Journeys into the world of our dreams
Dreams are a window of possibilities, on non-ordinary reality. It is a space-time which opens passages and allows messages to be received, and also to be sent. Our “dream time” is there to show us that we can glimpse the passage.
However, we do not touch dreams without caution, because it is a very intimate space, which dialogues with our soul and opens doors to infinite worlds which are sometimes destabilizing, even frightening. The shamanic approach to dreams allows us to move through them while being better prepared and more “present”. It then becomes possible to better receive the messages intended for us.
This ritual proposes to dialogue in a more conscious way with the dreamer who is in each of us. He is each time carried out in a very personalized way, taking into account your personal relationship with the world of dreams.
Lucid dreams and shamanic dreams
These are dreams experienced in a particular state of consciousness, in which the dreamer experiences their dream with the awareness that they are dreaming and, to varying degrees, the ability to consciously influence it. It is therefore a state halfway between dreaming and wakefulness. Lucid dreams and shamanic dreams, while sharing certain aspects, such as the ability to make certain decisions, do not, however, have the same purpose.
Indeed, the lucid dream is primarily focused on the ability to act within the dream. For example, voluntarily changing location, undertaking an action, or freeing oneself from constraints such as gravity by flying. This requires a high level of access to consciousness (or training). The shamanic dream, on the other hand, primarily aims to contact spirits and receive answers or guidance. The ability to act is also necessary for this, but it is not an end in itself. If the shamanic dreamer receives messages without necessarily having consciously sought them out, the journey already has a shamanic dimension.
Both types of dreams, however, require the ability to remember the dream upon waking. And this is something that can be acquired with practice.

