"When I write, and only when I write, I have dreams about babies, and I always know that the baby is the book in my life. And whatever is happening to the baby in the dream is connected to something that is happening to the book in real life."
- Isabel Allende, in an interview with Carolyn Turgeon, editor-in-chief of Faerie Magazine (Issue 33)
I notice a similar phenomenon. For example
I am
cradling a new-born baby. She is beautiful and her breath is soooo sweet. I
place the baby carefully on a lambskin I have stuffed between books on a high
shelf, making a kind of hutch. I arrange things so she can’t roll off the
shelf.
This was my dream from an afternoon nap. I woke with a sense of
joy, tenderness and wonder. In ordinary reality, it’s most unlikely that I’ll
have another child. It’s also most improbable that, if entrusted with someone
else’s baby, I’d think it was appropriate to treat her this way, When I
went down to my office, after my nap, I found that contracts had arrived for a
book I was planning to deliver that spring. This book would be my next literary
baby, and the birth announcement came in the dream.
Baby dreams, like
dreams on any theme, can be literal or symbolic. Expectant mothers dream of
babies before they know they are expecting. During a pregnancy, baby dreams can
rehearse both mother and child for the delivery. They can also be part of a
process of “getting to know you” during which a new personality introduces
itself and checks out the family it will be joining.
It’s not unusual for
pregnant mothers to dream of giving birth to animals. Indigenous peoples are
quick to recognize that such dreams can bring knowledge not only of the
character of the incoming soul, but of its spiritual connections. A television
host in St.Louis told me on her show that when she was pregnant, she dreamed of
giving birth to a lizard. “It just slid right out.” Though startling, the dream
was very auspicious. The delivery was smooth and quick. We also discussed
qualities of the lizard that might belong to the new child, including the
ability to grow back.
Baby dreams can be
birth announcements from others in the family, advance word of a coming
grandchild, for example. A dream announcing a literal birth may also be one
that invites spiritual parenting. The First Peoples of my native Australia say
that every soul on the way to birth needs a spiritual parent to help it find its
way safely to its home in our world. The spiritual parent – a godparent in a
deeper sense than that word has come to mean in English – may or may not be one
of the birth parents. The connection between the incoming soul and the
spiritual parent will be made in dreams.
As in
my dream of the baby on the bookshelf, baby dreams are often about
something other than a literal baby. If you dream of having a baby and you are
unlikely or unable to give birth in a literal sense, ask yourself: what new thing am I
getting ready to bring through in my life? What will I create? The creative act is always a process of birthing
something new into the world.
A mother dreamed she
grown a huge pregnant belly. Probing gingerly, she found she was carrying
twins, but there was something really strange about their anatomies. They had
hard, sharp edges. She was not enthusiastic about bearing twins at her stage in
life. When we discussed the dream, I asked he to explain what was “strange”
about the shapes she felt inside her dream self’s swollen belly. “It was like
they had hard, sharp edges.” I asked her, “Hard and sharp like what?” She
responded, “Like books!” She decided she was pregnant with two books she hoped
to write. Several years after the dream, she has completed the first of those
books and is writing the second.
Baby dreams can be more
than birth announcements; they can suggest a care and nurturing plan we need to
follow to support an initially vulnerable new life venture. A woman embarking
on a new career dreamed she gave birth to a tiny, very fragile baby. She found
it hard to hold the baby. It was very slippery and kept slipping from her
grasp, so we would find herself struggling to maintain a safe grip or to catch
it when it started to fall. This dream seemed to mirror, rather exactly, the
challenges of birthing that new career.
Another dreamer was horrified when she let a newborn baby fall
because she was overloaded with a huge crate full of stuff she associated with
her work situation. Studying the dream, she realized she needed to let go of a
job that was interfering with a creative project she wanted to bring through;
better to lose the work load than the baby.
A birth announcement in
our dreams may be about the beginning of new life in a spiritual sense. I was
moved when a friend recently shared a dream in which she received a birth
announcement from a deceased relative, announcing that he had been reborn on
the Other Side.
Let’s not forget that
Gabriel, the archangel of the annunciation – who brings the most celebrated of
all advance birth announcements – is also the angel of dreams and the patron of
travel on the astral plane.
Drawing by RM: "Baby Basket at My Door". When I started sketching out ideas for a new book, I dreamed that my doorbell rang. I opened the door to find that someone had left a baby basket just outside. The basket held the neatly stacked typescript of a book. The dream gave me confidence to push ahead with the book that was published as Growing Big Dreams.
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