Dreams are often approached as experiences to interpret or control.
Tibetan dream yoga treats them differently-as a place where the mind can learn how experience persuades.
The Night as Path explores dream practice not as a technique for lucidity or transformation, but as a disciplined inquiry into recognition, illusion, and restraint. Drawing on Tibetan Buddhist thought, the book examines how awareness arises within dreams, how it collapses, and how it matures when interference is withheld.
Rather than offering methods for manipulating dream content, the focus remains on conditions: ethical grounding, attentional stability, and the fragile moment when belief loosens. Dreams are treated as continuous with waking life, revealing not hidden meanings but the mechanics by which experience convinces.
Written for thoughtful practitioners and readers of Buddhist philosophy, The Night as Path approaches the night not as an escape, but as a terrain where the nature of experience can be seen more clearly.