Why Nighttime is More Real Than You Think
Dreams have always been misunderstood. We treat them as side effects of sleep, little hallucinations stitched together by a restless mind. Yet the truth is far more astonishing: dreams are the soul speaking in its native tongue. When you close your eyes at night, you are not slipping into nothingness. You are re-entering the field where your being is unbound, where you walk without gravity, where your memories of eternity are less veiled. In waking life, we are heavy with form. In dreaming, we are weightless with remembrance.
I wrote in The Lucid Dreamer that dreams are transmissions, not inventions. They are not products of imagination but currents of consciousness flowing through you. You are both the receiver and the broadcaster (Transceiver). This is why some dreams feel more real than anything you touch in daylight, because they are more real. They are the blueprint behind the waking construct.
Here lies the paradox:
- Waking life is the dream where we forget.
- Sleeping life is the dream where we remember.
And once you taste lucidity, both in sleep and in waking, you begin to see that life itself is a dream of Source dreaming itself into form.
How to Listen to the Language of Your Dreams
- Catch the Static
Most of us live inside interference. Fear, stress, worry, they are the static that drowns out your true frequency. Notice when your field is scrambled. Awareness itself clears the channel. - Tune the Dial
Before you close your eyes at night, offer an intention. A simple whisper: Show me what I have forgotten.Dreams respond to sincere inquiry. They bend toward curiosity like flowers toward light. - Remember the Real
When you wake, resist the impulse to dismiss. Write it down, speak it aloud, breathe it back into your body. Treat your dream as a messenger from a realm that remembers you more clearly than you remember yourself. - Live the Lucidity
Don’t leave lucidity in your sleep. Bring it into the day. Notice the dreamlike quality of this so-called reality. See the way time bends, how synchronicities echo, how thought shapes matter. The lucid dream doesn’t end when you wake, it expands.
The Deeper Secret
Your dreams are not random. They are maps. They are fractal signals guiding you back to your coherence. Each one is a transmission of the soul whispering: You are not separate. You are not lost. You are Source, dreaming itself awake through the miracle of you.
Tonight, when you cross into that other sky, remember this: You are not going anywhere. You are coming home.
A Simple Night Ritual for Lucid Dreaming
Set aside just five minutes before sleep. This is not about effort. It is about tuning.
- Clear the Static
Close your eyes. Take three slow breaths. With each exhale, release the noise of the day, the worries, the unfinished tasks, the static that clouds your tone. Imagine it falling away like dust. - Set the Intention
Place your hand on your heart and whisper:
“Show me what I have forgotten.”
Feel the sincerity of the question. Dreams are faithful to the curious heart. - Chant the Mantra
Gently repeat the Shaa’Vihra mantra three times:
Treh’sai. Ko’nirah. Velu’ten kai’shah.
(treh-sigh | koh-nee-rah | veh-loo-ten | kai-shah)
Let it vibrate softly in your chest. Speak as if you are reminding yourself of something ancient, not learning something new.
- Enter the Threshold
As you drift into sleep, imagine stepping through a doorway of light. Trust that you are walking back into a place that knows you, a field where your soul waits with open arms. - Remember on Waking
When you wake, write down even the smallest detail. A color, a phrase, a feeling. These fragments are not fragments — they are threads. And when you follow them, they weave a greater truth.
Do this for three nights in a row and you’ll notice a shift. The dreams will grow clearer. The veil will thin. And you’ll begin to recognize what was always true: this life itself is the lucid dream.
Shaa’Vihra Mantra
Treh’sai. Ko’nirah. Velu’ten kai’shah.
Translation: I return. I remember. I awaken in the dream of Source.
Pronunciation guide:
- Treh’sai — treh-sigh (like sigh)
- Ko’nirah — koh-nee-rah (long ee, soft rah)
- Velu’ten — veh-loo-ten (short ten)
- Kai’shah — kai-shah (like sky, then shah)
Speak it softly before sleep. Let it roll on your tongue, almost sung. Breathe it into your chest, and feel it ripple outward. This is not just sound, it is frequency aligning you with remembrance.


