If you are keeping a
dream journal, a great game to play from time to time is to track the evolution
of a familiar symbol or theme.
You've been dreaming
of the bear, or the fox, for years; how has your relationship changed? You
often dream of running into construction on the road; are you getting through,
taking a detour, grinding to a halt, or remembering you can fly? Again and
again, you find yourself exploring a dream house that has more rooms or levels
than your regular house; can you make a floor plan, marking its changes?
I made it a homeplay
assignment for members of one of my active dream circles to come prepared to
present the "biography" of a dream symbol.
A man in our group tracked his
dream encounters with the bear starting with a scary brush with a giant grizzly many years before, in which some of the tension lifted when he was reminded that
"all mammals like to be close to warm bodies." In a later dream, he
found himself snuggling with a big black bear in bed, which would have been
more enjoyable had the bear not recently been in the trash, so that it stank.
In the most recent of his dreams, he was playfully skipping along with his
children in the tracks of a friendly bear walking in the snow.
A woman dreamer told us she was
going to speak about the "cross-over" theme in her dreams. She did
not mean "crossing over" in the sense of the transits of the
departed; she meant situations in which she had to cross over an obstacle
ranging from a mountain to a busy street. Though the details of the five dreams
in which she flagged this theme were richly specific and individual, the common
theme emerged in a most interesting way in her narration.
In the first dream in
the sequence, she needs to cross over a man-made mountain
with rubber boulders; she manages this easily, even dancing with friends on the
top. In a later dream, she has to cross over a golf course set in the side of a
steep hill to get to where she wants to be. In the last dream in the series,
she must cross over a busy and confusing city street and make a loop through
alleys where she begins to lose her way, until three men appear to play helpful
guides. We noted a promising transition from needing to deal with a series of
challenges or obstacles created by men to men figuring as helpers. This seemed to resonate with major life transitions over the same period.
Running out of road
I came to this circle
intending to speak about my evolving visionary relationship with the red fox
over many years, though that story could easily fill a whole book. After
hearing the "cross-over"sequence, I opted to talk about a different dream theme, which I defined as
Running Out of Road.
It had been a recurring
dream theme for me, over decades. I'm on a road that becomes progressively more
difficult or simply more rustic. In some versions, I run up against
construction, a barrier or a brick wall.
In a recent dream of this kind, the paved road ends and becomes a kind of farm track
that in turn peters out. Now I am driving my car cross-country, over rocks and
through little streams. Soon I am on an upward slope that is getting steeper
and steeper, while the rocks are becoming enormous boulders. My car is doing
very well but finally it stops atop a huge boulder on a near-vertical gradient.
I get out of the car and inspect the situation. I calculate that my car can
make it to the top with just a little help. I need to find one or two people to
give a push. This can be managed if I go to a nearby village and ask for help.
I found this dream
enlightening. In my work, on many fronts, I had reached a point where
I found myself very willing to ask for help and cooperation from others.
I also noticed,
exploring this theme, that our dream histories are non-linear. They circle and
spiral around certain themes. In the past, my dream self has resolved the
challenge of running out of road by getting out of the car and picking it up
like a cardboard dummy and carrying it to where he needs to go. On another
occasion, confronted by a vertical, seemingly impossible cliff, my dream self
was pulled up by an ally above that revealed itself - when he reached the top -
as a mountain lion.
We never want to
forfeit the rich detail of an individual dream, which may offer specific
insight and guidance on multiple levels, relating to the possible future (for
example), to the state of our mind and body and relationships and/or to our
parallel lives in other times and in alternate worlds. But it's fun to track
those repeating and ever transforming personal themes and symbols.
In approaching
symbols, we want to remember the very useful distinction Jung made between sign
and symbol. A sign stands for something known; a symbol connects us with
something we do not yet know. So tracking our symbols becomes an excursion into
mystery.
Drawings from Robert Moss journals
Drawings from Robert Moss journals
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