My daughter’s wedding day had arrived and everything that could go wrong went wrong. We arrived at the church only to discover no one had come to decorate it. The food we’d ordered was half-prepared. My daughter showed up in her beautiful gown, but we’d forgotten to get her hair done or her make-up. It was so horrible, we cancelled the wedding and sent everyone home. The wedding party climbed into a car and was driving away when my daughter said, “Stop! I can’t take this anymore, I just want it over!”
So she forced the car to pull over at a tiny diner and announced that’s where she was getting married. I tried to talk her into going to someplace nicer, where it wasn’t so shabby and dirty. But she insisted. I remembered how I had planned to hang all the beautiful photos of her wedding on our walls at home. But how could we take photos of this! My worst nightmare was happening and it was all my fault. I shouldn’t have left the wedding planning up to her. I should have taken charge. I should have had a check-off list and made sure everything had turned our as planned. But it was too late. I screwed up. And now all my dreams for her wedding were ruined.
Then I woke up with a raging headache. And a sense of doom I could not shake.
It was crazy! Why was I having this dream? My daughter had already had the most beautiful wedding imaginable just last year. And she had planned it all! I hadn’t had to lift a finger. Why would I be worried about her wedding?
Then I had a flash of insight. One after the other.
#1 Flash of Insight
This was just a dream! There had never been a reason to be so upset and despondent. I could have changed the dream at any point–decorated the church, fixed her hair. I could have created the perfect wedding, if only I had realized I was dreaming. If only I had known I had the power to do so.
#2 Flash of Insight
This dream wasn’t about my daughter! It’s about my son. About the terrible addiction that has ruined his life, the beautiful life I had dreamed for him. And I blamed myself. I shouldn’t have left something as important as his life up to him! I should have taken charge. I should have planned better. But now everything was ruined and there was nothing I could do about it.
#3 Flash of Insight
Maybe I’m still dreaming! I remember how real it all seemed in my dream. Like it was really happening. So much so that even when I woke, I couldn’t shake the sense of sadness and failure. Maybe I will wake up and find out that this is all just a dream of addiction. Maybe in “reality,” he’s living the perfect life I’d always wanted for him, just as my daughter had had her perfect wedding.
Maybe I’d wake to find him in his perfect house with his loving wife, surrounded by his beautiful children, happy and healthy. He’d flash me a big grin and put his arms around me and say, “Silly mama. Why so sad? You were just dreaming!”
#4 Flash of Insight
But if I can’t wake up, maybe I can at least practice lucid-dreaming, wake up enough to know this isn’t real, and that I can change things, if I could only figure out how. It’s possible, right? Isn’t change possible?
#5 Flash of Insight
Maybe this is what they call “magical thinking.”
I keep thinking of those talks by Alan Watts that I posted here not long ago. He talks about the interconnectivity of the universe and how it has evolved into human consciousness–how the very cells of our bodies and brains are made of star stuff. We are the eternal universe, he tells us. Each of us, individually, is a pinprick of the whole, and altogether we are the whole itself.
Is believing this more fantastic, more “magical,” than believing in the Big Bang in the first place? Or that an infinite number of galaxies are spinning out in space, or being gobbled up by black holes? Or more magical than the “fact” of all those electrons and neutrons spinning in the cells of our bodies like tiny galaxies? What could be more fantastical or magical than reality! The reality we accept on “faith” because we believe what science has revealed to us.
Watts also mentioned this possibility: That we each are sparks of the divine–whatever force that created all we know–living an infinite number of lives over and over. Sometimes we choose easy paths, sometimes difficult ones. Sometimes we just want to see how much we can take, how far we can push ourselves, how bad it can get before we turn ourselves around.
Did my son choose his path? Did I choose mine? Are there layers of reality, as I wrote about in my last post? Are our night dreams and waking dreams just various stages in the ever-expanding understanding of who we really are? Will we wake to another understanding of reality and realize this life is just a dream within a dream within a dream . . . and each life is just as “real” or as “magical” as the next one?
We once believed the earth was flat and the distant ocean spilled off into nothingness. Later that the sun circled the earth, and we felt smug and special at the center of the universe. Then we woke up.
What more will we come to understand about reality–the universe and ourselves–as the eons unfold?
Wake up, Deborah, wake up.
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This is a lovely and thought-provoking post, Deborah, as many of your posts are.
I’m so sorry about what happened with your son.
-Natylie
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Thank you, Natylie, reading and commenting. It means a lot to me.
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Oh Deborah … this breaks my heart.
No one’s choice.
No one’s fault.
But we sure do wish we could wake up from nightmares and I wish your son’s addiction was just a bad dream.
Thoughts are with you.
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Your comment was so touching. Thank you so much!
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It sounds like you would get a lot of Freud and Jungian dream analysis. When I was growing up, my father treated every dream anyone had with the utmost importance, in an attempt to understand the issues going on in our lives before they even became apparent.
I would go further with your insights and suggest that on the psychological end, this sounds like another thread of fearing letting go, and allowing your dream daughter/son to hold the reins of their own life. Your thoughts, as relayed here, were basically “things will be messed up if I don’t do it”, but… it’s not your wedding, and the wedding in and of itself is a mark of a “new life” and a break away from the old one. Also, in the dream, even though the wedding was going to take place in a restaurant, (the daughter holding a different value of the moment from your expectation of that moment), that doesn’t necessarily mean a terrible life. Perhaps not a “beautiful” life, but…. well, you get the idea. 😛
Sorry if I overstepped myself with this comment… I just thought I’d share my musings after the read. 🙂
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Dear Alex, you are so right. That fear of letting go, or wanting/needing to control things when they become uncontrollable, are certainly the “elephant” in my dream, that I recognized but did not address here. That I have an overwhelming desire to take control of my son’s life that seems out of control, over which he seems to have to control, and the realization that a sordid, tawdry “life on the streets” may be all he will ever have. I just cannot accept that. I know I should be able to. I know I may be forced to do so eventually. But right now I can’t. I just can’t. I need a miracle. I need to know miracles are possible, that I can somehow affect a miracle. And I do know, that the life we see and experience “of the surface” is not all there is to life. That 75% of “reality” (or more!) lies below the surface, like an iceberg. Tapping into that, making use of that, that’s what I’m seeking. It’s my only hope really. But a part of me acknowledges that this hope may just be a dream, and in some ways, I am already mourning my son, what I fear will eventually happen to him.
But please know, I value your comments and insight and that’s what I’m looking for in these posts. So always share what comes to you. I value that. And so often its just what I need to hear.
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Love this Deborah. It sounds like a more dramatic and detailed version dream that I often have about not being ready for something – a test or a role in a play usually. But a wedding! It does sound like an expression of an underlying something that is bothering you.
Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about the power of the cultural environment we live in. Each person is a unique soul with its own vulnerabilities and sensitivities and each is going to interact differently with the culture. There’s no telling how the little accumulations of incidents and chance events result in what actually happens. I’m positive our minds, imaginations, characters, beliefs, and actions have much to do with what we become, but this is only part of the equation, perhaps 50 percent — although I would always push for a higher percentage for this side of the equation. Blessings to you and prayers for positive changes for your son. Amazing things do happen.
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Thank you CJ for sharing this. I do believe that probably 95% of what we truly are lies below the surface, and we just get intuitions as little bubble rise to the surface. And I belief as you seem to that we are constantly changing, a work in progress, and we never know what we might encounter that will change us in powerful ways. I thank you especially for that last sentence. I have a huge need to believe that.
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I read this post when it landed in my in box but hadn’t the time to respond. I am always curious what our dreams truly mean, what they are telling us, assuming they are our inner voices sending a warning. I don’t know for sure.
As for your son, I know not what to say. I don’t think a person can assume responsibility for another’s choice, although I know as a woman and a parent, it’s difficult not to. Each of us are the captain’s of our respective destines. Take care, and wishing you dreams of a sunny beach with white sands, drinks with little umbrellas, and stalk of books at your side.
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Thank you, Brenda. I can picture myself on that beach right now–drinking it all in. Lovely.
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