A PRIEST-friend once said dead relatives sometimes appear in dreams to give surviving loved ones messages.
For young actress Therese Malvar, being young is no obstacle to contributing to nation building. "All the stories read today had a unifying message: that even if you are young, you can still be a modern-day hero. Nothing should stop you from helping your country," she said.
Most people ignore their dreams because most of the time, these seem to be meaningless and nonsensical.
Can art and imagery heal? “Oh yes, definitely,” said Dr. Joven Cuanang, who, some time ago, hosted a lecture by Todd B. Peyton, a licensed counselor with a master’s degree in Depth Psychology.
Having grown up in the city, I had always dreamt of a small place in the country—a fruit orchard and flower garden or an organic-vegetable farm with pet dogs, goats, free-range chickens and a family of pigs.
According to Wikipedia: “A dream is a succession of images, ideas, emotions and sensations that usually occur involuntarily in the mind during certain stages of sleep.”
Studies showed that the frustrations and emotions associated with unfulfilled psychological needs did indeed influence the themes noticed in people's dreams.
Every day since he took office two years ago, the man 16 million Filipinos elected president has been revealing a progressive exacerbation of his “antisocial narcissistic personality disorder,” a condition clinically established and judicially acknowledged. For some reason—in itself possibly pathological—many of his supporters remain in denial of it.
A frustrated and exasperated woman recently asked: “How come whatever I do, I cannot make my dreams come true? No matter how many times I make mental affirmations and maintain a positive attitude I am not able to manifest what I want or achieve my goal. Is there anything wrong in what I am doing? Is there a formula for successful goal attainment?”
I recently received an email from Keith Dovichi, an American living in Pioneer, California, with an intriguing question: “Can a...