Wednesday, December 10, 2008

I had a dream the other night that I'm still thinking about. That's rather rare. I don't remember some of the details (very normal for a dream, in my experience), but since I subconsciously invented the whole thing, I'll fill in the details the way I represent it in my mind now.

I was in a state of existence in a dim world. I existed on a type of plateau with a steep drop hundreds of feet down to an ocean splashing against the dark rock cliff. The top of the plateau stretched beyond my sight and was rather barren - a few rocks and a single thin, dark, ancient, and sturdy tree with only a few leaves.

I existed in this place for a long time - serene and almost in a meditative mindset. Then, one evening, I stood near the cliff edge and saw far in the distance, a dark (nearly black) wave of extraordinary height was coming my direction. It was beyond panic or fear - it was so immense and grand that the danger was a puny concept. It was simply awe inspiring. It was 'awesome' in the word's truest sense. It immeasurably high. The picture above is not even a ripple in comparison.

It swooped towards me and in a moment I was submerged - inside the towering wall of water. It was not cold or hot. It would have been wet, except that the word lost its meaning since 'dry' was inconceivable in this new underwater existence.

The force of the water tore past me, but I found my arms wrapped around the stout tree. The wave had unbelievable force that nothing could oppose and yet I was secure because I was part of the tree, the tree was part of the cliff, and the cliff was immovable.

I remained submerged in the rushing water for a long time. I opened my eyes and watched the water race by. I breathed somehow in a very natural way. The wave was powerful, angry, and had no sympathy for me, but I remained calm and in a state of awe. I was where I belonged in spite of the chaos around me.

The dream ended.

Once more (the same night), I dreamed the same entire dream. Once more the dream ended.

A third time, I dreamed the same thing. But this time, I let go of the tree. I found myself a mere particle in the raging wave as is swept over everything. I lost all orientation and no action I was capable of mattered in the slightest. I fell unconscious - not worried, but still under water and very lost. Darkness.

I became conscious, floating on the open sea. Lost and alone in a way I hadn't felt on the plateau. I was still calm, but knew my future consisted of drifting forever. No control. Nothing. Only floating. I sensed a deep remorse for ever choosing to let go of the tree...

Then I woke up.

This dream struck me as a deeply symbolic experience. Very ethereal and yet purely sensory. The only things close to this dream were the surreal moments in "The Fountain".

What does it all mean? Is each wave a school year - overwhelming me every time? Is the tree my values? Is the tree a person that keeps me sane? Does the last wave foretell my doom? Did I simply need to go to the bathroom really bad? I have no idea.

5 comments:

Sweet Onion said...

Wow. What an amazing dream. I've never had a dream like that before. My dreams consist of me saving the world in some form or another, or free-falling, or me just about to pee in public when I wake up.... and realize I have to go. BAAAD.

I recently found out that 60% of what children dream about are animals. Somewhere along the line, we lose that.

I've been thinking a lot of dreams myself recently, wondering at what age I lost my childhood imagination, ability to get lost in the mooment and create some magical place out of thin air. I've also wondered when was it, exactly, that I quit dreaming about animals. Or even quit dreaming at all.

I had a dream the other night in which I was in Africa with my boyfriend's mom and we were stopped by gurilla warriors. She slid away on her stomach while I got caught. Then I woke up.

I think you assign meaning to your own dreams. In August's issue of Scientific American Mind, they say that the sleeping mind builds memories and solves problems.

Sweet Onion said...

I just pulled out my copy of Scientific American Mind to refresh myself on the article. The opening paragraph begins:

In 1865 Friedrich August Kekulé woke up from a strange dream: he imagined a snake forming a circle and biting its own tail. Like many organic chemists of the time, Kekulé had been working feverishly to describe the true chemical structure of benzene, a problem that continually eluded understanding. But Kekulé’s dream of a snake swallowing its tail, so the story goes, helped him to accurately realize that benzene’s structure formed a ring. This insight paved the way for a new understanding of organic chemistry and earned Kekulé a title of nobility in Germany.

*****

Let your mind work out the kinks and your genius will shine through.

Sweet Onion said...

Last one:

* As we snooze, our brain is busily processing the information we have learned during the day.
* Sleep makes memories stronger, and it even appears to weed out irrelevant details and background information so that only the important pieces remain.
* Our brain also works during slumber to find hidden relations among memories and to solve problems we were working on while awake.

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=how-snoozing-makes-you-smarter

Anonymous said...

That is an incredibly dream. I have no idea what it means but I know its a feeling and a memory you will be able to hold onto for long time.

Anonymous said...

Something I just thought of. Stephanie Meyer wrote her books after an intense dream and now she has a lot of money. Maybe you should try and write a book as well.