Yes, you can learn to recall last night's dreams, those of your childhood, and even those of your past lives! The author of The Illustrated Dream Dictionary reveals his secrets for remembering dreams and interpreting what they mean. Full-color paintings of powerful dream symbols, over 150 of them, will help you remember your dreams more vividly than any other method. Start by learning how to fall asleep for better dreaming. Then find out how to better position yourself in bed (with your head at the foot of your bed is just one surprising tip). Learn the proper kind of sleep for dreaming, and ways to awaken to assure better recall, including drinking "recall tea," keeping dream diaries and dictionaries, and coaxing forgotten dreams with inkblots, mandalas, doodles, tarot cards, and mind maps. As you advance to the altered state of "lucid dreaming," you'll recall your past, even past lives--as well as premonitions of the future.
Craig Hamilton-Parker is a British psychic and medium with over 30 years of working in the field. He is the author of over 15 books in the paranormal genre.
As well as being an author, he also has a youtube channel and has also been on numerous television programs. He started his TV career in 1992 appearing on "The Big Breakfast" and has since been on other TV productions including "The Spirit of Diana" (2003), "Our Psychic Family" (2008), "Mystic Journey to India" (2018) and "The UnXplained with William Shatner" (2020).
He established a website (psychics.co.uk) as a community place for mediums to meet, debate and practice.
Craig lives with his wife, fellow psychic Jane, in Eastleigh, Hampshire.
My friend made me check this out from the library for some reason... Anyway it is interesting and fun if you want to joke with friends about dreams but not very useful if a person wants to analyze their dreams in depth. This is clearly aimed for those who want an introduction to the dream interpretation area versus actually studying it. I didn't actually read all of this but I did try to interpret one of my dreams. For me there isn't much point in trying to interpret my dreams since the ones I usually remember are either completely random and not worth interpreting or I know exactly what in my life made me dream about what I dreamed, so this book wasn't very helpful. That doesn't necessarily mean someone couldn't find it useful, it just wasn't applicable to me.