Gareth Branwyn in Slumberland

The Plutopia News Network podcast welcomes writer, editor, and media critic Gareth Branwyn to discuss his workshop “Dreaming for Creatives,” which focuses less on dream symbolism or interpretation and more on mining the “dream-time mind” for usable creative material. Gareth and the Plutopians reminisce about early-1990s zine and cyberculture scenes (The WELL, FactSheet 5, bOING bOING, Mondo 2000, “Jargon Watch,” and “Street Tech”), then shift into Branwyn’s lifelong dream practice, including lucid dreaming as a teen and techniques to improve dream recall, especially using a “dream recall tally sheet” and the habit of staying still upon waking to retrieve dream fragments. He describes three liminal sources of creativity: “night thoughts” (hypnagogic scribbles), “night bulbs” (clear middle-of-the-night insights), and dreams themselves. He gives examples of how these have shaped his work and even his name. The conversation also touches on “second sleep,” sleep tracking, recurring flying dreams, sleep paralysis and its eerie “presence” hallucinations, and the idea that paying attention to dreaming, like meditation, can deepen one’s relationship with consciousness — while still warning against turning dream work into an unhealthy obsession.

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Gareth Branwyn:

I’ve only done the workshop once so far, and one thing I wanted to make, clear because when I started talking it up before I did it — people immediately think you’re going to talk about dream interpretation, dream symbolism, which I have basically no interest in, besides the obvious things of that was clearly an anxiety dream, like I lost my wallet, or I lost my phone (I have those a lot) or I got lost at a conference. But I’m not interested in that at all, and so I really needed to make it clear that’s not what this is about. This is really mining your dream time mind for creative material. That’s really what my interest is.

Video on YouTube:

#dreamWork #dreamWorkshop #dreaming #lucidDreaming

More #DreamWorkshop thoughts

Woodworking shop first

big, at least 8 foot by 6 foot assembly / cutting / clamping table table. 19mm dog holes and vices everywhere.
big 8 foot x 3 foot cabinet makers bench for hand work. Tail vice, dog holes side vice.
Very long combined compound mitre / cross cut / radial arm saw
Router / shaper machine, power feed for safety etc
Big table saw / panel saw
jointer machine
planer thicknesser machine
drum sander
Bandsaw
bobbin sander
scroll saw
linisher
drill press.
Maybe a full sheet CNC router table
Lots of extraction
basically all the Veritas hand tools or similar
Basically all the festool power tools

Metal working shop

big 8 x 6 welding table. Dog holes, clamps, angles, you know how it goes.
Mig/TIG all the welding gear
gas axe
plasma cutter / maybe CNC table or CNC waterjet table.
bandsaw and cut off saw
bench grinder.
polishing stuff
bending brake
arbor press
hydraulic press
tube bender
tube notcher
lathe maybe cnc?
mill maybe cnc?
drill press

Sharpening shop
Basically Toromek and all the accessories
Plus hand lapping etc

blacksmithing

forge
anvil
swage block
madrel
all the tongs, fullers, hardy tools, hammers etc
power hammer / hydraulic press

finishing

spray booth
powder coating booth?
large finishing table
downdraft table for hand sanding
lots of extraction

wood carving
all the carving chisels, scorps, gouges, knives, etc
carvers vice on large workbench for all of this.
maybe a wood lathe for turning

Outdoor area
processing timber, cutting, splitting, carving
chainsaws
axes / adzes
froes
wedges

Complete set of all spanners, screwdrivers, sockets etc