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Flying Dreams

* are meaningful, creative, intriguing and psychic
* aid dream interpretation and nightmare resolution
* invoke dream activities such as incubation and exploration
* have a strong link to lucid, telepathic, mutual and out-of-body dreams
* are favored by individual dreamers and in group dreaming projects

 
         
     

Flying Dream FAQ

More Flying Dream Facts

The Flying Connection:

Results From Shared Dreaming Projects

FAQ and FACTS Bibliography

 
         
     

Flying Dream FAQ

©1999 Linda Lane Magallón 

1. How common are flying dreams?

More than a third of the dreaming population reports having had at least one flying dream. And, if you have one, you're very likely to have more. Your chance of having a flying dream doubles if you are a lucid dreamer (you are able to become awake and aware as you dream).

2. Did flying dreams exist before the invention of airplanes?

Yes, they can be traced back to earliest recorded history (the Babylonians and Egyptians). They have also been found world-wide: throughout Europe, Asia and Africa; among the Pacific Islanders and North American Indians; in Australia and South America.

3. Why do I have them? Am I weird to have them? Or not to have them?

Are you especially creative? Do you have an imaginative personality? People with these characteristics (poets, writers, musicians, painters, graphic designers, etc.) are more likely to have flying dreams than the average population. People who do public speaking are prone to have them, too. Not surprisingly, folks who fly planes and hang gliders have flying dreams, although they tend to fly without their vehicles, like Superman.

4. How old do you have to be to have a flying dream?

Flying dreams have been shared by 3, 4 and 5 year olds. At the other end of the age spectrum, flying dreams are reported by the physically infirm elderly. Children and young people tend to have more flying dreams than the older population. But with deliberate dreaming, the numbers increase.

5. What do flying dreams mean? Doesn't flying in dreams mean that I'm not grounded in physical life? Or have sexual problems? Or am too proud? Or...?

There are many, many interpretations of flying dreams and some contradict others. They are metaphoric (sign of freedom), prophetic (omen of death), spiritual (journey to other realms) and cultural (for the Crow Indians: you are sick, but in Central Africa: you have good health). My favorite is that flying dreams are symbolic of the out-of-body experience.

6. Will you interpret my flying dream?

No, I don't do symbolic interpretation for other people. I'm more interested in what's initiating your dreams (the cause), and only you can track that down. When you do, you can use that information to vary the quality and quantity of your flying dreams.

7. So, what causes flying dreams?

Many explanations have been offered. Here's a few examples: psychological (expression of emotion), physiological (due to breathing), physical (movement of bed), psychic (precognitive of airplane trip) and astral (consciousness in motion).

8. Why do I have the same flying dream over and over?

A symbolic interpretation: it's an omen that you will lose everything you possess.

A causal explanation: the dream was induced by something in your life that had a great impact (environmental, bio-chemical, work-related, etc.). Either the impact hasn't dissipated yet, or the dream is being triggered by a similar stimulus, again and again.

9. What is it so hard to get off the ground?

A symbolic interpretation: the dream is a pun for being "grounded" in waking life, that is, restricted or limited in some way.

A causal explanation: you are still dealing with physical, psychic, emotional or mental fatigue that hasn't yet been processed by a full, deep night's sleep.

10. Why would I want to have flying dreams?

Because they're fun! How many enjoyable dreams do you have?

11. How can I have flying dreams?

One technique: develop a phrase (such as "Tonight I fly") and hold it vividly in your mind as you fall asleep. (See also Incubation of Flying Dreams.)

12. Can I control or influence my flight?

Yes, using the tools of incubation (before you dream) and lucidity (in the dream).

13. What experiments have been done with flying dreams?

Flying dreams are related to the vestibular system, which regulates body equilibrium. With this in mind, lab research confirms that certain physical stimuli that affects balance can induce flying dreams when the subject is asleep (wearing a blood pressure cuff, rocking in a hammock, raising and lowering the bed). In the laboratory, lucid dream subjects have more flying dreams than do nonlucid subjects. As measured by an electrooculogram (record of eye movement), a lucid dream of flying took the same time as the dreamer's account related upon waking.

14. What about field research?

Field research experimentation, case studies and statistical analysis of dreams has found flying to be positively related to nightmare resolution, superheroic dream feats, lucid dreaming, astral projection, extrasensory perception and mutual dreaming.

15. How can I use flying dreams to deal with nightmares?

At the very least, you can fly away. View the situation from a wider perspective or turn and confront your problem backed with a sense of strength and flexibility. Deliberate incubation of flying dreams promotes a positive dream experience, overall.

16. What's their link with fantasy?

Flying without technical support is a magical event. Flying dreamers are also likely to experience similar fantastic feats such as mutability, time travel and teleportation in their dreams.

17. What's the link with lucid dreams and out-of-body experiences?

Even more than sexual dreams, flying is the favorite activity of lucid dreamers. Lucid dreams of flying score low on confused thinking and perhaps this is why some dreamers can use flying as a cue to lucidity. Flying dreams can induce lucid dreams. They foreshadow, parallel and merge with the out-of-body experience.

18. What is their link with psychic dreams?

Flying dreamers tend to believe in and experience extrasensory perception. Flying dreams have been produced in telepathic experiments in which the sender used a picture target with a flying theme.

19. Are flying dreams just for loners?

No, people like to talk about their flying dreams. Flying dreamers are more likely than most to call someone on the phone to share their dreams. The majority of mutual dreamers (those who deliberately dream with other people) have the ability to fly in their dreams.

 
         
     

More Flying Dream Facts

©1999 Linda Lane Magallón

Flying dreams are the key to proactive and interactive dreaming. The willful pursuit of flying dreams sparks the emergence of many types of extraordinary dreams. Here are some facts to support this claim.

1. Flying is a favorite activity of lucid dreamers.

Susan J. Blackmore's 1982 study of two groups of psychology students at the University of Bristol (n = 60, 55) yielded the fact that "the same people tended to report both lucid and flying dreams."1 The next year readers of the Bristol Electoral Register (n = 321) responded to her questionnaire. "A significant positive association was...found between lucid and flying dreams."2 Deirdre Barrett's 1987 study of undergraduates at the University of North Carolina (n = 56) yielded 10 lucid dreamers. 6 of them also reported flying dreams (out of 9 dream flyers). "This was a statistically greater than chance overlap between the subjects to whom these categories of dreams occurred."3

2. Twice as many lucid dreamers have flying dreams as the general population of dreamers.

In R. Griffith, O. Miyagi and A. Tago's 1958 study of students in Kentucky (n = 250) and students in Tokyo (n = 223), about 39.3% of the students in both groups reported flying dreams. But Jay A. Vogelsong's 1994 study of lucid dreamers (n = 60) reported that 80% of respondents found flying experiences "common in their lucid dreams."4

3. Flying dreams can induce lucidity.

The following avid lucid dreamers have reported that non-lucid floating and flying dreams preceded or were concurrent with the onset of lucidity: Frederik van Eeden, J. H. M. Whiteman, Oliver Fox (Hugh Callaway), Robert Monroe, Mary Arnold-Forster, Patricia Garfield, several of Celia Green's subjects and six of my own subjects.

4. Flying dreams are associated with the out-of-body experience.

Eight authors from Hereward Carrington to Jane Roberts relate flying dreams to OBEs. Susan Blackmore's 1982 study found a significant positive correlation between flying dreams and OBEs (her 1983 study results were inconclusive).

5. Flying dreamers tend to believe in and experience ESP.

Blackmore's 1983 study found a positive association between flying dreamers and those who had experienced telepathy and those who believed in ESP. Vogelsong's 1994 study of 60 lucid dreamers (80% who were flying dreamers) stated that "45% thought it is possible to interact with other people or with the real physical world through lucidity. 20% said sometimes, 25% maybe, and 10% said they did not think it possible. Some people qualified their positive answers as psychic rather than literal contact."5 Astral projectors who floated to obtain verified information include Robert Monroe, Sylvan Muldoon, two of Celia Green's subjects and Charles Tart's famous "Miss Z."

6. Willful flying promotes a positive dream experience.

A review of the published literature reveals that spontaneous precognitive flying dreams involve negative themes - airplane disasters predominating (all were nonlucid). However, 5 of the 6 published mutual flying dreams are positive; the other is a "fly to flee" theme. The positive 5 involved dreamers who could achieve lucidity. Only 2 (6%) intentional mutual flying dreams in my projects had negative themes - again, these dreams were nonlucid. Patricia Garfield and I, among others, have both experienced the ability to shift dream content from negative to positive using flying themes in either lucid or nonlucid dreams. Fly to flee becomes fly to enjoy.

Footnotes

1 Blackmore, Susan. "Out-of-Body Experiences, Lucid Dreams, and Imagery: Two Surveys," The Journal of the American Society For Psychical Research, 76/4, p. 307.
2 Blackmore, Susan. "A Survey of Lucid Dreams, OBEs and Related Experiences," Lucidity Letter, 2/3, p. 1.
3 Barrett, Deirdre. "Flying Dreams and Lucidity: An Empirical Study of Their Relationship," Lucidity Letter, 6/1, p. 37.
4 Vogelsong, Jay A., "Lucid Dreamer Survey Results," LuciDream Journal, Vol. 8, p. 6.

 
         
     

The Flying Connection: Results From Shared Dreaming Projects

Excerpts from a paper presented at the 1995 Conference of the Association for the Study of Dreams

©1995 Linda Lane Magallón

An analysis of dreamers in 7 shared dreaming projects (n = 62) revealed that flying was by far the most common theme in their successful mutual dreams. 82% of these mutual dreamers had the experience of dream flying prior to joining the projects.

79% were capable of having a lucid dream. Thus, there was almost an equal number of lucid and flying dreamers with about 94% overlap in their populations.

Half of the dreamers had a mutual lucid dream in the course of their project. A mutual lucid dream meant that the dreamer became lucid in the course of the dream, whether their teammates did or not, and had cross-correlations with the dreams of those partners.

However, an even larger percentage, 61% of the dreamers, had mutual dreams with a flying theme. In all, 42% of the dreamers achieved mutual lucid flying dreams.

Of 161 mutual dreams, the content range was as follows:

  • 24% (38) Flying
  • 13% (21) Exploration
  • 12% (20) Recreation
  • 12% (19) Communication and observation
  • 11% (18) Fantasy feats and imagery
  • 11% (18) Emotional concerns
  • 5% ( 8) Sex
  • 3% ( 3) Other

Members incubated dreams to satisfy goals selected by the team or the project leader(s). Most themes correlated well with those stated goals. The exception was that exploration (23% of stated goals) and fantastic feats (like an out-of-body experience: 18% of stated goals) would often produce flying dreams as well. So did lucidity (7% of stated goals). But even a "no goal" option (7% of stated goals) would result in flying dreams. It seemed that no matter what the waking selves might desire, flying was the preferred option of the dreaming selves.

In the published literature can be found cases of spontaneous mutual dreams (n = 84) and intended mutual dreams (n = 40). Almost half of the spontaneous mutual dreams were negative. This high negative content finding correlates with those telepathic dreams gathered by Myers (1882) and precognitive dreams gathered by Stevenson (1970), which seem to be mainly spontaneous cases.

In contrast, less than of fifth (17%) of the intended mutual dreams were negative. Similarly, during the shared dreaming projects, 19% of the dreams had negative themes...at the beginning of the dream, that is.

However, over half of these problems and troubles were resolved in-dream, leaving only 9% negative at dreams' end. This shift from negative to positive dream content parallels a transformation from mundane to magical-fantastic imagery. The cumulative "environmental effect," from negative-mundane, to positive-magical is the product of proactive dreaming among members of an amiable group.

Because the environmental effect helps to clean up the traumatic field of dreams and substitute a safe, secure, user-friendly universe instead, the way is made clear for play and experimentation beyond the norm. Concurrent with the environmental effect is an explosion of extraordinary dreams: archetypal, adventurous, lucid, out-of-body, psychic and, of course, mutual. And at the center of them all is the ability to fly.

 
         
     

FAQ & Facts Bibilography

Barrett, Deirdre. "Flying Dreams and Lucidity: An Empirical Study of Their Relationship," Lucidity Letter, 6/1.
Blackmore, Susan. "A Survey of Lucid Dreams, OBEs and Related Experiences," Lucidity Letter, 2/3.
Blackmore, Susan. "Out-of-Body Experiences, Lucid Dreams, and Imagery: Two Surveys," The Journal of the American Society For Psychical Research, 76/4.
Busink, Rita and Don Kuiken. "Natural Classes of Impactful Dreams: A Replication." Paper presented at 1995 Conference of the Association for the Study of Dreams.
de Becker, Raymond. The Understanding of Dreams. New York: Hawthorn, 1968.
Delaney, Gale. Living Your Dreams. San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1981.
Dreams and Dreaming. Alexandria, VA: Time-Life Books, 1990.
Evans, Christopher. Landscapes of the Night. New York: The Viking Press, 1983.
Gachenbach, Jayne. "Manifest Content Analysis of Sleep Laboratory Collected Lucid and Nonlucid Dreams," Lucidity, 10 (1 and 2), 1991.
Gachenbach, Jayne and Jane Bosveld. Control Your Dreams. New York: Harper and Row, 1989.
Garfield, Patricia. Creative Dreaming. New York: Ballantine Books, 1974.
Green, Celia E. Lucid Dreams. Oxford, England: Institute of Psychophysical Research, 1968.
Holloway, Gillian. lifetreks - Flying Page. 1999. http://www.lifetreks.com/liftetreks3/recurring01.asp
Hunt, Harry T. The Multiplicity of Dreams. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1989.
Leslie, Kenneth and Robert Ogilvie. "Vestibular Dreams: The Effect of Rocking On Dream Mentation," Dreaming, 6 (1), 1996.
Lincoln, Jackson Steward. The Dream In Primitive Cultures. London: Cresset Press, 1935.
Magallón, Linda Lane. "Lucid Precognitive Dreams,"The Lucid Dream Exchange, No. 5, 7/3/95.
Magallón, Linda Lane. Mutual Dreaming. New York: Pocket Books, 1997.
Magallón, Linda Lane. "Telepathic and Group Dreaming: Some Considerations of Process and Analysis." Paper presented at 1988 ASD Conference, Santa Cruz, CA.
Magallón, Linda Lane and Barbara Shor. "Shared Dreaming: Joing Together in Dreamtime," in Dreamtime and Dreamwork, edited by Stanley Krippner. Los Angeles, CA: Jeremy P. Tarcher, 1990.
Ullman, Montague, Stanley Krippner and Alan Vaughan. Dream Telepathy, 2nd Edition. Jefferson,NC: McFarland & Co., 1989.
Van de Castle, Robert L. Our Dreaming Mind. New York: Ballantine Books, 1994.
Vogelsong, Jay A., "Lucid Dreamer Survey Results," LuciDream Journal, Vol. 8.

 
     

Go on to Art Gallery of Flying Dreams




 
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©1999 Linda Lane Magallón * Version 9/10