I’ve talked about my dreams
quite a bit here, and about how I’ve used scenes and imagery from them in
a lot of stories. I’ve said that many of my dreams have coherent story lines that actually work as stories. Probably the most frequent use of dream materials is found in my
horror collection, In the Language of Scorpions.
However, not all my dreams are suitable for such use, certainly not without major overhauling. Some are just full of capriciousness and sheer weirdness that make me laugh when I finally wake up. Last night’s dream was an example.
However, not all my dreams are suitable for such use, certainly not without major overhauling. Some are just full of capriciousness and sheer weirdness that make me laugh when I finally wake up. Last night’s dream was an example.
It started with me and a
friend heading out for a nature walk. The friend was my friend in the dream,
but not someone I know in real life. In most such cases the “friend” appears to be a composite of at least several real folks. We were going into this big open field of grass, with a creek running through it and
wooded hills in the background. There were a lot of cattle in the field.
After we cross the barbed
wire fence to the field, I look at the cattle again and realize they are really
deer. I excitedly point this out to my
friend and we continue on. I realize there is a commotion among
the deer and stop to figure out what. My friend keeps walking. I suddenly
call for him to stop as I realize the commotion is caused by a very large
grizzly bear trying to catch one of the deer. A huge buck deer, with
antlers like an Irish Elk, charges in and gores the grizzly, driving him
away from the fawn he’d been trying to catch. The grizzly starts in our
direction, looking distinctly angry.
My friend sees the grizzly
coming and runs back toward me. His cap blows off. As he stops beside me, I
look back at the grizzly and realize I’ve been mistaken. The “grizzly” has
gotten quite a bit closer and it is clear to me now that it is actually a scowling
young girl of eleven or twelve with blonde braids and wearing a green
uniform. Yes, in fact, the grizzly is a
Girl Scout.
Only, I realize suddenly
that my friend and I are actually young boys of nine or ten, with said friend
being quite a bit smaller than me. So, the
Girl Scout still looks rather menacing to us with her face all angry. My friend
darts toward her to reclaim his hat and I scream at him not to risk it. The “Scout”
is almost upon us. He grabs up his hat but then realizes the girl is too close.
She charges toward him and I rush to get in her way. She tries to go around me
to get at my friend and I get my hands up to try and keep her away, yelling as
loud as I can in hopes of frightening her off.
Maybe that would have worked on a grizzly. Not on the much more dangerous Girl Scout.
I woke up right about then and
had to lay there and chuckle a bit. Of all the imagery in this dream, the only
piece I understand the origins of is—strangely enough—the Girl Scout. Lana
informed me not long before bedtime that I had purchased six boxes of Girl
Scout cookies that day. I did not recall doing so but was assured that it
happened and will dutifully fork over the appropriate amount of money. And I
have seen some Girl Scouts who I’d be scared not to buy cookies from.
Pleasant dreams!
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Crack's a hell of a drug. ;)
ReplyDeletehahaha you didnt eat 6 boxes before bed did you? that might explain the dreams...probably the scariest one that has stuck with me the longest was a chase dream in the woods...i am finally caught and as the figure is about to stab me i see it is my own face under the hood...
ReplyDeleteGo ask Alice, when she's nine feet tall? :)
ReplyDeleteLana, so are girl scout cookies apparently.
ReplyDeleteBrian, interesting. I had a similar dream experience in which I fought myself and one of us stabbed the other. They were good and evil Charles and I'm still not sure which one lived.
Ivan, yes indeed.
Actually, I could imagine a pretty good story coming out of that scenario. Two friends, two worlds, two story lines, one monster -- a grizzly in one world, a Girl Scout in the other. Just as a bloody claw raises above our heroes head in the fantasy world, in the real world the girl snarls out, "Buy my cookies. Or else!"
ReplyDeleteCharles, it's amazing that you remembered your entire dream. I seldom do. I read somewhere (not Freud) that everyone dreams though not everyone remembers the next day.
ReplyDeleteTy,yes, but then you are one twisted fellow. :) I, on the other hand, am the soul of normality.
ReplyDeletePrashant, yes, biological studies show that everyone dreams every night, although many don't remember them. The key seems to be waking up at the end of the dream and then spending time thinking about it.
Neat Dream. I thought there at the end you had gotten some bad 'Thin Mints'. :)
ReplyDeleteCharles-there is no way in hell I could ever remember that detail from my dreams! Chocolate or pizza makes me have a light dream usually involving being late or public nudity. That's all.
ReplyDeleteFunny.
ReplyDeleteI had a cool dreamscape recently involving the sound of something landing on the roof -- I could hear the click of hooks clawing into the shingles and "knew" it was small alien ships. How I "knew" I don't now know.
Bernard, my brain just works that way.
ReplyDeleteJodi, I don't notice a relationship with foods, but taking vitamins sometimes seems to activate dreaming.
Erik, it's interesting how you "know" things in dreams. I have such experiences quite often.