completely baffled until it actually happened. "I dreamed that I was
in the Sinai Desert and there I saw a well-disciplined army defeat an Arab
army mainly by the superiority of air power. A few days later
the Arab-Israeli war broke out and was won by the Israelis."
For almost two years, Herb dreamed of world events
precognitively, and at first he was very enthusiastic about this
material. His feeling that these dreams were a tremendous
responsibility for him developed into a sense of frustration as
he realized that there was really no way for him to share these
dreams. As his frustration increased, he came to feel that this
type of dream was a waste of his time, which could be spent to
more advantage in dreaming for others who had a need for
these dreams. He still catches spontaneous glimpses of the
future now, but prefers to "step into the shoes of those whom I
am trying to help."
If one asks him, "How did you get started doing this?" his answer is, "I did it gradually and I wanted so much to get answers to my own problems as well as for others that the answers came spontaneously and in increasing supply." And if one asks him, "How do you do it?" his answer is, "Someone asks me a few questions and I hold them in my mind before sleep. I then dream the answers, and it seems that the persons for whom I dream are helped." Herb has found that others can help solve their own problems if they can awaken to their own dream-selves as he has. He encourages others to remember their dreams and to work along with their own interpretations. Herb closes with this message, "God says but to ask and we shall receive the answers which are within the higher consciousness of each of us. We must only want to know very strongly and to wait silently and patiently for the answer to slip through that small window in our conscious minds which we naturally and normally leave open to our soul self." 202
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