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Saturday, 12 July 2025

Imaginal Realms and Dreamworlds


Imaginal Realms and Dreamworlds: Between Matter and Mind – Exploring Shared Dreamworlds and the Subconscious


Abstract

This essay examines the idea of imaginal realms and shared dreamworlds as spaces that lie between matter and mind, where individual and collective subconscious forces intersect. Drawing from Sufi metaphysics (‘alam al-mithāl), Jungian psychology, Tibetan dream yoga, and Western esotericism, it explores how dreams, visions, and imaginal experiences create a participatory reality that is neither strictly physical nor merely subjective. We consider whether shared dreamworlds are real, symbolic, or a synthesis of both; why these realms are difficult to sustain; and how they serve as bridges connecting individual awareness to collective memory and archetype. Ultimately, we argue that imaginal realms are not illusions, but necessary thresholds through which consciousness remembers its roots and extends its reach beyond the boundaries of waking life.


Introduction

“Between the world of spirit and the world of flesh, there is a place made of image.” — Paraphrased from Henry Corbin

Throughout human history, people have reported shared visions, prophetic dreams, shamanic journeys, and places seen not with the eyes, yet experienced as real.
Such experiences belong to what mystics, psychologists, and philosophers have called the imaginal realm, an intermediate domain between matter and mind.

This essay explores:

  • What imaginal realms and shared dreamworlds are.

  • How they arise from and shape the subconscious.

  • Why they are difficult to access or sustain.

  • And why, despite their elusive nature, they remain central to the story of consciousness seeking itself.


I. The Imaginal Realm: Neither Fiction Nor Physical

The term imaginal realm (‘alam al-mithāl) comes from Sufi metaphysics:

  • It is not imagination as fantasy, but a real ontological realm.

  • It exists between the formless spiritual world and the dense material world.

Henry Corbin writes:

“The mundus imaginalis is the place where archetypes become images, yet remain more real than material objects.”

In this realm:

  • Symbols live and move.

  • Visions and dreams have causal power.

  • Individual mind and universal mind meet.


II. Jungian Psychology: Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious

Carl Jung described the collective unconscious as a shared psychic substrate:

  • Populated by archetypes — universal patterns like the Mother, the Shadow, the Hero.

  • These archetypes emerge in dreams, myths, and visions.

Dreams become portals to a shared symbolic language, through which the personal subconscious meets the collective.

Jung noted that:

  • Symbols seen by one person can appear in the dreams of others.

  • Dreams sometimes reveal truths unknown to the waking self.


III. Shared Dreamworlds: Myth, Folklore, and Modern Reports

Across cultures, we find stories of dreamworlds visited by many:

  • The Dreamtime in Australian Aboriginal lore: an eternal realm shaping and sustaining the visible world.

  • Tibetan dream yoga: training to navigate shared dream landscapes consciously.

  • Shamanic journeys: entering worlds where spirits, ancestors, and other dreamers may meet.

Even in contemporary accounts:

  • People report shared lucid dreams, synchronised symbols, or mutual awareness in sleep.

The question is not merely whether these places “exist” materially, but whether they function as shared imaginal space; bridges where psyches overlap.


IV. Between Mind and Matter: The Role of the Subconscious

Dreamworlds arise from the subconscious:

  • Personal memories, emotions, and desires.

  • Shaped by deeper archetypal currents.

Yet they are not purely subjective:

  • Symbols often resonate with universal motifs.

  • Visions sometimes reveal information unknown to the dreamer.

This suggests that the imaginal realm is inter-subjective: created by mind, yet sharing qualities of an independent world.


V. Why Sustaining These Realms is Difficult

Ordinary awareness quickly forgets or dissolves imaginal experiences.
Why?

  1. Neural embodiment: waking consciousness is tied to sensory inputs and body processes.

  2. Time perception: imaginal realms often feel timeless, conflicting with linear thought.

  3. Collective consensus: waking reality is reinforced by shared belief; imaginal reality is more fragile.

  4. Ego boundaries: individuation creates necessary limits; merging too deeply threatens self-coherence.

As Jung noted, encounters with archetypal forces can overwhelm or fragment the ego if integration fails.


VI. Functions of Imaginal Realms and Shared Dreams

These realms are not just curiosities:

  • They heal by revealing hidden truths.

  • They connect us to collective memory and mythic patterns.

  • They allow symbolic rehearsal of choices and fears.

In ritual and myth, communities return symbolically to these realms:

  • To renew collective bonds.

  • To remember origins beyond separation.

As Mircea Eliade wrote:

“Ritual and myth are the means by which the sacred is made present in the profane.”


VII. Beyond Binary: Real or Imagined?

Are shared dreamworlds real?
They are not material, yet not mere hallucination.

They belong to a third ontological category:

  • Real in effect and meaning.

  • Mutable, shaped by mind.

  • Accessible through altered states, symbol, and story.

The mundus imaginalis is thus a participatory reality: it exists because consciousness meets it.


VIII. Myth, Memory, and the Imaginal Bridge

As explored in Myth as Memory of the Singularity, myth arises from these imaginal depths:

  • Remembering unity.

  • Encoding archetypal truths.

  • Offering maps to navigate inner and outer worlds.

Shared dreamworlds are living myths: collective memories unfolding in real time.


Conclusion

Imaginal realms and shared dreamworlds stand between matter and mind:

  • They remind us that reality is not limited to what can be weighed or measured.

  • They reveal how profoundly interconnected individual minds are.

Though difficult to sustain, these realms serve as thresholds:

  • Where self and other, conscious and unconscious, memory and possibility meet.

  • Where the story of becoming unfolds in living symbols.

By honouring and exploring them, we deepen our remembrance of who and what we truly are.

“The dream is the small hidden door in the deepest and most intimate sanctum of the soul.” — Carl Jung


Bibliography / Works Cited (by title & author):

Primary and philosophical:

  • Creative Imagination in the Sufism of Ibn Arabi — Henry Corbin

  • The Imaginal Realm — Henry Corbin

  • The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious — Carl Gustav Jung

  • Man and His Symbols — Carl Gustav Jung

  • Memories, Dreams, Reflections — Carl Gustav Jung

  • The Red Book — Carl Gustav Jung

Mythology & anthropology:

  • The Hero with a Thousand Faces — Joseph Campbell

  • The Power of Myth — Joseph Campbell with Bill Moyers

  • The Myth of the Eternal Return — Mircea Eliade

  • Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy — Mircea Eliade

  • Dreamtime: Aboriginal Tales of the Ancestral Powers — Ainslie Roberts & Charles P. Mountford

Eastern philosophy:

  • The Tibetan Yogas of Dream and Sleep — Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche

  • The Upanishads — Various authors

  • The Tao Te Ching — Lao Tzu

Modern & supporting:

  • The Book of Symbols — Taschen

  • Myth and Reality — Mircea Eliade

  • The Perennial Philosophy — Aldous Huxley

  • The Secret Teachings of All Ages — Manly P. Hall






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