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She then fully describes more than 50 ways to explore dreams, including painting, dance, sculpture, drawing, poetry, music, or any combination of these. She explains several techniques for letting go of expectations and allowing the dream to guide the dreamer to the best form of expression.
Dr. Mellick also recognizes that many people don't have lots of time for working on their dreams. For those with little time for reflection, she provides a chapter titled "Expressive Dream Work in Five Minutes." A companion chapter offers techniques for those who have as much as ten minutes a day for dream work.
Not all dreams are pleasant. She offers help also to those haunted by nightmares, including how to make a healing mandala. She also discusses dreams in which a particular action or image is repeated.
Although most of us prefer to work alone with our dreams, some people find it beneficial to form a dream work group. Dr. Mellick provides guidelines for establishing a group and ensuring that it's beneficial to all participants.
One fascinating exercise asks people to imagine life events as a dream. The events can be ordinary activities. She says that doing this offers a new perspective that can be helpful in understanding our lives.
"The Art of Dreaming is an excellent resource and practical manual that inspires and amplifies self-discovery and understanding of the rich spiritual treasure and guidance that dreams provide."
These tools are the expressive arts and the variety of approaches that Mellick offers. With over sixty 5- to 15-minute exploration exercises, Mellick suggests ways to work with dreams, dream fragments, nightmares, dream figures and animals, and to explore dreams in groups. She organizes the book by ways of approaching dreams, with section titles such as "capture essence and hunches," "become the dream image," or "make a poem out of a challenging dream." She includes margin markers for the different types of expressive arts used, for easy access to specific techniques. The material is much the same as in her previous work, The Natural Artistry of Dreams (Mellick, 1996), but is presented in a more condensed and accessible form.
In The Art of Dreaming, Mellick offers a variety of ways to explore dreams using all of the expressive media: visual arts, movement, music, mime, drama, writing, collage, mask-making, clay, and more. Mellick makes the media amenable by using simple explanations of the techniques, and making sure that each technique can be applied in 5 to 15 minutes. Brevity makes these approaches invaluable both in the therapy office, for clinicians to use, as well as for the typically busy lay person. At the same time, there is nothing "simple" about the creative suggestions that Mellick gives. Both the novice and the experienced art therapist will find new ideas and techniques in this work. For instance, each new dream example and each new method introduces nuances that were not present in other examples.
By making her writing simple and directly addressing the reader in the second person, Mellick makes this complex material easy to understand and to use. She uses lists to present ideas, gives concrete suggestions, gives specific examples, and uses accessible language. On the other hand, she does not reduce the material, but allows the complexity to come through, both in the spaciousness and subtlety of her sentences, and the variety of ways in which she approaches the material.
Mellick offers, as she says, not techniques for dream interpretation, but ways to ask questions of the dreams. Her goal, in this book, is to help us open up our ways of working with our dreams, to free ourselves of our traditional ways of looking at them. As Mellick writes:
We need to let our dreams paint themselves, dance themselves, sculpt themselves, begin at the end and end at the beginning, spiral in on themselves, meander without climax or major turning point. Perhaps, then, when we can treat content and structure as indivisible, we can truly begin to appreciate the elegant sagacity of the dream. (p. 14).
Mellick uses this approach, too, to the expressive arts themselves: we are given a plethora of methods, but no prescriptions. The result is nothing less than creativity itself.
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