POWERFUL DREAMS
Are you aware that you will miss about one- third of this coming
year? You will "miss" it by sleeping. Researchers tell us that the
average person sleeps about one-third of each year - or one-third of
a lifetime.
But the experts also tell us that something important happens when we
sleep - we dream. Apparently all people dream, even if they don't
remember dreaming. And over the next twelve months, most of us will
have about a thousand dreams.
Dreaming is important. But equally important are those "dreams" we
have for our lives - those plans, hopes and goals we will formulate
concerning our relationships, our spiritual growth, self-improvement,
our physical health and our world. The dreams, or wishes, we have for
our lives are just as necessary as dreaming while we sleep.
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale used to tell of a 79-year-young woman who
was struck by a hit-and-run driver. She was expected to die from her
injuries. When he visited, he found her wrapped in plaster from her
hips to her heels. He glanced around the room, cluttered with
mementos of a lifetime. He spotted a paisley shawl, a child's
drawing of a horse (lavender) and shelves of much loved,
much-thumbed books.
One shelf was a row of brand new books - the only new items in the
room. They looked as if they had never been touched. Dr. Peale asked
her if she cared for poetry. Her answer was a beautiful tribute to
hope and dreams: "I love poetry, but I haven't read those yet." Her
face lit up. "I'm saving them for my old age."
She did, too. She lived to read those books many times. When she
finally died at 91, she was planning a trip to Europe.
Louis Driscoll put it like this: "In your heart keep one still secret
spot where dreams may go, and sheltered so, may thrive and grow."
She kept her dreams alive. And they kept her alive.
Are you aware that you will miss about one- third of this coming
year? You will "miss" it by sleeping. Researchers tell us that the
average person sleeps about one-third of each year - or one-third of
a lifetime.
But the experts also tell us that something important happens when we
sleep - we dream. Apparently all people dream, even if they don't
remember dreaming. And over the next twelve months, most of us will
have about a thousand dreams.
Dreaming is important. But equally important are those "dreams" we
have for our lives - those plans, hopes and goals we will formulate
concerning our relationships, our spiritual growth, self-improvement,
our physical health and our world. The dreams, or wishes, we have for
our lives are just as necessary as dreaming while we sleep.
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale used to tell of a 79-year-young woman who
was struck by a hit-and-run driver. She was expected to die from her
injuries. When he visited, he found her wrapped in plaster from her
hips to her heels. He glanced around the room, cluttered with
mementos of a lifetime. He spotted a paisley shawl, a child's
drawing of a horse (lavender) and shelves of much loved,
much-thumbed books.
One shelf was a row of brand new books - the only new items in the
room. They looked as if they had never been touched. Dr. Peale asked
her if she cared for poetry. Her answer was a beautiful tribute to
hope and dreams: "I love poetry, but I haven't read those yet." Her
face lit up. "I'm saving them for my old age."
She did, too. She lived to read those books many times. When she
finally died at 91, she was planning a trip to Europe.
Louis Driscoll put it like this: "In your heart keep one still secret
spot where dreams may go, and sheltered so, may thrive and grow."
She kept her dreams alive. And they kept her alive.
lifesupportsystem.com





