Peter in a comment to one of my posts relates a dream, and asks if it works as a TSK practice to make the dream as past into a presence. My general answer is that everything is okay in TSK. As to whether this is helpful, I actually could imagine (Peter, as a psychologist you would know better than I) that this could be a very interesting way to work with dreams; that it would help them come more alive. Arthur, perhaps you have a comment to this?
Of course, in TSK in general the focus on the content of the dream, or the effort to interpret it, is not the main point. But to go into the felt experience of the dream, in effect exchanging past and present, seems useful. One limit might be the question I raised the other day: how much are we a different person (different people) when we dream, even if those different people are working out issues that they have in common with our waking selves.
Jack