I finished my second read through of the book and I feel like I got more out of the active imagination section in particular than I did the first time I read it a couple years ago. One symbol from the dream interpretation section, though, that I didn't catch before was the diamond being a representation of the Self. My DV avatar is actually a drawing I made from a super intense dream I had many years ago where I was fleeing from shadowy creatures in the darkness that could end my existence if they caught me, but a diamond of radiant light appeared protecting me with pure love. The interpretation of the diamond as Self adds another layer of meaning to something that had already left quite an impression on me.
As for active imagination, I'd made a couple half-hearted attempts in the past, but I really gave it some solid effort recently. Initially I had a hard time clearly visualizing things and immersing myself in the scenery as more than an observer. As the author suggested, I found it helpful to focus on the feelings and experience of things more than the visuals themselves. Certain aspects of the imagination session would become really clear and colorful after a while even if the surroundings were vague. As for immersing myself... I ended up miming various actions physically while my eyes were closed lol. It really did help a lot with getting into it, but given my klutzy nature it's a miracle I didn't smack into something.
I did have a lot of intense symbology come up, some new and some from a variety of old dreams. As a matter of fact, it seems to have affected at least a few of my dreams following the sessions, with those same symbols showing up together in dreams as if they're taking off from where I left them during active imagination.
Just wanted to share a little poem excerpt from a character in one of the active imagination sessions (I do not normally write poems):
Look not where your eyes cannot see,
Be not where your body cannot be,
Touch not what your hands cannot grasp,
Think not what your mind cannot understand.
The message is pretty much the opposite of my conscious tendencies. That is, I'm very much "in my head" most the time. I've spent much of my hiatus from focusing on dreaming trying to be more practical and go beyond "Who am I?" to "Who am I in the context of the world around me?" I certainly experienced some personal growth from that, but it was diminishing returns over time. I felt more and more like something was seriously missing, so I decided to reconnect with my inner world. Only to have it essentially tell me that I need to be more grounded and stop trying to intellectualize everything. Go figure. Perhaps I'll want to shift my focus to applying new insights in waking life as the author repeatedly suggested after all... It seems like such a common sense point, but it really can be a challenge.
 Originally Posted by MoonageDaydream
Have you ever had the experience of the shadow figure, once you express acceptance/love for it, merging into your body?
I haven't had that experience with the shadow yet, but that does sound like the natural progression. In the past I've gone from being absolutely terrified and fleeing for my life to hanging out with it like we were buddies 
 Originally Posted by DarkestDarkness
Finally, I think it's interesting that the author did not mention lucid dreams at all; perhaps he's never had them, I don't know. But in my mind, he could have certainly included the topic in this book, somewhere in-between Dream Work and Active Imagination.
Yes, it also struck me that lucid dreaming was somewhere between the two - it's especially similar to active imagination in that the conscious and subconscious parts of the mind are "meeting" relatively directly, except perhaps it's more like bringing images from the subconscious into conscious awareness while lucid dreaming is bringing consciousness into an existing inner landscape.
But this is actually something I was curious to hear about other LDer's opinions on since the book doesn't address lucid dreaming; how could active imagination be used to supplement lucid dreaming practice? I feel like it has a ton of potential beyond what's already described. For instance, maybe it could be used to practice dream control techniques, creating more vivid visualizations/experiences, or dream incubation in general.
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