Here’s a quick review of another excellent panel at the 2007 IASD conference. Apela Colorado, lead professor at Wisdom University, chaired a panel of three of her graduate student on the topic of ancestral dreams. These four powerful women shared their journey of coming to know who they are through the process of remembering and honoring their heritages.
According to Colorado, dreams are one way the ancestors “speak.” By cultivating these dreams, she insists, we can come to know not only our forgotten lifeways, but also the traumas that haunt our heritage. Researching your heritage is not all ancestral rainbows and butterflies… it’s work.
But if these three young women are any indication, the work is well worth it. Atava Garcia Swiecicki spoke how deep grief dreams are a primary way she confronted the unpretty truths of her European heritage. Once she acknowledged these traumas, she began to dream about the fairies of the Polish countryside. These dreams led her on a quest to these ancestral lands, where she met a teacher who changed the way she lives in the world. Atava smiled and named this woman as “My Polish wood witch.”
erin Langley shared the database she is developing to track ancestral dreams. Although for now it is only open to other students, she is planning a version that the dreaming public can submit to. Check out Erin’s webpage for updates. One of the many insights from this database is that most dreams were recorded during the waxing gibbous phase of the moon. This could potentially be a powerful research tool for anyone interested in dreaming with the ancestors.
Finally, Teresa McCall gave a soulful talk about her research into Celtic mythology, discussing how St Patrick rid all of Ireland of not only the “snakes”, but also the dreamseers. She concluded with some advice about cultivating ancestral dreams that she received from an Aleut elder.
How to deal with Ancestral Dreams (Your own and people’s you love)
1)Don’t get attached to a powerful experience. Get the message and hang up the phone.
2)Watch carefully in the dream: be a witness
3)Be careful of the ego…. we can often crush a message without even meaning too by our gaze alone.
4)Look at fears when they emerge. Face them, but act out of love, not fear.
5)Integrate the emotions that come up in a dream into waking life. Remembrance, dream sharing, ritual and art all can help with this.
6)Don’t get in the way of someone else’s process. It’s not the way you”d do it, and that’s good!
All of these women imparted a sense of hope for the future. Apela Colorado’s message is that the cure for American culture’s “melting pot indigestion” is to know who we are, where we came from, and where we live. By dreaming our ancestors, we meet them halfway.
Update (7/30/07): erin Langley’s website is now open! And here is the mural she painted while in Ireland last summer, depicting some of the ancient sites in the County Meath. I”ve got heritage in the County Meath, too: unfortunately, the Dungan Clan’s castle has been a pile of rubble for almost three hundred years already.
Mural and image by erin Langley
Renita says
I am now having these ancestral dreams that are coming from nowhere… and will be building a blog/diary soon because I don’t know what else to do…. Thank you for building this site.
Dungan says
thank you Renita for your comment. be sure to check back in when your blog is up!
Erin Langley says
Hey! The dream database http://www.dream-people.net is open to all people now. My intent for it has always been to be open source and available for everyone to use. I worked it out with my elder Apela Colorado to enable this vision.
Dungan says
thanks, Erin! Interested readers may want to also check out this post which describes your perspective about dreams:
http://dreamstudies.org/2008/08/21/track-dreams-with-the-moon/