Jefferson Harman |
"As I … began to articulate this with my friends, I was able to interpret dreams for them, and then for others as I do on my radio show."
Jefferson speaks on Life Unedited radio show, (usually on the first Saturday of each month, but check his events calendar for schedule changes). Life Unedited will run a special Halloween edition featuring Jefferson on October 31st.
In addition to Life Unedited, Jefferson is filming a new show with Adam Rothenberg called "Dreaming with…" where Jefferson will be interpreting the dreams of various entertainers.
During a dream interpretation Jefferson said the words, inflection, emotion and energy people use reveal much about what the dream really means.
Dreams also have a timeline that depends on how the dreamer feels at a particular moment. A dream about a house could signify issues with the dreamer's house, or if there are no issues with their house it could represent something deeper. The question then becomes, "why this dream? Why now?"
"[Dream symbols] come at particular moments, because it's something specific that they're revealing to us in that moment," Jefferson said. "It can be about something in this life, or past lives, or earlier in our lives."
Sometimes dreams foretell future events, such as meeting someone at a party, or visiting a place from a dream. Jefferson explains this through mathematics. From the Big Bang, everything began in a trajectory, he said. From that point, lines of information and probability stretch out in multiple directions. The probability curve is the choices one makes, determining points along their path. People have the potential to dream possibilities and probabilities based upon the mathematics of prior events.
"De ja vu is to some extent being aware of what's coming based upon what was," Jefferson added.
Recurring dreams, on the other hand, is the universe sending a message that wasn't integrated the first time around.
"It has to do with growth of the soul," Jefferson said.
He explains these dreams as conversations with one's higher self that come through in a way that we can accept. Disturbing dreams come when we aren't paying attention—when we are focused on one thing, but the important information is flying around in the periphery. Sometimes the psyche understands the need for a disturbing dream in order to jolt the awareness to more important concerns.
"There's always something calling our attention, and that distracts us," Jefferson said. "You're putting life on hold without realizing it. You're receiving a message from your soul in your dream telling you this is the next step to take, and you're not taking it. So you're behind, and you're out of balance, and so the dream comes again. Part of my work is to make people aware of that."
Jefferson conducts private dream interpretation sessions in his office in Butler, NJ as well as sessions via telephone. Visit him at everydaysymbology.com or by calling 973-839-9317
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