coming out of my shell

coming out of my shell

Monday, January 25, 2016

Dreaming and the unconscious mind

I had an interesting dream last night, wherein my unconscious mind sent me a very clear message about what to do next. I think that is almost always what dreams attempt to do, but this dream was actually clear enough for me to understand.

A little over a week ago one of my best friends, ShS, died of lung cancer. It was unexpected. She lives up North, so I have not seen her for almost two years, but we talked on the phone. She was an integral part of my group of friends, and has been since about 1993. She was also an amazing person, almost always positive and up for a laugh. We had such fun over the years. I am going to miss her terribly.

Her first marriage was difficult and ended in divorce, twice. Her second marriage (or maybe it is her third since she married that first husband, the raging asshole, twice?) was to a kindly man who loved her completely. They were together for 36 years. 

I have been concerned about her husband, K, since her death. At 70 years old, and with health issues of his own, I worry about him being alone. I know grief can be brutal. He is probably numb right now. How will he cope?

In my dream K sent me photographs he took of winter scenes via email attachments. There were at least a dozen of his lovely photographs, appearing almost black and white only because that is what winter looks like in Upstate New York. Perhaps also because that is what grief looks like? The subject matter was simple, stark, cold, and beautiful. He took pictures conveying his loneliness and sorrow. He did not turn away from his pain; instead, he made a picture of it and made it beautiful.

I was awestruck by those photos. When I awoke, at 3 a.m., I could not wait to send them to K so he could see what he needed to do. As I returned to my conscious state, I sadly realized I actually didn't have the photos. They were not in my email in real life. They were part of the dream.

It occurred to me that was what art therapy does for a person in crisis. It allows a suffering human being to plug into the creative imagination and find some relief from pain. It frees the symbolic to work on our damaged psyches, allowing that great archetypal world to soothe and begin to heal us. We experience the symbolic most purely without words, without language. I wonder if truth is easier to accept in that form?

I am going to share this dream with K. However, I know that the dream was also for me. Dreams are always for the dreamer.  Everyone who appears in a dream is a symbolic part of the dreamer. I am pretty sure that is true. So this message about managing grief with the visual arts, although universal, is one that I need to embrace and explore as well.  


Footprint and pansy in the snow



6 comments:

  1. Do share your dream. I notice your black and white photo has green and purple. Things change. I hope your friend is doing as well as he can be, right now.

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    1. Yes, things change. One thing leads to another, especially when the creative imagination is tapped. Eventually, color demands to be seen. Thanks for your concern about K. He is such a nice person.

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  2. I lost a very good friend of mine a year ago tomorrow. She died of cancer in the very hospital I work in. A few weeks ago I dreamed about her; it was so real that when I woke up I thought I must check the computer to see if she has died. And then I remembered that she had been dead for almost a year. I miss her.

    Dreams are powerful things.

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    1. I've started keeping a dream journal and try to make sense of them from time to time. It has been really interesting. So many of my anxieties are addressed in my dreams.

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  3. I am so very sorry to hear this. And I'm glad you will be a source of support for your friend's husband. Take care. ♡

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    1. Thanks Jennifer. Unfortunately, we live too far away to be of much help.

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So, whadayathink?