Dream Network Bulletin 1(1): 1,6. January 1982
Dream Appreciation 3(2): pp4,6. Spring 1998
"Dreams as a Subversive Activity"
What we’re dealing with in dream work, in short, is counter-conditioning.
Constantly we’re blasted by what’s all around us with what
we should think and feel. It’s so easy to let a lot of our decisions
be made up by all that noise. Meanwhile, we’re being just as consistently
informed from within by a different source. Our dreams tell us what we
do think and what we do feel and what we do perceive.
Dreams, like little children, can’t help but be truthful. They
are an accurate map to our reality. The one we’re being spoon-fed
day and night from external sources isn’t so much wrong as it is
outdated, like an ancient map with inaccurately depicted shorelines.
Why then, is it so assiduously propounded by everything and everyone
around us? Because it serves to maintain things as they are and we all
profit more than we care to realize by keeping things just as they are.
Not just those in economic or political power who are profiting at our
expense. Not just those who grow rich as we grow fat or as others starve.
Not just those who get powerful when we stay poor; or who get even richer
when we try to get rich. Not just those who earn fat therapy fees when
we stay confused about who we really are. Not just all of those. But we
ourselves benefit from keeping everything the same. It is safe. Just look
at the parts of the world today where change is breaking through to the
surface — Poland, Afghanistan, El Salvador, Guatamala. Change always
involves turmoil, a return to chaos before the new more inclusive order
emerges. It’s nothing other than the creative process that is at
work. Anyone who has embarked on the path of creative personal transformation
knows what I mean. True work with dreams often brings disruption and indecision
and chaos before it heralds in the higher level of awareness that alone
enables a deeper, truer life. It’s not nice to be miserable but
it’s a little more bearable if we don’t know it. So we read
about Poland and El Salvador in the newspapers and forget out dreams.
If they persist in forcing themselves upon our awareness, then we manage
to not understand them. It’s easier. It allows us to stay as we
are.
If, by working with dreams, we do manage to free ourselves from an intolerable
domination, like Cuba or Vietnam did, we congratulate ourselves, ignoring
that we may have landed under a different but equally intolerable oppressor.
The movement toward freedom tries to continue as in Poland but meets powerful
resistance. The chaos it entails is too disruptive. It’s easier
to remain fixated somewhere along the way where we can congratulate ourselves
on our progress while doing everything in our power to defeat the ongoing
process. But the process won’t stop. It will merely find someone
else in whom it can carry itself forward. Most of society is composed
of dead souls, washed up on the shore of their fixation to a stagnant
life. History moves through the rare individuals. “I have a dream,”
Martin Luther King said.
Domination from any one superstrong component of our total souls is
intolerable. Total freedom is the only aim. Freedom from within. For each
part of us to be free to be what it is. Not for some other part of us,
however strong and valid and important, to tell it what it should be.
The repressed part will always merely go underground, into our dreams,
to wage its guerilla warfare. If the smallest segment of the whole circle
is rejected, we don’t have a circle anymore. The tiniest excluded
part of us can easily sabotage the whole and cause all our good aims to
go awry. An age old axiom goes, “As without, so also within.”
What are our souls like? Look at our world, our society, our environment,
our bodies. Need I say more?
So we are polluted, we are dominated, we are ravaged, we are unreal;
and hence, we are ineffectual in achieving what can really make our lives
work. These ideas aren’t new. Everybody knows these things. Read
any psychology book or New Age manifesto. But such knowledge hasn’t
helped us. Knowing with the mind is of little import. When we know in
the real sense, the only sense that signifies, we become, we transform.
D.H. Lawrence, poor misled man, was right all along when he talked of
“knowing with the blood.” Unfortunately though it was all
an intellectualization with him. The disease that his life was eventually
overtook him, as it will us all.
There is a way out thought. You don’t even have to work with your
dreams but dreamwork makes it easier, much easier, for people like us.
Krishnamurti maintains that when we become enlightened we cease dreaming.
Reality itself becomes the dream that we write. Nothing is forced into
the underground to wage its guerilla fight towards our awareness. Everything
that we are is admitted into our being. The battle is over. Freedom is
won. Life itself becomes deeper and fuller and more beautiful than we
could ever dream. I haven’t reached that ultimate state. I have
only tasted little glimpses but these have shown me that it is the only
thing worth pursuing.
My work with dreams has shown me that our society is a lie. Our lives
are lies. The things I have wanted aren’t the things I want. The
things I have needed aren’t the things I need. What I was and am
isn’t what it is to be a human being. Working with dreams and with
creativity (I am writing a novel that came from a dream) has carried me
to the portal of a new way of being. I started The Dream Community of
New York perhaps because I’d rather no be alone as I take the next
few steps.
Armed with our dreams we have a weapon that can turn this society upside
down by turning our lives around. The greatest battles waged throughout
history have been within the souls of a few brave men and woman. All the
rest has been noise, an externalized reverberation from these great happenings.
To work with dreams in the deepest sense is to be a leader in the revolution
of human consciousness.
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