On Valentine Day, romance your dreams. The romance of dreaming is played out
beyond your present life and your present world. Through dreaming, as the Irish
poet-painter AE (George Russell) promised, "Your own will find you".
Someone you loved and lost five thousand years ago may call you to remember
that romance, and look for its fulfillment in new bodies that have ancient
eyes.
Yes, I am a romantic about these things. But I am also a practical
romantic. I know that we can dream the way to manifest the kind of love that
transcends time, and also that dreaming will show us how to do what we love and
let the world support us. However, this requires us to develop the practice
of active dreaming,
which involves not only growing our dream recall and keeping our journals, but
learning to clarify the content of dreams and above all taking action to bring energy and guidance from the dream
worlds into the physical world.
One of my favorite teaching stories about this comes from India.
It is sometimes called "The Sketcher of Pictures". It goes like this:
The princess
(and all women may be princesses, or queens) is dreaming. She dreams of the
perfect lover, who satisfies her in every way. The dream streams like silk. It
smells like jasmine and honeysuckle.
She opens her eyes and howls with pain and loss, because although
her surroundings are opulent she knows no one like the man of her dreams.
Her father sees that she is very sad and asks what is wrong. When
she tells him it has something to do with a dream, the king summons his wise
men to listen to the dream and tell her what it means. They gather in a council
chamber, ready to give their interpretations.
As the princess recounts her dream, a wild man rushes into the
room, his hair a white storm about his shoulders. He is a rishi who lives in the woods and cares
nothing for the rules of the court. He grabs a piece of paper, makes a quick
sketch, and hands it to the girl.
When she looks at the picture, the princess is stunned. The rishi
has captured the very essence of her dream lover.
Abandoning the conclave of dream interpreters, she runs
after the wold man from the woods. When she catches up to him, she begs him to
tell her the identity or her dream lover. "Who is he? Where can I find
him?" Clearly the rishi knows the man of her dreams.
Good teachers don't give you everything all at once. The
rishi says only, "The map is in your dream." Then he takes off into
the woods.
The princess thinks about it. What does it mean, that a
dream contains a map? When she thinks about it some more, she realizes that she
was not with her lover among the clouds. She was in a bed in a room in a house
in a city in a certain landscape. Though she recognizes none of these places,
she has vivid memories of them and feels she would know them again.
So she sets out on the quest. In an Indian village, they
may take hours to tell this part. There will be tigers, of course, and bandits,
and deserts and snakes and all manner of perils. There will probably be
elephants.
But let's catch up with the princess at the moment when her
quest is almost over, because there on the horizon, after long travels and many
ordeals, she sees the city from her dreams. And now she is rushing through
those streets the house from her dream, and up the stairs to the bedroom from
her dream, where she finds her lover rising from his dream of her.
It sounds
like a fairy story, but there are no fairies in it, or any of the gods, demons
and others from the rich forests of Hindu mythology. There are only humans, and
what humans can do when they learn to make maps from their dreams and have the
will and stamina to follow their maps.
Through the perfume of romance, we receive a lesson in practical
romanticism. Do the work in dreamwork. Recognize that dreams
require action. Learn - why has it taken you so long? - that a dream is a place. Because you have been
there, you can go there again. This can bring you, in this physical world, to
place of your dream lover. More often, it will bring you to places in a more
spacious universe where you can rejoin the beloved company of your soul, those
who love you across time and space, even when you make each other crazy.
Give a hug to someone you love on Valentine Day. Bring flowers or
chocolates if you must. But don't let the day pass without sharing dreams.
Illustration: "The Sketcher of Pictures" by Robert Moss
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