Writing and dreaming
are intimately connected, as far back as we can travel through the history of
humans making marks intended to be read by others. It seems that in many
cultures, humans developed systems of writing because they needed better and
more specific ways to record and honor dreams, when dreaming was understood to
be a field of interaction between humans and greater powers.
The techniques of writing may
themselves have been the gift of dreams. It is surely no accident that in
ancient pantheons a god of writing is also a giver and interpreter of dreams.
Ibis-headed Thoth, with his stylus, venerated in night rituals of dream incubation,
is a famous exemplar. His consort the star goddess Seshat, patron of scribes
and keeper of the akashic records, is also depicted writing.
The cuneiform scripts of Mesopotamia
and the hieroglyphs of Egypt were not devised merely to figure out how many
bales of cotton or bundles of reeds had delivered, but to record dream
encounters with the gods, and oneiric geographies of the Otherworld. From these
recorded visions, mythologies grew and spread their waving fronds over whole
peoples.
Among indigenous peoples, we can see
the process at work up to the present day. Look at the intricate pictographs of
the Anishnaabe, or Ojibwa, of the Great Lakes. They are drawn on long scrolls
of birch bark, the papyrus of the Northeast woodlands of North America. They
record the trials of the soul between birth, through trial and initiation, to
the womb of rebirth. They depict life as a spiritual adventure, where success
will be followed by a zigzag path of new challenge and temptation. They are
vision maps. They spring from the soul journeys of shamans, and the shared
dreaming of initiates gathered in the medicine circle of the Midewiwin.
Photo: The Egyptian goddess Seshat writing with a stylus, in a carved relief on the back of a statue of Ramses II at Luxor
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