Dreams can introduce us to areas of knowledge and open
spiritual connections we might not otherwise know about. A woman in one of my
courses received the name Imhotep in a dream. She knew it was Egyptian but knew
nothing about Imhotep himself. She accepted the research assignment and
discovered that in ancient Egypt, Imhotep, whose name means "comes in
peace,” became associated with medicine and healing. In the late period,
Cleopatra's time, the shrines of Imhotep were sites of dream incubation for
healing in the style of the Asklepian temples of the Greco-Roman world. The
dreamer’s curiosity deepened. Why was she dreaming of Imhotep? And what did an Egyptian
god have to do with the other characters in her dream, in which she found
herself in a happy family of black bears, gamboling with them and perfectly at
home?
Historically, Imhotep was famous as
an architect. He is said to have designed the step pyramid of Djoser in the 27th
century bce. It was only 2,200 years later that he started to be recognized as
a physician. That probably came in because of people's dreams. Maybe they
dreamed of a physician by that name. Imhotep was celebrated in Cleopatra's time
as a physician whose sanctuaries were places where dreams healed.
At Saqqara,
on the west side of the Nile from the ancient Egyptian city of Memphis, there
was a temple of Imhotep where people went to dream or have their dreams
interpreted by professionals. In Karnak, in a vanished temple of Imhotep, at
one time there were no fewer than fifty priests responsible for dreamwork.
There are records of a very knowledgeable dreamer whose name was Hor. He was
actually a priest of Thoth and used to dream amongst the mummified ibis birds
in the temple of Thoth. But when it came to reading an important but confusing
dream, the priest of Thoth went to "a magician of Imhotep” to get a
definitive reading.
So a modern American woman dreams of an
Egyptian deity and a family of black bears. She learns that Imhotep was at the
center of a cult of dream healing at a time when ordinary people are gaining
access to sites and practices once reserved for royalty and closed priesthoods.
What’s with the bears? Their appearance in a dream of an ancient god was both
thrilling and strangely familiar for me. In the first years when I was leading
public dream workshops I often placed a statue of Asklepios on the altar at the
center of the circle. These gatherings usually started with the group singing a
song to call the Bear as healer and protector.
During one of these workshops, as I
circled the room, beating my drum to power a journey to a place of healing, I
asked about the possible connection between the Bear – the great medicine
animal of North America – and an Old World deity of dream healing. Suddenly I
saw the energy form of the bear joining what had become the living statue of
the god. The two fused and came together. I understood that one way of seeing
this connection is that in the new world, the bear is the equivalent of what Asklepios
and maybe Imhotep meant in the ancient world of the Greeks and the Egyptians. I
think this perception would have delighted the ancient mind because the ancient
mind was forever shuffling things together, making hybrid deities, melding
different traditions, borrowing power and “breathing images” from many
cultures.
“You are a natural at this,” I told
the woman who dreamed the name of an Egyptian god while dancing with bears.
Illustration: Just for fun! RM with NightCafé
No comments:
Post a Comment