Month: July 2022

Potential dangers (and benefits) of herbs that help you dream

Clinical herbalist Sky Richarde says she is often asked about plants that can bolster your dream life by giving you more vivid or lucid dreams. However, few people are aware of the potential dangers of taking an herb without knowing about things like side effects and possible interactions with other medications.

“A lot of people have a misconception that just because it’s a plant, it’s very safe. It can be very safe for some people and can be very dangerous for others, especially for those who are taking medications or who already have other sleep disorders,” said Sky.

Sky is a student in my Embodied Experiential Dreamwork certification program and this presentation of her expertise was given at one of our final class meetings. (A new cohort begins this September). She has been working with medicinal plants all her life, and has also received formal training as a clinical herbalist, from Pacific Rim College in Victoria BC, where she now teaches several courses on herbal medicine.
Sky says that any herb can be helpful for promoting dream life if it is taken with that intention. Two of her favorites include lion’s mane (a fungi, not a plant) which increases mental clarity and can promote dream recall and lucid dreaming. She also likes holy basil or Tulsi, a pleasant tasting tea that can also help with certain sleep disorders and their physiological consequences. Herbs for sleep and dreaming are not a one-size-fits all but ideally are matched with what a person wants to achieve and take their unique sleep and dream life into consideration.

Sky warns against simply doing an internet search on dream-promoting herbs because side effects and dangers are rarely listed. Mugwort, for example, is often listed as an herb that can boost dream recall. However, most people burn mugwort in a room and allow the scent to promote dreaming rather than drinking this very bitter brew, which is not recommended if you suffer from acid reflux.

In general, Sky says an internet search on dream herbs typically yields a list of highly stimulating plants that are not conducive to sleep. Some can even induce psychosis. Blue Lotus Flower, for example, was used in Egyptian times, steeped in wine to induce euphoria. But some people have been inhaling it with vape pens and going into catatonic states that require hospitalization.

Another plant, with the common name African dream root, was used by certain tribes to communicate with their ancestors. But it was taken as part of a ritual, and vomiting is expected. “A lot of these plants are often taken out of the context of their culture and people are using them recreationally without understanding their properties or potential interactions with other substances.”

In terms of potential drug interactions, Sky offers two examples: People might take St. John’s Wort for stimulating dreams, not realizing it can completely disrupt how their birth control medication works. Passion flower is not compatible with anti-depressant or anti-psychotic medication.

It is impossible to cover all of the possible benefits and dangers of dream-inducing herbs here. The main point is to treat plants as you would any other medicine or substance. Sky points out that you would not take another kind of drug without consulting a doctor and understanding its proper dosage and use, and if it has side effects. The same should be true for plants.

Sky recommends that if you’re wanting to explore the rich world of dreams with the assistance of plant allies, that the best course of action is to choose one plant to work with and research how it functions in the body, being sure to do a separate search for potential side effects and herb/drug interactions as well as herb/condition interactions, and try not to neglect learning about the cultural significance of the plants you want to use. Be fully informed before you consume any medicine.

The dream text is not so sacred: Dreams as doorways to possibility

“A dream is alive.” Eugene Gendlin wrote this in his book, Let Your Body Interpret Your Dreams to describe the ongoing, in-process nature of dreams and how much potential they possess because of this. He said dreams are ‘unfinished’ and therefore they represent a huge possibility space. Rather than dismiss what may at first feel like fragmentary nonsense, we can sink into our dreams experientially and flesh them out. This idea, that dreams are alive and rife with possibility, also means that they are fluid and responsive to our attention, rather than fixed. I see them as a doorway to the larger imaginal world of the dream, an opening to something larger.

In the early days of dream interpretation, a dream text was taken a little too seriously, as if it were sacred. I do have a deep respect for dreams. But when you think about what a curious mix of image, temporal anomaly, strangeness and confusion a dream is when you wake up…
and when you think of how much more comes (and how much more escapes) when you attempt to capture the dream in words as you write it down or tell someone about it…
and when you sense how much of the dream was not quite captured, how much more there was than you can recall… you realize the dream text you have written is not so sacred. Rather, it is a memory jogger, a leaping-off place into the world of the dream itself, which like a felt sense, contains so much more than you can actually say about it.

This is why I have adopted such an experiential approach to dreams. And why I like what Gendlin says about dreams needing ‘careful but irreverent handling.’ It’s okay to play with them and to engage with them. What feels unhelpful is to try to pin them down too soon, or to confine them to a particular meaning. That way of working with dreams can be a fun, intellectual exercise, but ultimately one that takes you further away from the dream itself. To borrow the words of another of my mentors, Dr. Stephen Aizenstat, a dream likes to be met in the way of the dream. The way of the dream is through imagination, play, creativity, and wonder.

This is the introduction I gave to my day-long pre-conference workshop at the Person-Centred and Experiential Psychotherapies world conference this month in Copenhagen. It was truly an honour to be among a new tribe of like-minded therapists and share my approach to dreams. It feels like another step forward in my mission to bring a modern, collaborative and experiential form of dreamwork more widely into clinical practice.

Why Work with Dreams?
Dreamwork (according to the research) is implicated in regulating our emotions – and one of the reasons sleep deprivation leaves us cranky and out of sorts is that we have missed out on the activity in REM allows for processing of our most salient emotional concerns. Dreams have been shown to help us work through grief and the impact of trauma while we sleep. They bring depth, meaning and creative solutions that may not be as available to our busy waking minds. With all input from the outside world shut out, and with our logical processing faculties dampened down, dreaming is a state conducive to associative play with images that depict our deepest concerns.

In therapy, they are a doorway to deeper conversations. They open up topics the dreamer may be hesitant to broach, but offer these in images and metaphor so the dreamer can process difficult topics with the help of mediating images. What I mean by this is that the images in our dreams can carry important pieces of process forward without the need to retell a traumatic story or go around the same pain- or problem-saturated circles. You don’t even have to know how the dream relates to the dreamer’s story. Such insights often drop in later, on their own. In the meantime, my best advice is to follow the dream itself, dive deep and trust it.

Dr. Leslie Ellis offers online dreamwork training programs to mental health professionals. Her flagship Embodied Experiential Dreamwork certification program begins in mid-September, and there are still a few spaces left.