Jonathan Livingston Seagull is a short book about “Buddhism” written by the none Buddhist author Richard Bach. I relate my dreams to this book so that all people may better understand higher level of existence (heavens) and how they can get higher into those levels. The video above serve as a metaphor that instead of people being like seagulls, an allegory, learning how to fly to higher levels of existence, like in the book, they could become like Blue Angels pilots. In other words the blue angel pilots are the seagulls (the metaphor). The music lyrics “Dreams” also serve as a good representation of the book Jonathan Livingston Seagull theme.
My dreams are divided into two categories, the first Heaven Dreams and the second Past Lives which are both interconnected with each other. There is a third one , events dreams, but is not directly related with levels of existence. Your level of existence will be determined by your good-bad actions taken in past lives, what we Buddhist call good-bad karma, and it applies to all religions. For example, you do not have to die to go to hell, for some people in their human existence, they live in hell from the moment they wake up in the morning to the moment they go to sleep at night (people in jail, forced labor, prostitution, drug addiction, extreme poverty, born with mental or physical ailments, etc). So what determines how you are borne (poor/rich, healthy/sick, good-looking/bad-looking, good/bad kid) at the human level of existence, here on earth, are your good or bad actions (karma) taken in present and past lives.
My dreams explain all of this points in a logical chronological manner which I extend with the scientific explanation. The dreams I have had and I’m having about heaven and past lives feel real while I’m having them while sleeping. It feels like I’m actually in a real place or reliving experiences from my past lives which are in the subconscious part of my brain (neurosciences). I also have, as a scientist, the most logical explanation of what is happening from a scientific standpoint.