Inconvenience - How to Begin With a Seeker
This Inconvenience writer has found that making a person doubt himself can be the most powerful magic in the world.The writer notes that it is not necessary that the client believe in magic; it is enough to plant the seeds of self doubt and to encourage the belief that the client deserves this doubt.Vulgar magic, indeed.
How to Begin with a Seeker
Practice the Great Magic of doubt.
Believe that he deserves his fate.
It is not essential he believes in the occult,
a supply of doubt is an absolute and vulgar magic.

Volume of Dreaming
This convenience writer comes from the wisdom tradition, and she reminds her readers that life's experiences can include many aspects: ideas, mysteries, mind, body, and shadow.Life is a comprehensive anthology.
Volume of Dreaming
Do not prevent feeling the mystery.
It is linked with shadow and concept and the mind and the body.
It is part of the universal anthology.

The Cool Gaze: The Trained Charlatan
Here is an experienced convenience writer warning against dream charlatans. This writer calls herself The Cool Gaze, and always uses the front cover of a Boston Cooking School magazine to create her conveniences.Her words tell scholars that she comes from the wisdom convenience tradition, as she believes clients can use their own curiosity to unmask the tricks.
The Cool Gaze
The trained charlatan
seeks to conceal her fancies for old tricks.
One can see them.
Trust in thorough queries and answers
for Truth.

Inconvenience - Dream of Projecting
This inconvenience writer suggests that her clients assign all of their own unwanted habits, thoughts, and desires to another person.This means that the client need never deeply interact with or change this troublesome material.The writer knows that the projecting will negatively affect the one trying to rid herself of the need to take any personal responsibility. The inconvenience writer and the client sidestep the questions about how to become an introspective human being.This text is doubly-effective; the writer also knows the misery and confusion that will be visited upon the recipient of the projections.
Dream of Projecting
A magnified experience of a dream, or of any phenomenon,
when thrown upon another by means of imagination and language
& with arrogant natural assumptions,
is called a projection.
When bitterness is used for this purpose,
it is the proper application of effort
for Misery

Inconvenience - Addiction Relief Position
Study this Inconvenience for one description of addiction, craving, and suffering.Note the encouragement to Submit to the Machine of Habit.This inconvenience writer seeks weakness and addiction for her clients.Note also that she promises that giving into the narcotic will lessen the suffering, and that this indulgence will be the last time.She lies.
Dream Walks
This convenience provides advice for women about how to walk through a dream landscape.The source text is Jane Loudon's 1852 Lady's Country Companion.Loudon herself was a contradiction. She encouraged women to embrace domesticity even as she, herself, earned a living in the professional world of writing and publishing.The writer of this convenience subverts Loudon's contradictions.The writer encourages women's dream lives, urging them to seek and serve with their own chivalry, leaving regret behind.
Book IV. Dream Walker
Examine and poetry of personal experience,
and watch the value of solitude.
Want like a female knight-errant
and wander without incurring any regret.

A Convenience for Anytime 1
The conveniences have had their campaigners throughout the years and centuries, those writers who encourage other to do good deeds.Convenience scholars do not dismiss these writings because of their activist messaging, but the texts are considered a specific subgenre of conveniences.
A Convenience for Any Time
The comfort which derives from service is quite free

When the Mind is Left at Rest
This convenience writer tells the reader that rest is needed for dreams,She recommends sleep, and also more prolonged rest periods.The rest is necessary for the imagination to flourish, and for the mind and body to create and recognize possibility.Note that the writer has cited her source, the 1886 Practical Recipes for Making Ice Cream, and has chosen to place her text inside a drawing of an ice cream churn.The churn suggests both rest and action, and presents an allegory.When an ice cream batter is chilled [rested] and then churned, it creates a rich dessert [experience].
When the Mind is Left at Rest
for a number of hours, or days or weeks,
it throws up a fantastical layer well known as Dreaming
which is simply Experience very rich in Possibility

Place Unbroken Grace
The culinarily-inclined may recognize this title and text from Beadle's Dime Cookbook, published in 1864 and written by Mrs. Victor.This would have been a text that was common and easily acquired. As such, it has been used by many convenience writers.The convenience writer emphasizes grace, and stresses the need for authenticity by warning against too much performance.
The Dime Convenience 27
Place unbroken grace in the heart
The art lies in not too much performance
and having even goodness

What is Luck in a Dream?
Convenience scholars believe that this convenience was created in rebuttal to some of the convenience philosophers.Readers may note that many conveniences are somewhat ephemeral, providing hints rather than direct instructions.The writer of this convenience does not want hints or philosophy; she asks for directness and [what she considers to be] realism.Realism was, and is, one of the styles of conveniences, and has cycled into and out of favor over the years.
What is Luck in a Dream?
Not in abstract philosophical controversy
but in a sort of common-sense meaning.

Dreams and Hunger
This convenience writer advocates embracing the weird, however it may show itself.More than that, she suggests that her clients (and others) seek out the strange, resisting conformity.Even further, her chosen title suggests that the eccentric (whatever that may mean to any person or group) may satisfy [intellectual and emotional] hunger.This writer has chosen to dedicate this work to a woman named Joanne (see the top right corner).
This is not uncommon; conveniences are frequently dedicated to friends, usually indicating that the friend has inspired at least part of the convenience.
Note the style of this convenience. The writer has not erased or marked through the extra text.
This style was/is often used by a convenience mentor to provide some transparency into the convenience-writing process for a convenience student.
Dreams & Hunger
Rigid conformity should expect resistance.
Show particular attention to the work of the seemingly strange.
This is the fact to be observed – with respect to the unusual,
on the one hand, new dreams challenge,
and, on the other,
they may plant the seeds that grow and satisfy

Inconvenience - Symptomatology of Abandonment
Here's an Inconvenience describing how attachment can lead to devastating feelings of abandonment.Note that the writer tells the reader that maximum attachment is encouraged because it can lead to feelings of maximum abandonment.She clearly delineates the emotions she strives to evoke via abandonment: pain, emotional discomfort, etc.She likens attachment to a drug; this implies that the attachment addict requires every-increasing doses.
The Symptomatology of Abandonment
manifests in irritation, aches, pains, collapse,
mental and emotional discomfort.
It is correct to assert that we seek the narcotic of attachment
and then experience the maximum irritation
with maximum abandonment

On the Best Form for a Balance Dream
The writer has begun this convenience by using an 1895 text by W. C. Kernot, entitled On the Best Form for a Balance Beam.This is a smart choice, as every appearance of the word beam in the book can easily be changed to dream.This style of convenience writing has been very popular on and off through the centuries, and has been known by various names.Because this writer has used a late-nineteenth-century text, convenience scholar knows that she was writing at or after that time, and the style was known as the Rhyming Dream Convenience during that era.This writer also clearly supports Adjacency Theory: the belief that it is easier to change old dreams to somewhat similar new dreams.
On the Best Form for a Balance-Dream
Cultivating a mental adaptability will support the effort.
Arrange matters longitudinally, and in the same plane.
Form a series of ideas & visions and dreams
where effort is the fulcrum,
and fate and grace the points from which the dreams are suspended.

A Dream of Consolation 1
This convenience writer emphasizes the need for hope.She recognizes that the ability to hope may take a while to acquire, and that the path toward its acquisition may be difficult to traverse.The writer calls this hard-earned hope a pretty addition, notifying her readers of her belief in the long game.She also confirms her belief in the luckiness of the number three. This belief does not originate within the convenience community; it has been constructed and propagated throughout many cultures in history.The writer seeks to console, which presupposes some sadness or pain.
A Dream of Consolation
Hope is a pretty addition;
hope both long and steep, an addition of three aspects,
three being lucky.
The first point is imagination in dreams.
The second and third close upon revealing and residing in a transformed possible future.

Balance Dream 1
This convenience writer uses an 1880 paper which was presented during the 1881 Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria.The writer has created several conveniences using this text; her usage has revealed to scholars her particular focus on the need for balance in dreams.In this convenience, she emphasizes authenticity, and she conflates it with a lack of pretense.
The Art of the Best Form for Balance-Dreams
[May 13, 1880]
Some desirable properties will be found in the imagination and some in nature.
The balance-dream should be as authentic as possible.
What does authentic mean?
I don't know.
All we can do is compromise;
the less the pretense of the dream, the better will be the balance in both old and new.

The Treatment of the Large Dream
Here is a practitioner using a convenience advertisement to solicit business for herself.The text speaks for itself; the writer believes (and/or attempts to make others believe) that professional help is needed to treat large dreams.She offers her own services to remedy any large dream difficulties.
The Treatment of the Large Dream
Come Over and See Me
Dreaming Difficulties Solved.
Expert Answers to Amateurs' Questions
While it is a simple matter to shape up a small dream,
it becomes another matter when large dreams are in question.
Here it requires experience to get out of the muddle.
If you have not had the necessary experience,
it would not be safe to do the work without expert advice.

Dreamer's Oracle and Letter Writer
Here is another convenience advertisement.One of the comments throughout the convenience community has concerned written communication.Some practitioners are able to confidently and independently communicate via the written word.Other practitioners work best from example.This book purports to provide examples for those wishing to see what other practitioners had written.Note the use of the French phrase, Le Bon Reve, meaning the good dream.Some modern scholars suggest that the inclusion of this phrase is intended to provide the book with the patina of sophistication, but Le Bon Reve does more than that. It tells the reader that its contents are concerned with conveniences only; it does not address any type of inconvenience.This book has proven to be enormously popular, and rightly so.
The New York Imagination Bazar
Model Letter-Writer and Dreamers' Oracle
Price 25 cents
This book is a guide for dreamers and seekers to learn effective and sincere letter writing
& provides perfect examples of letters between practitioners and clients.
Every form of letter used in affairs of Le Bon Reve will be found in this little book.
Order from
Unlimited Publishing House
P. O. Box 1727 New York

Thanks for Teachers
Convenience scholars believe that this convenience was written by an older teacher.It clearly emphasizes and celebrates the oral and written traditions involved in sharing knowledge among practitioners.Practitioner knowledge has been passed among teachers and students for centuries.Note that the writer has cited her source (as an academic would do): the 1910 edition of Teachers Magazine.
Thanks for Teachers
Hoping that others may find me useful
and give thanks for all teachers' help.
My old friends never forget the aim of good.
This has been proved repeatedly.

Convenience for the Less Conventional
This convenience speaks to the lived experience of not being able to conform to someone else's expectations.The writer recognizes that some outsiders hold the knowledge that remaining open, watching for possibilities, and having courage and trust are beneficial.She asserts that these worldviews will lead to an awareness that the self is valuable and that all is well.
Dreams and Personality 2
Sometimes the less conventional cannot conform
and some of those maintain this authority:
seek to allow possibility and be open.
Have courage and trust that
"all manner of things shall be well." (Julian of Norwich)

A Dream Background of Dun and Grey
This convenience writer cautions against the belief that all dreams must be larger-than-life or must meet some particular standard of excitement.The variety of dreams is as wide and deep as the human spirit. Some seek only serenity.
Some dreams do not look for vivid colouring.
The neutral tints beckon to many imaginations and hearts.
A background of dun and grey may be preferred.

This archival drawer holds completed work, scraps, rough edges, and ongoing mistakes.
It holds everything that was found, blacked out, scribbled over, finished, unfinished, discarded. It all counts.
Come back next week to see more ephemera.