Dreams as expressions of dark knowing—the intelligence of the unconscious that daytime consciousness cannot access or control.
Western rationality has taught us to dismiss dreams as random mental noise, yet every human culture except modern Western ones has viewed dreams as meaningful. Laozi's philosophy embraces the unknown, the dark, the seemingly useless—precisely what the rational mind dismisses. Dreams arise from the deep wisdom of your being, the part that knows your needs beyond conscious awareness, that processes experiences into integration, that sometimes shows you truths your waking self resists. This dark knowing isn't inferior to logical knowing; it's a different mode of understanding. Your dreams know things about your life, your relationships, your body, and your soul that your thinking mind hasn't yet grasped. Rather than forcing dreams into rational interpretation, the Taoist approach involves witnessing them, sitting with their images, allowing their wisdom to work gradually. This transforms your relationship with sleep—nights become precious not just for physical restoration but for accessing the intelligent darkness within you. By honoring dream-knowing equally with waking-knowing, you reclaim a fundamental human capacity that modern culture has taught you to ignore, enriching your relationship with the night.
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