(Undetermined)"). This made them and the idea surrounding them more accessible to ordinary people, not just those who attended art fairs or went to the stores where they were sold. Dream catchers became popular for parents to purchase to hang over their children's beds to ease children's fears of having nightmares. The belief that a magical object kept bad dreams away in many cases actually led to a decrease in nightmares because they were repressed by the. These events instilled in children the belief in the dream catcher and its ability to protect them. As the children grew up, they associated the dream catcher as a way to ward off all bad things, even if children. now grown up they no longer believe in the power of the dream catcher, it still gives them a sense of comfort and they have passed it on to their children, however, the dream catcher has spread beyond simply using it to calm children, people of all ages have started to keep dream catchers around the house. to keep negative energy away. According to Miss Amy DuBois, a dream catcher craftsman, dream catchers "allow people to bring a spiritual sense into their lives, and they resonate with people" (Heaney, "Big Dreams, 'Tiny Spaces': Catch a glimpse of artwork at Freedlove on First Friday"). Some people, however, purchased the dream catcher simply for its beauty and to use it as decoration without entertaining its supposed purpose
tags