Horses run through our
dreams. We wake, hearts pounding, still feeling the thunder of the hoofbeats.
Our dream horses are
not the same, of course. Some are oppressed by dreams of a black horse that
seems like a figure of death, or a red horse foreboding war and bloodshed, or a
ghostly pale horse that brings the sense of sorrow and bereavement. Such dreams
- and Fuseli's famous painting of nightmare - have encouraged the belief that
the "nightmare" has to do with a mare, whereas in fact (the
etymologists tell me) the "mare" part here is most likely derived
from the Old Germanic mer, meaning something that crushes and
oppresses.
In dreams, the state
of a horse is often a rather exact analog for the state of our bodies and our
vital energy. When you dream of a starving horse, you want to ask: what part of
myself needs to be nourished and fed? You dream of horses flayed and hung up
under the roof beams (as did a dreamer in one of my workshops) and you need to
ask: which parts of me have been flayed and violated in the course of my life,
and how do I heal and bring those parts back to life?
Such a dream also
evokes the ancient rituals of horse sacrifice - common to many cultures - and
might also require a search back across time into primal material from the
realm of the ancestors, lost to ordinary consciousness, but alive in the deeps
of the collective memory.
In Greek mythology,
horses are the gift of Poseidon, and come surging from the sea, their streaming
manes visible in the whitecaps. Or they irrupt from the dark Underworld, from
whence Hades charges on his black stallions to ravish Persephone with his
unstoppable sexual energy and hurl her into a realm of savage initiation
beneath the one she knows. Yet in Arcadia, Persephone's mother Demeter, the
great goddess of Earth and grain and beer, was depicted with a horse's head.
Go to the British
Isles, and you find the white mare revered as the mount and form of the
Goddess. She is Epona, and her prints still mark the land whichever way you
ride, even if only by train or car or Shanks' pony. In ancient Ireland, a true
king was required to mate with the white mare, as the living symbol of the
sacred Earth. (It would take a manful king indeed to couple with a mare; I
suspect a priestess was substituted.)
We know the horse in
certain living myths as healer and teacher, as vehicle for travel to higher
realms, and as the source of creative inspiration. It is the hooves of Pegasus,
rending the rock, that open the Hippocrene spring, beside the grove of the
Muses, from which poets have drunk ever since. It is Chiron the centaur, the
man-horse, who is the mentor of Asklepios, the man-god synonymous with healing,
especially through dreams. In fairy tales (the Grimms' and others) it is often
the horse that can find the way when humans are lost.
I dreamed of rounding up a great herd of wild horses, and understood, waking in
excitement and delight, that this was about bringing vital energy back where it
belongs and helping to shape a model of understanding and practice of soul
recovery for communities as well as individuals, The wild horse racing through
our dreams may be the windhorse of spirit, or vital essence, that needs both to
run free and to be harnessed to a life path and a human purpose.
Of all the shaman
terms I have heard, "windhorse" is my favorite. It is native to at
least three traditions of Central Asia, where the word "shaman" and
the shaman's frame drum (often made with horse hide and commonly called the
shaman's "horse") originate. In Buryat (Mongolian) the word for
"windhorse" is khiitori; in Old Turkic it is Rüzgar
Tayi; in Tibetan it is rlung ta (pronounced lung
ta).
When you think about
it, the horse is unlike any other animal. Stronger than man, it yet allows itself
to be gentled and bridled and provided the main form of locomotion for all
those centuries before the invention of the internal combustion engine. As in
Plato's image of the charioteer of the soul, challenged to manage the rival
energies of a horse that wants to go down on a rampage, wild
and sexy and possibly violent, and the steady horse whose instinct is always to
go up, to rise higher, we are challenged by our dream horses to
recognize, release and temper the horse power within us.
Photo: Pegasus in Powerscourt gardens, County Wicklow, Ireland
I dream of black winged horses from time to time. Sometimes they are being hunted and frantically flying away, other times the are grazing in a countryside meadow.
ReplyDelete