For C2C fans, Streamlink is a super offer! You'll get daily podcasts & downloads of George's M-F shows, Ian's Saturday program, and our special Sunday show. And you'll have access to the last 90 days of shows to download, collect, and listen to at your leisure. Plus weekly streamed broadcasts of Somewhere in Time with Art Bell and our rotating Classic offerings!




Wednesday March 29th, 2006

Host

George Noory

Guests

Clip Streams

 
Dreams & Quantum Connections
 
Programming & Intrusion
 
Auguries & Omens

Recap

Dreams & Intuition

Michael & Nicole Sebastian, known as The Dream Dudes, discussed the nature of dreams and intuition. We are all intuitive and can tap into the universal database of information, said Nicole. A person can tell the difference between intuition and erroneous thought by recognizing that intuition is sensed as a feeling rather than a thought, and comes before the thought, Michael shared.

Word association can be used as a tool for interpreting your own dreams, said Nicole, who added that a key question to ask yourself is-- 'what is going on in my life right now?' People can also program their dreams to help create the life they want to live. One helpful technique is to repeat the sound HUUUUUUUU before going to sleep-- this helps to clear the mind, Nicole offered, as she intoned the resonant mantra over the air. (The organization Eckankar specializes in dream work that relates to this kind of approach, the Sebastians noted.)

You can ask a question before going to sleep and in the morning you'll often have an answer based on your dream experiences, Michael commented. He also contended that it's possible for other people to intrude into your dreams and one of the telltale signs of this is when someone is acting out of character in a dream. To prevent or protect yourself from dream intrusions, they recommended the use of the sound HUUU as well as a visualization exercise in which one imagines being wrapped in mirrors facing outwards, thus bouncing off negative energies.

Related Articles

After Dark Sneak Peek

Featured in the April issue of After Dark is a Q & A with Alex Jones (pictured) that takes a look at his life and history. In the excerpt below, our reporter Tim Binnall finds out how the controversial radio host and filmmaker got his start:


Tim Binnall: How did your journey as a journalist and activist begin and evolve?

Alex Jones: I’d already read a lot of history books. I was already aware that governments engage in subterfuge and backstabbing and all of this treacherous behavior. And that the elites were always trying to get control. And then I got to college and they’d tell us the one-world government was good and that it was wonderful. But then I’d turn on television and be watching CNN and they’d say "nuts and crazy people believe there’s a one-world government." And then I read a book called "None Dare Call it a Conspiracy," that’s woken up so many people. He just, from being in government, went through what was going to happen: the Pan American Union, the EU, how the globalists operate, how they control both parties. And that really made total sense.

So I saw kind of a schizophrenic pronouncement by the government and the media and the universities that if you believe in world government and you believe it’s good, it exists and you’re wonderful. If you don’t like world government and you believe it exists, you’re crazy and it doesn’t exist. And so, with my cousin who was a DJ, I went into a studio and produced these little radio ads where I would imitate a Radio Shack commercial or a local commercial for a remodeler. And they were pretty good little ads. I mailed them into the local radio station and I said, "I would like to come intern." Their afternoon talk show host at that time got on air and played my tapes and made fun of me.

TB: Oh, man.

AJ: Yeah, but it didn’t really hurt my feelings. I thought it was hilarious. So what I then did was, I said, "You know what, there's access television here in Austin. I'll go down there and I’ll see how it operates and what goes on there." And after about a year of that, I started an access TV show. And I would just sit there with a little table with a camera on me and no one helping me in the control room, running the show myself, taking phone calls, and talking about the news. Then, in the mid 1990s, a local heavy metal station changed formats to talk. The station manager called up and said, "Alex, I think you’ve got some talent. I want to give you a two-hour radio show on Saturday nights."…

Get the full story. Click here to subscribe to After Dark.
Copyright © 2008 Premiere Radio Networks.
Terms of Use | Privacy Statement | Copyright & Trademark Notice | Contest Rules | Streaming Help