The Sun Archive
A Resource for Spiritual Discovery & Inquiry
On Dreams

"Jacob's Dream" by William Blake, Circa 1805
The mystery of dreams has long mystified and fascinated us. Theories abound about what dreams mean, what purpose they serve, and what role they play in our lives. Whatever approach one takes to study dreams, trying to understand their true meaning requires a deeper study and self-reflection. Because a true study of dreams requires the use of higher form of wisdom and insight, this study relies upon the insights gathered through Anthroposophy, psychology, and the author's personal experiences.
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The term "dreams" refers to a different state of consciousness when the human being, or "I", is no longer in a waking state. We feel tired and as a result go to sleep. All of us accept this as an axiom without understanding the true reasons as to why a human being requires sleep at all. This necessary cycle between waking and sleeping is a vital aspect of human existence when, after depleting its resources, the human being must somehow recharge itself. But what happens during this time, and why?
Spiritual studies and Anthroposophy reveal that the human being requires sleep because that eternal part of us that resides within the folds of the physical self must be recharged. It can only be recharged by higher, spiritual forces. For those mysterious forces to flow into the soul, we must temporarily abandon our physical form and return to the spiritual worlds; the same place from when we came prior to being born and shall return after we die. During this time, the physical form is sustained, informed, and transformed in mysterious ways by God, angels, and divine beings who oversee human evolution.
After our forces have been depleted during the day, we sleep and magically awaken to feel better - or at least we should. Fatigue caused by mental exertion, physical effort, illness, etc. all require the human being to be recharged and renewed for another day. Behind this fact, lies a deeper mystery that Dr. Rudolf Steiner spoke of at length. Every day the soul cycles and is compelled to return to that eternal region where the individual can heal the damage. There, all living beings, including animals, return to the spiritual worlds to be restored for another cycle of waking life.
During our waking lives, living beings continually wear ourselves down on multiple levels including our energy body (Etheric), the Astral body (our soul or light body which carries emotions, passions, etc.), and our physical body. The "I" appears recede into the background although depending on one's degree of consciousness - or awareness - some people have greater memory and clarity of their dream experiences upon waking. These experiences occur over approximately 1/3 of the time of our physical lives. Anthroposophy shows us that these experiences - most of which are not remembered by the average person - are consciously reviewed after death and are just as vital as our experiences are during waking life.
The terms "etheric" and "astral" are Anthroposophical terms which can also be found in Theosophy, yoga, and other fields of spiritual study. They are used to describe the hidden aspects of the human being. Regardless of the vernacular used, the eternal in us - the soul - leaves the physical form while sleeping and remains connected to it, until it returns to the physical form to continue another cycle of waking and sleeping. Upon falling asleep, human beings - and indeed any living being that has consciousness - experiences a shift in consciousness.
Dreams consist of images, symbols, and situations that often do not conform to our understanding of waking life or how one thinks and engages in the world. The precise moment when the soul leaves the physical sheath, and yet remains connected to it, is not discernible. The "astral" and the "I" of the human being are two separate and yet interwoven aspects of each human being. They are interwoven with one another.
While I do not have data to support the claim that many of us do not remember our dreams, Dr. Rudolf Steiner informs us that most of our dreams are not remembered until our consciousness matures. If one reflects objectively upon one's dream life, one will frequently find that dreams are not remembered upon waking. However, we are having real spiritual experiences during that time regardless of our ability to remember our dreams.
While sleeping, our consciousness is subject to the laws of the spiritual worlds where thoughts, emotions, experiences, and forms that we created and carry within us emerge outwardly and can be observed by ourselves and others who occupy the same space. What was inner, becomes outer. What we are feeling, thinking, and willing - which is a deep mystery of the human soul - is apparent and observable. All sorts of impulses and activities occur that have substance and expression. All of these experiences occur on the astral plane or spiritual spheres.
These experiences - while mostly hidden - are as important as the experiences we have during our waking lives. On average, dreams consist of about 1/3 of the time of our lives. According to Anthroposophy, this corresponds to the amount of time that a soul spends in purgatory - or "kamaloca" - after death as he or she settles into the spiritual worlds and a new destiny. Dr. Steiner informed us that after death, all of our dreams are remembered; each soul is reborn.
Some researchers in the modern era have endeavored to create universal catalogs of dream imagery, but I believe that these images can only be applied at a general level. For example, what a lion or cheetah means to one person may mean something different to another and the soul will manifest that image - or perceive it - in accordance with its own experiences and the situation upon which a lion or cheetah is experienced in a dream. In other words, a context is needed.
Dr. Rudolf Steiner, and others who have written on the matter of dreams in light of higher knowledge, inform us that dreams occur on different planes of the spiritual worlds that consist of lower, middle, and higher spheres. The lower astral plane, for example, is referred to as the plane characterized by many aspects including desires, feelings, and passions. It is the spiritual plane that is closest to the earth.
Dr. Steiner referred to the higher planes, or what we consider Heaven to be in the Christian context, as "Lower Devachan" and "Higher Devachan." There are higher planes beyond those planes that are not perceptible to the modern human mind until one reaches a higher stage of development. As a soul moves beyond the lower astral plane, either after death or while dreaming, its experiences vary. All individuals who pass through the gate of death move through and exist within the same astral planes and can interact with souls who are dreaming. Typical dreaming is a lower form of consciousness while deceased souls who interact with dreaming souls do so in a waking form of consciousness.
The astral planes, or spiritual planes, are living spheres. They are populated by myriads of souls that are both incarnate and discarnate. Angels, archangels, and higher divine beings who oversee human evolution move throughout the spiritual planes in accordance with their activity and missions. Animals of all types, companions, friends, and those who have recently departed - and are awaiting rebirth - occupy the same planes. Dr. Rudolf Steiner informs us that higher animals do not necessarily need to reincarnate.
This may give the impression that the higher planes are crowded. Based on experience, there ere more "populated" areas than others. In addition, Dr. Steiner informed his students that souls can occupy the same space on the astral planes without seeing one another. The spiritual worlds are eternal and the concept of space in the physical world does not carry over well into the application of the eternal.
The physical plane is the lowest region of human experience and is tertiary. However, in addition to the higher spheres which are referred to as "Heaven" in the Bible, Dr. Rudolf Steiner also discussed a "subsensible" sphere where lower forces - and destructive forces - exist that have a necessary place in the evolution of the cosmos. Regardless, everywhere in the spiritual worlds are living souls - both incarnate and discarnate - who interact with one another.
In the higher planes - or worlds - there are many mansions. These "continents" or "cities" are perceptible as fields of light and structures separated by fields of light or black voids of nothingness. There is presence, stillness, motion, and activity in the spiritual worlds. Regardless, emotions, ideas, activities, thoughts, and experiences flow from soul to soul, the world, and the cosmos. Knowledge - as well as transformative and sustaining forces - flow from regions and through souls of all levels of existence.
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(1) "...our soul goes out in sleep from our physical and etheric bodies (energy body), and enters a world not subject to the laws of nature. That is why dreams are a mockery of those laws. We enter an entirely different world — a world to which we grow accustomed in sleep, just as when, awake in our physical body, we accustom ourselves to the world of the senses.
This different world is not governed by our laws of nature; it has laws of its own. We dive into this world every night on going out of our physical and etheric bodies. Dreams are a power which forcibly opposes nature's laws." - Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA227/English/RSP1966/19230822p01.html *Parenthesis are the author's.
(2) "The dream we have as we go to sleep and the dream we have just before waking both draw on the experiences of the day, break them up and give them all sorts of fantastic forms — at least we call them fantastic from the point of view of ordinary consciousness. The dissolving of a salt in a liquid is a good simile for the kind of thing that happens inwardly in a dream." -Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA227/English/RSP1966/19230822p01.html
(3) "In the time between going to sleep and waking, when our astral body (feeling body of passions, desires, and emotions) is no longer subject to these laws (natural laws of the outer world), and we are in a world where the force of gravity, the law of energy, in fact all laws of that kind have ceased to be valid, the way is clear for those moral impulses which down here, during waking life, can find expression only under the constraint of the world of the senses and its ordering.
Between sleeping and waking the Ego lives in a world where the moral law has the same force and power as the laws of nature have down here. And in that world where in sleep it is set free from laws of nature, the Ego can prepare itself for what it will have to be doing after death." -Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA227/English/RSP1966/19230822p01.html *Parenthesis are the author's.​​
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Thus, it is that the laws of nature - that is the outer laws of the physical world - "dissolve" when a person transitions into a higher sphere of consciousness which occurs during dreams. A similar transition occurs during death and meditation when the boundary and interference of the ego which is tied to the physical form, which necessarily finds its inputs from the outer world through the senses and the mechanics of the intellect, is carried forward in a different way into the world of the spirit. How mature an ego determines its memory and experiences. The dream, like meditation, is the bridge and the portal to the eternal in each human being; that which we are before birth, carry within us during life, and lives on after death.
As one crosses the first gate of inner consciousness, which manifests in dreams, symbols often emerge before us. These symbols are the subjective reflections of our souls which Buddha referred to as "Samskara." These are residual unpurified aspects of perception that need to be deciphered. This does not imply that these symbols are illusory. Rather, we must learn how to decipher for them for what they are which requires discernment, research, and reflection.
Symbols, feelings, hopes, fears, ideals, words, and behaviors that emerge during dreams are how the soul finds expression in alignment with spiritual laws. It is important to remember, however, that these reflections carry both higher and lower aspects (in terms of a moral foundation and how we perceive things) of our soul. This quality of perception often varies from person to person in subtle ways.
To understand the strange behaviors of our dreams, a person who endeavors to understand the deeper forces or our souls - and thus the deeper forces and karmic necessity of our lives - needs to understand the "language" of the soul. It is an education and an intuitive journey. Dreams are a fundamental aspect for he or she who seeks to "know thy self"; a central theme in the ancient Mysteries. In light of Dr. Rudolf Steiner and Anthroposophy, Edgar Cayce, Carl Jung, and those who have made progress on the path of seeing beyond the veil of the physical world, the fact is that much is hidden from our consciousness during our waking lives.
The known and hidden forces, thoughts, feelings, habits, and impulses of the human being manifest in dreams. In dreams, it frequently occurs that the "I" is separated from the soul which is housed in a physical form. During our lives, the soul is clothed with in a worldly identity - or lower Ego - that was built up during life. It finds its path to transformation, fulfillment, and reformation through this temporary form.
Dr. Steiner observed that after death, the experiences of our dreams are merged with our "I" and we become fully aware of everything that occurred during our waking and dream lives and how our decisions, dreams, and inner experiences shaped us into what we are. Through spiritual-dream experiences, the soul is preparing for its future life after death when a great transformation occurs and we are raised to a higher stage of consciousness and the fulfillment of a spiritual mission for ourselves, those we are connected to by karma, and the world.
If we observe our dreams carefully and objectively receive the messages that come to us by those who guide us on the path of life from the world of the spirit - whether they be guides, guardian angels, or companions - we can achieve our life's mission with greater clarity and confidence.




"Alchemy of Love" by Freydoon Rassouli.

"Joy Riders" by Freydoon Rassouli.
During dreams, objects which normally appear be in proportion and relation to one another based on the laws of physics, weight, movement, and gravity often do not appear that way. Our activity and perception are influenced by states of awareness and consciousness which influences our memory; both objective and subjective. The greater a person's clairvoyance, the greater is her or his memory and consciousness during dreams. Subjective dreams are mysterious, symbolic, confusing, and even disorienting. If constructive and inspired by genuine ideals, values, and virtues, the soul typically awakens feeling renewed and well.
Conversely, if a soul behaves against spiritual ideals, or bears a grudge towards another, the experience may be reflected back upon them in any number of ways. Emotional venting, for example, or ranting amongst one's private thoughts will always produce negative side effects. For example, a person may gossip or insult someone (either true or untrue) in thought or verbally thus resulting in some form of harm.
Later, during a dream, the offender may find themselves stranded and observe someone hurling rocks or objects at them, thus making them feel the same thing that they projected upon someone else. Or, the offender may find themselves being lectured or guided by someone and awaken to guilty feelings as they though they had wronged someone. It could also be that two people may find one another while dreaming and offer an apology. This is an objective experience between two souls.
Thoughts, words, deeds, and feelings are transmitted across the physical and spiritual worlds with the same intensity and intent upon which they were created. They must be faced by each soul at some point. Thus, we should consider these dream experiences as moments of reconciliations to get us on the right path especially if awaken feeling guilty or shameful. These frequently come through as directions given to us by those who helping us on the path of life which can flow through to us in dreams.
Symbolism, or subjectivity, is a preliminary stage of perception. When objective, experiences, beings, and activities appear before the soul in dreams as they truly are. This follows for perception in our waking lives as well. While it cannot be measured - except by those who have ascended to a higher and objective form of wisdom and vision - a substantial amount of our perceptions of things is rooted in a form of subjectivity either positive or negative.
This is an outcome of a disposition rooted in self control and maturity. It is at that moment of clarity and objectivity that beings appear to us who occupy the spiritual worlds. These interactions occur with divine guides, the deceased (of all stages of change), and those who are also dreaming somewhere in the world with whom we may have a relationship OR may have a relationship in the future.

"Dreams", 1858 by John Anster Fitzgerald
So, dreams are the windows to the soul that work within and along the activities, forces, and impulses of the human being that guide us on the path of life. Without crossing the threshold into the spiritual worlds - regardless of one's awareness of it - life in the physical world is not be possible.
Ideas, feelings, colors, and scenes colored by the travails of love, anxiety, regret, anger, stress, goals, ideals, and yearnings often appear outwardly during dreams. Reminders of our life's mission manifest in dreams that were planned prior to being born. These often unfold at specific intervals of our lives. What was inner becomes outer. Sometimes memories are presented to the soul, provided to us by divine guides and helpers who share the astral plane with us. Forces, ideas, and divine guidance are given to us during dreams. Additionally, opposing forces can also work upon and misguide us. Thus, it is important to consider and reflect carefully upon what we dream.
The materialistic impulse which pervades the world today typically brings darkness to our dreams. Only living thoughts, feelings, and genuine ideals enable us to have a clear dream life. Souls often appear before us in dreams as light forms; sometimes as they are in life - if they are also dreaming - while others appear in a form that they occupied before they died. Discarnate souls can assume masked appearances. It may be that discarnate souls cannot pierce through the interference of a dreamer which may be chaotic and confused, and thus may appear as masked or at a distance. It often requires a lot of patience and effort for our deceased loved ones to reach us in dreams.
Then, there are moments when discarnate souls appear objectively in their true form to us in dreams. This is much easier when the dreamer is at peace and centered; free of encumbrances. Negative aspects such as anxiety always create a barrier and require extra effort by those trying to reach us. Thus, they pick moments which can appear to the dreamer as a mystery. Regardless, all of us have interactions with deceased loved ones, divine guides, and even old companions with whom we may never have known during our lives. They may not be consistent interactions and we may not always remember them upon waking, but they do occur.
People who are alive in the physical world and dreaming can have common shared experiences or discussions. Oftentimes, these interactions go unnoticed and are not remembered by dreamers upon waking. Thus, it is important to write down one's dreams as messages are frequently passed on to a dreamer from those in the spiritual worlds which more frequently occur from loved ones and colleagues who have passed through the gate of the spirit. These often occur just after falling asleep or just before waking when memory is at its strongest.
Songs, comments, locations, names, etc. are frequently passed along to the soul during sleep and follow us in the coming days and even years of our lives. Songs are frequently shared between souls who have passed through the gate of death as inspiration or to inspire a connection. Thus, it makes sense to look at the lyrics of songs that are passed along to discern if there is a deeper message. Most of us have experiences with those who have passed through the gate of the spirit more often than we think.
For example, someone may be thinking of a deceased loved one and they might have a dream where they receive a phone call from that person. They pick up the phone, and the deceased loved one informs them quite clearly that "I am doing well", "don't worry about me", etc. The dreamer awakes quickly and remembers it. This is typically a genuine experience from a deceased loved one who is trying to get a message through using familiar symbols.
Another fact of the astral plane, and this applies to all of us while we dream, is that thoughts, feelings, experiences, yearnings, and ideas resonate in the soul and are outwardly perceivable as colors, images, and forces. It is also important to consider that those who have passed through the gate of death communicate differently. We use words as a primary form of discourse. However, souls occupying the astral planes who have passed through the gate of the spirit often communicate through images, feelings, discussions, and living forces that bring insights, ideas, and direction to our lives. They often use thoughts and the application of will to guide us and communicate with one another.
The traditional notions of privacy, in terms of thoughts, feelings, and experiences, must be discarded as they no longer apply in the astral-spiritual dream experience. Our thoughts, foods we ate, notions, and ideas are visible to those who approach us during dreams. Our most personal aspects are visible. In addition, there is a giving back process - and taking in process - during our dream lives of what we project that is constructive or destructive.
Physical experiences can follow us while we dream. Dr. Steiner quoted specific examples of people who experiences symbols that were reflections of purely physical events; small or large. For example, he quoted a person who had a cavity and in a dream observed a massive stone block with a burning hole in it. Ultimately it is up to the dreamer to develop an intuitive perspective, vocabulary, and informed disposition on what they are observing, feeling, thinking, and doing in their dreams.
Since leaders possessing genuine insights are not easily found in today's world, we should first rely on ourselves through self-education through informed sources such as a Dr. Rudolf Steiner, Edgar Cayce, and others.

"Dreams", 1858 by John Anster Fitzgerald
Final Thoughts
In conclusion, the experience of dreams is the result of a shift in consciousness which allows the soul to leave the physical form and enter into the spiritual worlds; also known as the "astral plane." During that time, the human being is frequently renewed and recharged and prepares for another day of activity in the physical world in pursuit of one's life task. During dreams, we give back experiences, thoughts, and feelings to those who can benefit from them, and receive in turn healing forces and guidance from those concerned about our personal lives and our karma which has brought us to this point in time in the world; a moment which is destined to evolve and change.
In dreams, whether it be constructive or destructive, what is inner becomes outer and we experience it as external forms. If we think, feel, and behave constructively during our waking lives in accordance with genuine ideals, we can give something back while we dream. For example, Dr. Steiner discussed in his lectures that delivering genuine spirit readings - including those who in his works - can greatly benefit those who have died.
Conversely, negative aspects also resonate across the universe through the human mind and the astral plane which find expression in dreams - and find people and souls who are objectified in these notions. Thoughts, ideas, and feelings are living things that arise and fall depending on their degree of intensity and the forces behind them.
We should never discount our dreams, but endeavor to build a memory of experiences so we can learn and allow them aide us on the path of life. If we have erred, and a dream brings that fact back to us externally, then let us use that information to heal others and take corrective action. If a message or information comes through from divine messengers, loved ones, or colleagues, it is a good idea to write it down and reflect upon its true meaning. Was it straightforward or symbolic? Do not discount if it appeared to be confusing and meaningless, but rather look for correlations and how the symbolism may apply in our lives in the future.
Forces such as inspiration ("spiritus" or "divine breath") and helpful direction for leading a productive life often flow through our dreams and can helps us, others, and the world. If we allow them to flow through us, we can reach our highest potential and lead more balanced lives.

"Dreams", 1858 by John Anster Fitzgerald
Quotes from Dr. Rudolf Steiner
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(1) From early till late he is occupied with his work and his daily experiences; he makes use of his intellect and his outer senses. He lives and works in what we call the waking state. But that is only one state; between waking and sleeping there is another. In this state he is aware of pictures, dream pictures, passing through his soul. These pictures are not directly related to the external world and ordinary reality. We may call this the dream-state, and it is interesting to study how it takes its course. Many people suppose that dreams are nonsense, but this is not so." -Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA095/English/RSPAP1986/19060902p01.html
(2) "When in sleep a man is out of his physical and etheric bodies with his Ego and astral body, he finds himself within the being who goes through repeated lives on Earth. What gives inner strength to the sleeping man, what above all is inwardly active in his being, is the Ego together with the astral body. These need not be limited to memories of experience in the life just over, but can go back to other lives on Earth." https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA227/English/RSP1966/19230822p01.html
(3) "Everyone is familiar with the external characteristics of the upsurging and ebbing life of pictures arising in dreams. I shall speak of a few of these characteristics only. The dream arises as the result of some definite instigation. Firstly, there are dreams which have been instigated by the senses. A dream may arise because a clock is ticking away beside us. In certain circumstances the pendulum-beats become the trampling of horses, or perhaps something else.
Certain sense-images, therefore, are found in the dream. I lay particular stress on this, for dream-experience bases itself upon numerous impressions received by the outer senses. But what works upon the outer senses never works in the dream in the same form as in the ordinary waking life of day. The sense-impression is always transformed into symbolism — a transformation that is actually brought about by the life of soul." -Rudolf Steiner, Manifestations of the Unconscious Dreams, Hallucinations, Visions, Somnambulism, Mediumship, GA 67 https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA067/English/Singles/19180321p01.html
(4) "...if we...examine dreams of this (first) type, we find that the pictures derive their whole character chiefly from the nature of the man himself, from the individuality of his ego. (Only, we must not study dreams like the psychiatrists who bring everything under one hat.)
If we have an understanding of dreams—I say, of dreams, not of dream-interpretation—we can often learn to know a man better from his dreams than from observing his external life. When we study all that a person experiences in such dreams we find that it always points back to the experience of the ego in the outer world." -Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA234/English/RSP1931/19240208p01.htmlf
(5) "...for example, a man dreams of seeing a row of white pillars, one of which is damaged or dirty; he wakes up with this dream and finds he has toothache. He then sees that the row of pillars ‘symbolises’ the row of teeth; one tooth is aching, and this is represented by the damaged or, perhaps, dirty pillar. Or a man may wake up dreaming of a seething stove and find he has palpitation of the heart.
Or he is distressed in his dream by a frog approaching his hand; he takes hold of the frog and finds it soft. He shudders, and wakes up to find he is holding a corner of his blanket, grasped in sleep. These things can go much further. A man may dream of all kinds of snake-like forms and wake up with intestinal pains." -Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA234/English/RSP1931/19240208p01.html
(6) "It is the course of the dream just that which does not interest ordinary consciousness and which I can only call the dramatic quality of the dream—that begins to interest us most. We see behind the scenes of dream-life and, in doing so, become aware that we have before us something related to man's spiritual being in quite a definite way. We see that, in a spiritual sense, the dream is the human being, as the seed is the plant." -Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Search.php?q=dreams
(7) "The astral world is as transparent as the dream-pictures; it is, as it were, woven out of dreams. But these dreams which constitute the astral world differ from ordinary dreams, for they are the images of a reality, just as “real” a reality as the physical world. We perceive this reality in the same way in which we perceive dreams, for the astral world, too, is perceived symbolically. You all know that the world of dreams is a symbolical world. Everything from the world outside which enters our sleep, takes on a symbolical aspect in our dreams...
For example, you may be dreaming that you have caught a frog. You feel its slippery body, and on waking up you find that you are holding the cold end of the sheet in your hand. Or you may dream that you are in a cellar, in a dark hole full of spiders' webs: You wake up ... with a headache. Or you may see snakes in your dream, and when you awake you will find that you have abdominal pains. Or another dream: An academician has a long dream of a duel, beginning with some insult and ending with the pistol-shot: He hears the shot, awakes, and discovers that a chair has fallen." -Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA100/English/ANS1942/19070619p01.html *This is an abridged quote.
(8) "...Not only does time run backwards, so to speak, but the whole conception of time loses its meaning in a dream. During a dream, we may pass through a whole life in the fraction of a second, in the same way in which our whole life passes before our soul's eye during the moment of drowning, or crashing. The point to be borne in mind in all these dream-pictures is that the cause which gave rise to them appears in the form of IMAGES.
This is the case in the astral world. Its images can be interpreted. The same astral experience always appears in the form of the same image; there is always regularity and harmony in these pictures of the astral world, whereas our ordinary dreams are chaotic. In the end, we can find our way about in the astral world just as well as in the physical world. " -Rudolf Steiner, https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA100/English/ANS1942/19070619p01.html
(9) "Another result of the inverse unraveling of things in the astral world (where dreams occur) is that it teaches man to know himself. Feelings and passions are expressed by plant and animal forms. When man begins to behold his passions in the astral world, he sees them as animal forms. These forms proceed form himself, but he sees them as if they were assailing him.
This is because his own being is objectivized - otherwise, he could not behold himself. Thus it is only in the astral world that man learns true self knowledge in contemplating the images of his passions and animal forms which hurl themselves upon him. A feeling of hatred entertained against another being appears as an attacking demon.
This astral self-knowledge occurs in an abnormal way with those who are troubled with psychical illnesses which consist of constant visions of being pursued by animals and menacing entitles. The sufferers are seeing the mirror images of their emotions and desires." - Rudolf Steiner, An Esoteric Cosmology, Page 39-40. Parenthesis are the author's.