,
and NovaDreamers out there are sitting unused in drawers along with many
people's reduced motivation and faith in having lucid dreams. Sadly, in a way,
the technology is like the lucid dream microwave oven, and by the nature of the
way it's marketed and also due to the quick-fix thinking in our culture, it ends
up doing a disservice to lucid dreaming rather than helping it. In my times of
deep personal questioning about its effectiveness, I incubated a dream, asking
what overall effect it was having out there in the world at large. The dream was
simple and to the point. In it, a dear friend and wise, shaman woman that I knew
simply left the room - her name (in waking life) is Joy. After that, though it
was a great personal challenge for many reasons, I left LaBerge and the Lucidity
Institute because I no longer agreed with important aspects of the framework and
thinking there. I do see the devices as being useful in some regards to some
people, especially as research aids
in lab or home lab settings with the computer interface connected.
(RCW): Is there a "Next Step" in lucid dream technology?
The next step would be one that plays a much more tutorial role, and also one
that empowers the user to a much larger extent by offering a rentable, training
device, that comes along with an appropriate training program. It's feedback
would also be more inclusive of the waking aspects of the users' life. My
general feeling is that people are on the average better off learning various
principles and techniques from a good teacher or even a book and having their
skills and awareness develop naturally and "organically", rather than
purchasing a device when it comes to expanding consciousness such as with lucid
dreaming. However, I have seen and experienced various technological methods,
some aspects of which look very intriguing and promising.
(RCW): Many people are still quite suspicious that lucid dreaming is just
another exercise in the kind of willful egoic muscling that has brought our
planet to the brink of destruction. What's your take on all this?
A very good question. In terms of having more lucid awareness, either in
dreams or in life, I am generally for it, though my position has shifted
somewhat since I was first a gung-ho promoter of
as-much-lucidity-as-possible-as-soon-as-possible for everyone. I have learned
through personal experience that there is a healthy time for people to begin to
experiment with consciousness (such as lucid dreaming) and a healthy, organic
rate of learning too - which many people don't recognize. Conscious awareness
brings responsibility - literally, the ability to respond knowingly - so too
much too fast will be far less than the fun that it initially seems to be. The
time to begin and the rate of learning are different for everyone, so it's a
very personal thing. As one grows in awareness, this predisposes change as one's
thinking and hence the framework and waking symbols of the person's life die and
then evolve to form new structures. This is the natural process of creation. The
change, however, is scary to many people, since they do not recognize it as an
evolution - the dying of the old and the birth of the new. The changes that
comes into our lives is generally designed by our larger selves (often in our
dreams), and hence it's guaranteed to lead us directly towards our greatest
fulfillment and by definition, this usually involves facing our fears. Even with
those people who know what's going on, if change comes too fast or too big, it's
like biting off more than we can chew at once. I know.
As for those people who are afraid of "controlling" dreams because
they don't want to meddle with what they consider to be a source of divine or
intuitive knowledge, I would have to say a couple things. First, that such a
perspective stems from fear-based thinking, a fact which I would advise anyone
who follows it to look into. I would also suggest that the same divine source of
dreams also must know what is best for each person, and knowing this has
encouraged many people towards lucid awareness in their dreams, and also, as a
natural by-product, in their lives. It also knows if they're
"controlling" their dreams too much and it will guide them to such a
realization. Second, among other numerous examples of creativity, healing,
problem-solving and useful, practical guidance, lucid dreaming has also helped
many people to resolve recurring nightmare themes along with their related
waking issues once and for all. There is a delicate balance of experience and
understanding to be kept however. Lucid awareness is one thing, and what each
person does with it is quite another. I personally haven't and professionally
don't encourage people to become "control" freaks in their dreams, but
rather suggest that they keep a curious, open approach to the situations that
present themselves. If there is anyone who wants to try out my favorite lucid
dream experiment, which has brought me truly, truly incredible and often very
surprising and fulfilling results, then try this: The next time you go lucid,
say to the dream (or think out loud), something like "Please bring me
whatever experience and/or knowledge that would bring me the greatest
fulfillment right now" (note: sometimes I leave off the "right
now" part). I find this to be about the best balance between guiding and
letting go that I've discovered to date.
(RCW): Dream work seems to have now slipped off the couch and into the
culture at large. Do you foresee a widening gap between clinical and grassroots
dream work?
Generally, I see the opposite. With internet, and all the various books and
viewpoints being offered to the public, I see people in our culture becoming far
more in tune, not only with dreams in general, but with their won (interesting
Freudian finger- slip there, I consciously meant "own") personal power
and best way to work with their dreams. This is an ongoing process and will
likely continue at least over the next few decades, but that is precisely the
mission of the D.R.E.A.M.S. Foundation which I founded here in Canada - to
spread the awareness of what being in touch with one's dreams has to offer, and
to show people how to do it and that there are many great teachers out there,
but that, in the end, they are really their own best teacher, as most dream
workers would agree.
(RCW): Do you have a theoretical stance or bias yourself in approaching
dreams?
I would have to say that I have a number of them. I have grown up with the
Seth philosophy which is a framework for viewing experience in general, and by
extension, dreams. I also would say that a large aspect of my personal stance is
intuitive in that I draw from a tremendous base of insight and experience from
over ten years of focused personal dream work, training in many widely varied
models of thinking from lucid dreaming to yoga and meditation to ecology and the
truths of nature, and from having worked with, trained with or interviewed a
number of who I consider to be the great teachers of our times, including Ram
Dass, Shakti Gawain, and Hal & Sidra Stone, among others. The intellectual
framework which I have personally found to be the most powerful in the last few
years comes from the work of psychologists Hal and Sidra Stone, whose work is a
powerful extension of the Jungian model and Gestalt techniques. I have also
gained much insight into dream symbolism from Philadelphia dream worker James
Villareal, who is not only an incredible master of symbolism, but also now a
personal friend.
(RCW): There hasn't been much done to bring dream interpretation and dream
science together since Harry Hunt's work in the late 1980's. As a matter of
fact, dream science seems to be losing funding in general. Have we reached a
wall or limit in dream science, or do you see new horizons opening up?
"Dream science" per se, is definitely not as up and coming as it
was at the times of the discovery of REM sleep or at the scientific proof of
lucid dreaming. As for it's future, I would say that the science and art of
dreams will likely become more integrated as more scientists work with their
dreams, and as more dream workers realize that the religion of science, which is
basically what it is in our culture, is one of the large present day frameworks
which people trust and through which many people can initially come to
experience more subjective states, as I personally did. Likely, there will be a
few more watershed scientific experiments that grab media and academic attention
to bridge the present gap. Dreams for me, are the most fascinating personal
science there is. There are plenty of principles and laws to be learned, but
nobody can hand them to you gratis, you have to go discover them for yourself.
And how fun and freeing that is!
(RCW): How did the idea for D.R.E.A.M.S. foundation come about?
The summer that I moved to California to begin work at the Lucidity
Institute, another summer student at the Sacre-Coeur sleep and nightmare lab got
inspired enough to create a non-profit foundation on paper, though that's all
that ever happened. I found out about it by chance, a couple years later, after
I had my split with Lucidity Institute, while I was sleeping at the Sacre-Couer
lab a couple years later to record some lucid dreams. It was just another one of
those right-place-and-right-time experiences that I've come to know so well. So
with great support from the lab director, Dr. Tore Nielsen, I took the
Foundation on as my new career, and have been slowly getting it established ever
since. (RCW): Is the D.R.E.A.M.S. foundation planning any activities in
coordination with the Global Dreaming Congress 2000?
We are on the mailing list to be informed of any events that come about, and
are quite interested, though at the moment, nothing is planned. It would be
great to hear from Jeremy Taylor and the committee there if there is one.
(RCW): With all this activity, do you still get a chance to run the rivers?
Most certainly. I'm off for a white-water canoe trip this week-end as a
matter of fact, though it's a private vision quest/fun trip with friends, not a
publicly advertised trip. The lucid paddling adventures (see www-sca.PSY.UMontreal.ca/dreams_foundation/dumoine1.html)
that I've been running for the past few years are offered later in the summer
and anyone interested in having a powerful dream and lucidity training in the
grounded setting of a canoe-camping trip may contact me by e-mail at
lucid@magnet.ca, [as of 07MAR09
info@dreams.ca
]or through the D.R.E.A.M.S. Foundation at 514-488-0347.
(RCW): Can you tell us a little more about this program, how it started, what
its about?
I've always loved the water and was a national level competitive swimmer, and
lifeguard. Over the last seven years, I've guided numerous river and flat-water
varying-length canoe trips at first for a couple other organizations, but four
years ago, I started my own business and have run vision quest adventure trips
during the summer ever since. Early on, I realized I had a lot of different
interests and hence directions going, so this is one of my attempts to integrate
as many different aspects of my life as possible, share my skills and knowledge
with others, and have a great time doing it - and it worked great from the
start. Like Thoreau says, if one advances confidently in the direction of his
dreams and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with
success unexpected in common hours. Life is meant to be like that.
(RCW): So Craig, what are your favorite dream books?
I've appreciated various ones at different times. Patricia Garfield's
"Creative Dreaming" is a good lucidity introduction book, as is
LaBerge's original "Lucid Dreaming", though it's a bit more
scientifically geared. I also like Dr. Harmon H. Bro's "Edgar Cayce on
Dreams", Jane Roberts/Seth's "Dreams and Projections of
Consciousness" & "The Nature of the Psyche", as well as the
screenplay "Groundhog Day" which is really all about lucidity, in my
opinion. Other great movies include "Excalibur" and "LadyHawk",
which are packed with great symbolism, and nothing beats the good ol' Wizard of
Oz.
(RCW): What do you foresee as the role of the Internet in the future of
Dreams and Dreaming?
I see the internet as the physical extension of dreams, and I joke about it
as the waking counterpart of the "innernet" (but there's no
"t", since dreams can be "t"ime independent). Practically, I
see the internet getting more multidimensional in terms of better input and
output systems such as virtual reality, and becoming the way that we can break
down all barriers of race, age, sex, and even remove the limits of geography, as
dreams can. I also see it being prime soil for all types of global dream
experiments, dream work and dream-sharing. I even have a pet project that I'd
like to see developed of regional dream "weather" maps, which would
process and group dreams from various parts of the world and warn of impending
natural disasters, or of political or social upheavals before they occurred
physically. For example, Quebec, the province I live in, had a referendum over a
year ago to see if they were going to separate from Canada. They didn't, but it
was ever so close, and the psychological implications are phenomenal, though
somewhat invisible to the general public - it's almost like this region was hit
with a huge psychological plague that can be transmitted by word of mouth and
the media as people's attention is focused on the tension of the situation here
between French and English cultures. There really was no big split going on, but
the whole referendum began creating one. After the referendum, many people were
suffering from nightmares about earthquakes and splitting earth and I myself was
at a few "dream" rallies where the issues were being worked out on the
dream level. I'm sure there were hints of all this in the dreams of people
connected with this area before the event. Imagine what the a communal dream
view of the gulf-war or of the dissolution of Russia would be like? It would be
fascinating to watch the dreams of different regions for trends such as this and
I could actually see you heading up such an intriguing project, Richard. It
would surely get plenty of media attention for dreams in general and
specifically for dreams and the internet.
(RCW): What kind of projects are you planning for the future in dreams and
dreaming?
I'm presently finishing my book about applying lucidity and dream principles
practically in life, and planning various events through the D.R.E.A.M.S.
Foundation such as taking lucid dreaming and dream incubation to high schools
for teens as an alternative exploration and rebelliousness outlet over drug and
alcohol abuse. I've also started working with dying patients at the invitation
of a dream work student of mine who is a doctor there, to see how dream work and
related skills may help with the terminally ill, and especially with cancer and
AIDS patients, possibly even providing insight into their cures. As for other
projects or directions, only my future self knows, so I'll tell you when
"I" awaken.
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"Believe you can, believe you can't. Either way you're right." -H.
Ford
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