Our dream memories are often like postcards or snapshots from a
journey. We have an image or two from an adventure that goes far beyond what we
remember. You look at a postcard from your trip to Paris and there is so much
it does not contain, starting with the smell of the morning coffee and
croissants, though dwelling with the image may start to bring back more out of
memory.
Suppose we could consciously send ourselves postcards while we are
still traveling in a dream country? Maybe that would help us to remember more
of the dream excursion, and to home in on the most important elements in our
waking mind.
This interesting idea comes from Dr Haines Ely, the gifted and
civilized host of the "Earth Mysteries" radio show on KVMR out of
Nevada City, California. I enjoyed a very lively and agreeable hour's
conversation on the show a few years ago, when Haines mentioned that he is
often lucid in his dreams, but found himself frequently frustrated because his
dreams still tended to slip away when he got out of bed. He developed the
practice of taking photographs inside his dreams, which he then mails to
himself as postcards while he is still in a dream country. He does all of this
meticulously, as you would do it in an ordinary situation: aim the camera,
focus, click the shutter, print, write the address, stamp, put in a mailbox.
Sometimes Haines finds that despite this recourse, his dreams
still dissolve when he gets up in the morning. But then the postcard image will
pop up on his inner screen later in the day, as if the mailman has just
delivered it.
Listening to Haines, I realized I have often done something like
this in a less meticulous way. I find myself, recurringly, wanting to take a
snapshot of something inside a dream so I can keep that image and show it to
other people. I generally try to use my phone to do this,as in regular life. Sometimes my dream phone camera works, sometimes it does very strange things.
In a dream soon after the radio show, I was being royally
entertained by a talking head. It was the head of a New York publisher I used
to know, long gone from this world, a lovely man with whom I used to have lunch
in Murray Hill. The head was on the ground, nicely balanced on the gravel of a
drive or courtyard, and my deceased friend was cracking us up with a series of
wicked one-liners about politics and religion.
I wanted to take his photograph to show to friends but before I could take the picture, I was whisked away onto a movie set. The film starred Clark Gable and Rita Hayworth, and I was right there with them when the soundtrack started playing "Some Enchanted Evening". I didn't send myself a postcard from inside this dream, but I may just possibly have managed to send myself a video clip.
I wanted to take his photograph to show to friends but before I could take the picture, I was whisked away onto a movie set. The film starred Clark Gable and Rita Hayworth, and I was right there with them when the soundtrack started playing "Some Enchanted Evening". I didn't send myself a postcard from inside this dream, but I may just possibly have managed to send myself a video clip.
3 comments:
It sounds like an interesting technique Haines uses. Taking photographs inside his dreams. I wonder if this is easy to learn. Going to see the next weeks if I can learn to do this. I am not familiar with the expression you used; "on the show a few tears ago" , or is this a mistype?
No doubt there have been a few tears since that radio show, but that was a typo. Since corrected, but one of my rules is "Notice what's showing through the slip" so I'll reflect on what my errant fingers on the keyboard might have been tellng me.
Oh I have just come across your work and loving it immensely. I am a photographer among other things and I’ve always wondering why my camera is never with me on my journeys to these remarkable places at night. Perhaps I need to make a conscious effort and do as I do in real life and decide on my subject and frame it up? I guess I am too busy living it to stop, yet it is such an important part of my waking life. It would certainly enhance my work to come at it from a symbolic and metaphoric way rather than just my brain trying to make meaning! Thank you for all your insight and work, it is a true treasure to this world.
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