I
was flattered, of course, because I had heard that many real artists, and some
would-be ones, kept dream journals (to protect the innocent, I won’t rattle off
any names at this point). I was eager to formalize my dream tracking because I
believed dreams could be a useful aid to my creative efforts while I was awake.
I no longer have this book – lost in the hassle of moving or constant travel.
Nevertheless, I still remember a few of my youthful dreams thanks to that
“dream book.”
Although
I don’t continue with the practice, except to make it a point to remember my
dreams (although, in the morning, they don’t even get short shrift once I do
remember them), the simple effort of “remembering,” that is, going over one’s
pictures of the night’s dreams before fully getting out of bed in the morning,
is a wonderful mental exercise. It’s difficult at first, since most dreams are
usually chaotic and appear to be utterly meaningless (when they’re not funny or
obscene), but if one persists over a period of time, it gets a lot easier.
I
always felt there was something cool about what went on at night while I
“wasn’t there.” In other words, when I was sleeping – oblivious to all that
goes on in the darkness of the unconscious. Things forgotten have a way of
percolating back up to our conscious level like an inverted aquifer (shy as
that may be of a useful metaphor), and such memories are, like dream
remembrances, well worth keeping tabs on. While I can’t vouch for this being
the case, I’ve always had the sneaking sensation that dreams are woven into a
tapestry that is worthwhile making some “sense” of. At least, to the point of
asking why they appeared at a given point
in my life.
Well,
when I was younger, my enthusiasm to discover those hidden secrets of my
subconscious soon waned. As the pages of my dream journal filled up with my
passionate, but idiotic scribbles, it kept turning into a “diary” of dream
events. I didn’t see the threat though them. I didn’t recognize how these
dreams were really just feelings “in picture form,” and I couldn’t make heads
or tails of it (of course, at that time, I was immersed in all the daft trends
of materialistic psychology as purveyed by that cottage industry, and worse),
so eventually, I slouched off and stopped.
But
enough about me. I wanted to talk about dreaming and the phenomenon of sleep,
because they are such a big part of our lives that we simply ignore. Think of
it. Over a third of our lives is spent sleeping. We’ll get that time back after
we’re no longer here, but it certainly does make me wonder what we actually
“do” while we’re sleeping. And, dreams are the only “tangible” things that
connects us, through a circuitous weave of tenuous memories and remembrances to
our sleep time. Naturally, the most palpable thing we get in the physical plane
from sleep is health!
Never
before in the History of humanity have people slept so little, which explains
why we’re the least healthy people of all time!
Do
you think that the ancients, those living before the Iron Age were tired when
they woke up in the morning? Do you imagine that the Black People suffered from
CFS (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome)? Not likely! If they had, they’d be well on
their way to an early grave… Life was not as forgiving as it is today with all
our machinations and medicines. We ought to start thinking a little more along
realistic lines before popping too many pills to regain wakefulness. Reducing
stress and sleeping more would go a long way towards dealing with that modern
syndrome, and with the lack of “animus” that fatigue entails.
That’s
right, us moderns sleep little and do even less once we’re allegedly awake. I
argue we never are truly awake during our daytime hours, if such hours are
being kept in our life. A little sleep shortens your life by weakening your
health (your inner forces, which include those underpinning your immune system).
A lot of sleep restores your health and replenishes your inner forces. And
herein lies the secret to sleep – it’s how we restore not only ourselves after
each new day, but our whole universe.
I
wish I could be more precise, but unfortunately, the nature of the beast is
such that a great many false ideas have been wrapped up in what the sleep state
is, and what dreams actually are – and, since we know squat about them and what
causes them – they continue to be a mystery to us. In this day and in this dark
age, it could hardly be otherwise…
Sleep
and Wakefulness
The
“eternal” cycle of day and night… the spinning of our planet around its axis…
at one point facing the sun at another away from it, conditions our physical
bodies to require sleep. Therefore, we truly have two types of consciousness –
the daytime (waking) consciousness and the night time (sleeping) consciousness.
We enjoy lots of differing degrees of consciousness within those two states,
but generally, we’re not aware of them (e.g., “daydreaming” is a “sleeping”
consciousness we experience when we tend to fall back into “sleep” because
we’re either bored, distracted, or fatigued.
As a
result, it seems that there is a “waking” consciousness – filled with all the
sense impressions we receive in our day-to-day – and a “sleeping” consciousness,
which is for us as unfathomable as a black hole. The two states of
consciousness are tightly woven into us with the circuit of the sun and the
rhythmic cycle of day and night (which in our subconscious is still a highly
mysterious phenomenon). And because when we fall asleep we lose consciousness,
intuitively we know that sleep is a lot closer to a state similar to death than
our waking-state. We don’t remember anything while we’re asleep and what we
believe we remember, namely dreams, are only the brief passing in and out of
the sleep state. Sleep always seems to us, intuitively, like falling into a
warm oblivion, and we forget everything… Then, rather jarringly, it’s that darn
alarm clock again!
And
just as there’s a waking-state and a sleeping-state, we have an intermittent “transition”
state period in between them, when we come in and out of our bodies. These
brief transitional states are when we actually dream. The very “dreaming” we do
is that transition out of our material state and then back into it (this may
occur several times during the night even when we’re not fully conscious of
being in our bodies).
Dreaming,
therefore, was always a sacred state for people in ancient times. They knew
well what was really going on as they passed into their nightly slumber and out
of it the following morning. They felt it and understood their own feelings
about it. And, might I add, back 4,000 years ago, and farther still, we were conscious of where we were. Back then, we were compelled to fall asleep soon
after the sun went down (not like today, when some of us night owls can be
awake all night and sleep during the day!). It wasn’t a choice then – it was
rather instinctive – we’d fall asleep after sundown whether we liked it or not!
That’s
why communal celebrations often lasted over several nights. These were
religious, or sacred, experiences for the Black People (and all ancient people,
everywhere!) – a kind of “endurance” test. In the distant past, we knew
“intuitively” or “instinctually” (however base you want to get) that staying up
“past our bedtime” was stealing away something the neteru gave us – HEALTH and
LONG LIFE – a chance to be with them, in their domain, while we slept. That was
the sacrifice people made. They sacrificed their “health” to honor the
neteru/gods – that’s how deep our commitment was to them.
Rituals
and rites grew out of this wisdom to become part of the Mysteries – in more
recent ages these “events” were the cherished Dionysian Bacchanals – which were
usually centered around the new moon or the full moon. Staying awake while we
should be in the “other realm,” namely, the spiritual realm, was done as a form
of “penance,” if you will. We forewent one to three nights of being in
communion with the neteru (the higher beings of the spirit, which in our
Western tradition are known as angels and archangels, etc.) in order to honor
them. But that was O.K., because we got to drink a lot of wine and party all
night.
Sleeping
induces a “slowing down” of basic bodily functions, like respiration, blood
flow, and nervous activity, etc. (these physiological changes are the
by-product of sleep or meditation, but are really a foreground or superficial
“benefit” compared to what we gain from sleep in our will and emotional life). For
once we fall asleep, and get past our physical “boundary” delimited by what we
remember of dreams, we are in a milieu where there are no sense impressions, or
sense-bound feelings, thoughts, or actions… Once we fall asleep, we’ve left our
bodies behind.
Life Is
A Dream, But Dreams Are Not Even Dreams
Let
us imagine that dreams are what the popular culture assumes them to be –
irrelevant flights of fancy. Thanks to Freud we have many misconceptions about
dreams. The eminent psychiatrist should have paid heed to his one-time
colleague and adversary, Jung, to get a better grasp of dreams for they are
part of our “collective unconscious” (although Jung’s conception seems equally
abstract if you don’t follow his idea through to its conclusion).
What
Freud missed is that we dream in retrospect about the future.
Say
what? Yes, we dream what we haven’t yet lived through, yet it’s there because
“everyone” has had a similar dream to ours and we’ve all lived through the same
experiences (in our sleep consciousness, which is where Reality starts). A
dream is based on our physical form, our appearance, our material surroundings,
and even our material circumstances. All of which are the stuff of nightmares
if you think about it too much.
Ever
dream of being rich? Probably not, unless you feel yourself rich, or are
otherwise satisfied emotionally (even if your net worth ain’t worth much). We
dream our circumstance… we dream our “reality” to a great extent. When you do
dream of being rich, or a feeling akin to what you imagine being rich feels
like, then you’re doing well (even if your bank account disagrees with that
assessment!). Either way, it’s a fleeting feeling.
Why?
Because invariably, during our waking state, being rich feels just like being
poor – it feels like shit – it feels like raw Fear!
And
here’s another thing that’s true of dreams… Remember, we all dream the same
things, mostly the same feelings… You may imagine it otherwise, and that’s fun
for you, but while we’re asleep, we’re all in the astral plane together. The
astral realm is one “made up” of Feelings. There’s nothing there beyond
Feelings (and that includes everything in the universe that can be felt, so
don’t think you’re being short-changed). Mostly, feelings of… yep, you go
it—Fear… in one form or another (one degree of intensity or a lesser one, but
it all adds up to the same thing).
Dreams
may trigger neurosis, as the Freud believed (actually, the neurosis triggers the
dream), but whatever does take place, believe me, no one dreams a surreal
dream, ala Salvador Dalí, or anything like that.
Our
dreams may be “weird” because they don’t fit right in with our daytime waking
“logic,” but they’re never far-off enough to be “surrealist.” That’s a
Hollywood convention (where Dalí worked in the 1940s) and fun to banter about
at a cocktail party (do people still have cocktail parties anymore?).
Yeah,
I can hear the complaints from here… people have their opinions and their a priori judgments and they’re hell bent
on them – nothing will loosen their death grip on these stupid ideas…
That’s
not so! I dreamed of a cat playing the sousaphone, or was it really an elephant?
No,
you didn’t – unless your cat or elephant actually plays the sousaphone in a
marching band during your waking day – you “saw” no such thing! Don’t recommend
teaching your elephant an instrument – they already have a pretty big horn to
play with as is!
How
do you know? Didn’t
I just tell you that we’re all asleep in the same place (a.k.a. the astral
plane)? And, depending on what part of the Earth you’re sleeping there are quite
a few people there with you, at the same time? Then why didn’t we all dream of your
cat, or that same musical elephant? The answer is: because you only sensed it…
What
happened is that you felt your cat or
your elephant playing the sousaphone in
your
dream, but it wasn’t rendered that way to your inner eye (i.e., yourself
watching inside your widescreen, HD home theater and entertainment center
inside your head/heart/limbs). Actually, this “inner eye” stuff is overblown,
since you dream with your limbs, mostly your hands, and if you’re a footballer,
with your feet too.
In
your actual dream, your cat, your dog, your elephant (if you have a big enough
backyard for it), your mother, your friend, etc. was just as he, she, it was in
your waking state, but your feelings
made that person, animal, or thing, whatever you’ve imagined… and usually,
that’s not something “purple” or exotic in any way, shape, or form. Your
Feeling does color your dream world, but it doesn’t color your “pictures” of
it, except when you recount your dreams. We simply lack the “art” and the
organs to picture our feelings (at least, as precisely as we believe we dream
them – since we dream them as a kind of hyper-reality).
So,
what does it mean if you dream of your elephant playing a sousaphone? If you
had dreamed of your wife, husband, mother or father, that way, we can get
really Freudian. What does it really mean? Ahh… well, it means something to
YOU, and here we enter in the multi-million-dollar industry of dream
“interpretation,” Tarot reading, and other forms of charlatanism. It doesn’t
mean anything, except what it made you feel,
and whatever you can make out of that, which normally isn’t much since we dream
through our feeling life and we aren’t ever either aware or very much in tune
with our core feelings.
In
my mind, the more important question should be: What does my dream reveal of
what my inner feeling life is on about? (Forget about what’s being “externalized,”
we need to get into our own hearts first!). The best we can say is that it’s
your subconscious speaking to you. It’s telling you what’s up, as far as your
being and that of the astral realm – a shorthand to your well-being, if you
like. The subconscious (what we don’t remember) has its “economy” also, it
wants production and disdains waste. Everything you’ve seen, heard, or sensed
during your waking day, even things you haven’t actually paid attention to,
will be presented back to you, as if upon a mirrored reflection (it’s not the
mirror or the reflection, but something else...).
Really?
Why? Because your ka-double is very much like a mirror reflecting light. Those
are the images populating your dreams – feeling images they are and that’s why
they’re difficult to interpret. Dreams, like the economy, has its own lingo in
the form of pictures (or symbols, if you prefer). Although, if you pay close
attention while you dream, you’ll also hear sounds, words, music, and whatever
else pulls at your feelings, or your “heart strings,” should you have any. Like
I said, by being “constrained” to the astral plane, to the reality of feelings
only, if you will, you’re not being short-changed as far as the widest possible
spectrum of experiences is concerned… (in fact, you’re only constrained in the
material plane, since there’s a far broader range of experiences possible in
the astral!).
We
Awake To The World We Made While We Slept
As
we awaken, we “build up” the world again, based on what’s been reflected back
to us. Usually, it’s what’s been reflected back to us as part of a memory (the
ka-double is what retains our memories). Reflections of light, form, movement,
and time, as we left our body (khat) when we went to sleep the night before. The
dreaming we do is the “glue” (or Lego set) that allows us to “rebuild” the
world we’re coming back to inside our bodies the next morning. Otherwise, we
wouldn’t be able to “reconstruct” the world each morning as we return to it…
we’d have a different world each day. A world of our own making.
A
world our feelings generate based on what we experienced during the night… Alas,
that’s not to be in our present incarnation, in this particular age, because we
can’t “bridge” the ka and the khat the way we could in the past in order to bring
back the Feeling and Willing (acting we’ve done) in the sleeping state into
normal, daytime waking consciousness. Why? Because we’re not conscious of it
(what we did, felt, thought in the astral region) and therefore, we miss the
opportunity to remake not only ourselves, but our entire material surroundings.
Whatever
Freud believed dreams were, our Western culture has adapted itself to his way
of thinking of it. Like him, we’ve narrowed our own powers into a lifeless, materialistic
“manifestation” of things. Any wonder that what is hidden from us tends to take
on a superstitious, dark tint? We live in the most superstitious times in all
of human History because we don’t “see” anything when we look at things, since
we’re looking at them as something we’ve hidden in our subconscious (or the
unconscious, depending on the psychologist de jour). In other words, a kind of
memory we’ve buried (according to novelists and psychiatrists – is there a
difference?) for some ungodly reason (usually murder, incest, sexual abuse, or
something worse, right?).
As a
result, these “horrible” memories are somehow “gone” from our daily waking
consciousness. We don’t want to go into our “inner feelings” and look around in
there for them. Yet, there they lurk beneath the surface, waiting for us to
fall asleep in order to haunt us once more. All well and good, while we can
keep such feelings of fear “suppressed” – or vainly try to… and yet, nothing is
hidden forever… and therein, I fear, lies the rub.
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