Then an ear-splitting sound! Miracle of miracles: not gunshots but the clanging bell! After some seconds, I look back towards the thugs and they have disappeared like phantoms. A weird feeling of paranoia descends upon me like a tympani orchestra. Somehow I feel the world is not right--as if I'm bearing the brunt of a cosmic joke. Cautiously I exit the building into a deserted street. As I approach our tent I hear laughter and the pleasant voices of my friends inside. When I pull back the entry flap they greet me and ask where I've been. Speechless, I sit down and gladly accept the smoking pipe offered to me. I just couldn't bring myself to say that I'd fled for my life with gun-toting giants on my heels when apparently it was all a hallucination. I had ingested a psychoactive substance after all.
Just then a deafening rumble breaks the air and our tent is pitched over violently. Amazingly it continues to roll over and over as if we are caught in an avalanche on a mountainside. This goes on and on--impossibly--until the enclosed space of the tent is filled with our possessions that have fallen from our now-empty backpacks. Books, toothbrushes, CDs, pens and pencils, paper, clothing, flashlights, food, it all spins, breaks, mixes together. I bat it away from my face to breathe and prevent injury even as I am myself tumbling over and over. Then a glorious thing happens. In trying to control the flotsam I feel a strange force on my fingertips, as if there are taut threads connecting them to centers of mass among the debris. In a few seconds I realize I am directly manipulating the cloud of crap with a psychokinetic force emanating in straight lines from my fingers like a puppeteer. It takes me a few more seconds to get the hang of it, by which time August has learned the trick as well. Now all the crap is stabilized, floating in a lump as if we are in zero gravity. The sensation in my fingers is exquisite and highly intuitive. I can run my fingers along the lines of force, sensing exactly the orientation of masses and their trajectories. Perhaps they are more like stiff wires than threads because I push on them to maintain the stability and it feels just like when you balance a broomstick upright on your finger. Except I'm manipulating scores of objects and the force lines merge when they get close together.
Suddenly we abruptly stop tumbling and gravity reasserts itself as everything falls to the floor. It is silent in the tent. A dawn-gray light diffuses into the space. We look at each other and I feel like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz when her house finally lands after riding the tornado, wondering "What the hell the just happened and where the hell are we?" I find I'm having trouble breathing but before I can say anything, August, lying on his back, reports a similar discomfort. I reach out to help him sit up and I finally get a deep breath. August says his condition has passed too. Then over his shoulder I notice the honey-comb shadows on the wall...painted there in purest paradox.
The camera zooms in on the cell pattern, a shadow now cast by dawn's early light. Now we are looking at the same pattern on the outside of the tent and zooming out to take in the adjacent flower garden, the brownstone house, the quiet street scene. We pan down the street and see early risers walking dogs in the crisp morning air. Puffs of air condensing in front of their faces. Suits with briefcases. An old woman with a bag of bread. The pan stops and we watch the passersby go to and fro before a broad, whitewashed wall. A young girl with a red parasol. Sounds of a waking world. Black credits begin to show on the screen and I rub my eyes, stand and stretch as the movie theatre begins to empty. My heart is beating fast and I feel a kind of euphoria. What a magnificent film! It seemed to capture the thematic mythology of my life perfectly and hinted at an optimistic unfolding of future...at home in the paradox.
When August and I had trouble breathing in the first dream, I believe it was because I had twisted myself into a constricting position in bed and was partially blocking my windpipe. It was interesting that August exhibited the same adverse reaction. In dreams, the people you meet are direct reflections of your self. Every aspect of their behavior and personality are in fact aspects of you. This is a lesson not only about your own personality but about your conceptions of those people in your waking life. See my Self Visualization dream log for more about this.
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