Dreams

November 10, 2005 - 9:02am

I had a powerful and vivid dream a couple of months ago. I woke up and wrote it down. The feelings from that dream remain vivid in my memory even now. The dream had two distinct parts, both set in an unnamed Islamic country.

In the first part of the dream I was a young, Islamic boy who was too immature to care about the lives or feelings of others. Another boy loaned me his most beloved possession, a pair of binoculars with plastic caps for the lenses and a nice leather case.

I was not very careful with the binoculars. After using them, I hurriedly put them back in their case without putting the covers on the lenses. Before climbing down an embankment of some sort, I lazily dropped the case and some books of mine to the bottom so that climbing down would be easier for me.

My books were fine, but the binoculars were ruined. They were the only thing of value the other boy owned, and he cried out, grieving for his loss.

Suddenly I was filled with remorse for my actions as I understood for the first time what it meant to hurt another person. I lost the friendship but grew in wisdom. After that I was able to laugh and play peacefully with other children in the village.

This part of the dream ended with a mysterious old woman praising me for my newfound ability to care for others.

In the second dream sequence, I was a Christian minister visiting in the same Islamic country. I went into a mosque that was almost empty of worshippers. I spoke with the Imam and a number of the elderly people. They were very sad and grieving the fact that their mosques were empty and the younger generation was drifting away from their historic faith.

I left the mosque and sat on the slope of a small hill with a group of Imams and their students. In this part of the dream I kept my Christianity hidden, trying to blend in with the others.

They were reading from an ancient book of scripture. Its pages were made of very thin sheets of stone carved with mysterious looking runes. The rune letters were exceedingly beautiful, so that it was wonderful for me just to gaze at them. When I confessed that I did not know the language of the book, they were shocked and filled with grief for me. They wondered how I could be in spiritual training if I didn’t know the sacred language.

I tried to follow along in the text as an old Imam read aloud, for some of the runes looked rather like Hebrew letters. But the real meaning of the words was contained in the pictures or symbols that the letters formed, as is true with Chinese. Slowly my understanding of the language grew until I could read a little of it. In that moment I was filled with a joy that is beyond any joy I have ever felt in real life. There is no way to describe the purity and delight that I felt. It was as if I was standing before the throne of eternal truth, my long journey over. I burst into tears and ran forward, weeping and telling everyone that I had learned to read.

Even though I was far behind the others, I had no shame. And even though they were far beyond me, they rejoiced in my small step forward. The happiness that filled me was a complete consummation. I was consumed by it.

The Imams and students and people of the village were so happy for me that they threw beautiful, colored pieces of paper that rained down upon me like confetti. I learned that this celebration was also a part of their spiritual tradition, and I was filled with love for such a people who would rejoice so passionately at a stranger’s first steps toward enlightenment.

I do not know what this dream means. I do not have to know what it means.

As myths are to humanity, so dreams are to the individual. No one knows where they come from or exactly what they mean. But we cannot live meaningful lives without them. Deprive an individual of his dreaming, and he becomes psychotic. Deprive a culture of its myths, and the people lose their identity. They begin to lose touch with the deep and old forces that created them. Without myth, society itself becomes psychotic.

I do not have to understand my dreams for them to move me and change me. I only have to receive them, take them seriously, enjoy them, think about them, delight in them, or in some cases be horrified by them. This is the way of dreaming. One receives a dream and is changed in subtle and even subconscious ways.

At night we lay ourselves down and are plugged into a source that we do not know. You may name this source if you wish. You may call it God or the collective unconscious. You may even deny the presence of an intelligence beyond your own and claim to be the source of your own dreams. But you will dream, and a part of you is receiving these messages. This is not something you can control.

Think of them however you will, but do not neglect your dreams. Listen to them. Hear them. Know them. Do not be afraid of them.

Dreaming is one of the ways that we learn what it means to be human.

rlp

Click here to join a discussion on the subject of dreams.

Submitted by brotherterry on November 10, 2005 - 10:44am.

What did you eat before you went to bed?
Pepperoni and Jalapeno pizza makes me have dreams like that!
Seriously though... Wow!
peace,
 
 

Submitted by Wandering Willow on November 10, 2005 - 11:25am.

Oh, I love them both! What wonderful dreams! I love the flickerings of deep, profound meanings that don't really have a translation in waking life. I agree with you about just receiving and absorbing them, and fully "getting" their meaning that way. Thanks for sharing them!

http://blogs.salon.com/0003947
www.wanderingwillowblog.blogspot.com

Submitted by Janna H on November 10, 2005 - 2:35pm.

Very interesting thoughts.I wonder about my own dreams, sometimes.  I don't often remember them.  But the ones I do, I hold. Mover, Maker, Changer, unbreak me once again. Beautify me... I want to be fully Yours. - JH 2005
Deep calls to deep in the roar of Your waterfalls; all of Your waves and breakers have swept over me. - Psalm 42:7

Submitted by Anonymous User on November 10, 2005 - 2:38pm.

What did the book say anyway?

It's not true that living dreamlessly makes you psychotic, I stopped dreaming for a period of time at the end of highschool, and it was one of my most productive periods, philosophically speaking.

Submitted by rlp on November 10, 2005 - 3:57pm.

As the person commenting directly below noted, all humans dream. You dream. You just don't remember your dreams. Still, you are hearing what you need to hear. The only way to prevent humans from dreaming is to awaken them before they get into R.E.M. sleep, allowing them to sleep but not to have dreams. Experiments doing this show an onset of a variety of emotional problems for those who are not allowed to dream.

Submitted by Anonymous User on November 13, 2005 - 2:21am.

I can perceive the difference between a night where I did not dream, and a night in wich I did not recall my dreams. I suppose you will simply have to make my word for it. I would point out however that our understanding of the human brain and it's operation is still very slight, and nature does love to produce aberrations.

Submitted by Janna H on November 13, 2005 - 10:28am.

Actually, people dream at any time during the sleep sequence, not just during REM.  REM doesn't actually have much to do with what you're dreaming.  REM is necessary for regeneration and renewal. 
Mover, Maker, Changer, unbreak me once again. Beautify me... I want to be fully Yours. - JH 2005
Deep calls to deep in the roar of Your waterfalls; all of Your waves and breakers have swept over me. - Psalm 42:7

Submitted by Anonymous User on November 10, 2005 - 3:22pm.

I'd suggest that not remembering your dreams does not mean that you don't have them. I'd further suggest that not remembering your dreams does not mean that you're not learning from them.

Submitted by Jonas on November 10, 2005 - 4:00pm.

Wow. This is interesting, considering I just had a pretty profound personal dream, last night. It's weird how dreams work, but really neat at the same time.

Submitted by jeffthefish on November 10, 2005 - 11:41pm.

Beautiful.  I've actually kept a record of some of my dreams at http://www.jeffthefish.com/dreams.php  
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Clicking here will change your life forever.
Not really.

Submitted by steelcowboy on November 11, 2005 - 5:28am.

There are, of course, many conjectures as to the meaning of dreams. Freud and so many others have tried to decipher them, all to little or no avail.
I imagine God just looks down as we try to 'read' our dreams, and laughs.
You are right; you do not really need to know what they mean; only that they were.

Submitted by PastorBluejeans on November 11, 2005 - 10:30am.

What a beautiful dream!  As I read your words I allowed a willful suspension of my disbelief.  For me, in that moment, the account of your dream became reality.  What was most incredible, I began to remember that time when I finally got it.  When I finally began to understand Grace.  I was back in my moment of joy, purity and delight. (To use your words.) 
Thank you for taking me back from language study, counting which manuscript says what, struggling with profound theological questioning.  Thank you for a moment of sheer comfort in knowing all the busyness doesn't matter all that much.
 

Submitted by jeremyca on November 12, 2005 - 12:50am.

Dreams are the windows through which we glimpse the inner sanctity of the human heart and mind. A spiritual awakening has opened you up to other people and of new traditions. I see that as a gift of enlightenment to you the preacher who ministers to a flock. How wonderful to have insight and "vision" to see and admit where you failed. It takes a man to admit his faults but it takes a truly gifted man to learn and to share that knowledge with others. From my window I see a city that is built upon the myriad of people from all over the earth, their traditions and faiths create for us a "tapestry" of centuries of faith and belief. What a wonderful world to be part of. Your heart seeks divinity even when you sleep, sends a message of a servant whos heart is constantly being changed and I am sure that God smiles upon you. What a better world it is when we acknowledge "all" of those who live in it. This Christmas my prayer is that we live the Christian message globally and not just locally. There are many lives, and many faiths and many traditions we can either choose to explore and learn from or lock the door and keep them separate from us and what a shame that would be.  "and may God bless us everyone...."

Submitted by Anonymous User on November 12, 2005 - 3:01pm.

interesting comment system. haven't seen this one before.

your dreams are wonderful. methinks its a message for a broader audience than just you.

http://tammythehippie.blogspot.com/

Submitted by Anonymous User on November 12, 2005 - 7:12pm.

I find this post fascinating! Thanks for sharing!

Submitted by Anonymous User on November 12, 2005 - 11:52pm.

Preacher- I am catching up on reading blogs, and read your dream before the one on depression. There seems to me to be a common thread - gaining an understanding of something new / yourself / others, not by learning, or studying, but by being.

Or maybe that is just part of my showing through - and the understanding I need to learn.

I too have been depressed, severely enough to be hospitalised for a while. I related to your description, and thank God, the church I was a part of at that time (yes a Baptist church) were able to accept me, and the depression as an illness that needed treatment.

Perhaps the most important lessons I learned was to be true to what was happening in my body (& soul & spirit), and not discount what didn't want to face, and an incredible sense of empathy and understanding of others when they were down.

I have been wondering how you were going, thank you for sharing

Blessings
Janet McK

Submitted by Anonymous User on November 30, 2005 - 4:00pm.

First, I'd like to clarify that I believe in Spririt inspired dreams and that God uses dreams to speak to us. This dream, though seemingly joyful and positive, was disturbing to me. I am curious to know what your own thoughts are towards Islam? Perhaps that is also a window into the reason for the dream?

I believe that there are good people of the Islamic faith, but I don't believe the Islamic faith is good. Just as I believe Christianity is good but there are bad people in it. Yes, you can find both good and bad in both faiths, but one teaches opression and death to those who don't submit. It teaches it's followers to force others into submission. The other gives one a choice and also offers redemption and a personal relationship God.

Thanks,
Rhema - Sent by PenguinBoy ;)

Submitted by rlp on December 1, 2005 - 8:43am.

First, I don't know what the dream means, and I haven't spent much time thinking about how I feel about other religions. I will say that I believe you are being grossly unfair to the religion known as Islam. To judge this religion by its extremists is unfair. Imagine for a moment if people judged the purpose, intent, and character of Christianity by a group of white supremicist "Christian" survivalists, or by the antics and theology of some outrageous TV preacher.
 
Real Islamic scholars denounce much of what you have said.
 
On the other hand, I'm very disheartened by mainstream Islam's continued acceptance of poor treatment of women. They are coming along and there are women's advocacy groups now within Islam, but they have a long way to go. I do have a real problem with that aspect of Islam. Of course we have branches of Christianity that have similar ideas about women.