THE DREAM
AS A
PATH OF
INITIATION
from
New
Millennium, Sept. 1997
by
G. Scott Sparrow,
Ed.D.
Twenty
four years ago, my friend Benny died when his car hit a palm tree on
the
way back from Mexico late one night. Before driving while
drinking
received so much attention, it was customary for teenagers and young
adults
who lived along the Rio Grande River in south Texas to stay up late
dancing
and drinking in the Mexican lounges. Then, early in the morning,
we would head for home along a perilously winding
road that followed
the
course of the river. Many of us who grew up on the border
--
where alcohol for minors and adults alike was only a bridge crossing
away
-- can recall times when we should have been dead. I still
shudder at our foolishness. We were just luckier, not wiser, than
Benny and his two friends who died that night.
Shortly
afterward, Benny began showing up in my dreams. He appeared
deranged,
even demonic -- intent it seemed on hurting or killing me. I
would
run from him, scared out of my mind and wondering why he would want to
hurt me, his friend. In one dream, I realized it was a dream and
I tried to wake up to escape him. But I couldn't escape the dream
in time; and he assaulted me before I could rouse myself from
sleep,
terrified.
It was
conceivable, I realized, that Benny could really have been there,
attacking
me as an earth-bound, or confused, discarnate soul. That
idea
did nothing to reassure me. But as a student of Jungian
psychology
at the time, I also realized that Benny could represent an aspect of
myself
-- my "shadow" -- that was profoundly disenfranchised and enraged by my
neglect of him. Along these lines, I eventually came to
realize
that Benny represented my own aggressiveness and need for power that I
had suppressed under a facade of outward spirituality. Quite
possibly,
he was angry that I had become such a wimp.
I also
knew that both could be true. He could be "himself" and a part of
me. From this perspective, our relationship was continuing to
offer
us both ways to evolve toward wholeness, even though he was physically
dead. Whatever I did in the encounter that represented a
breakthrough
for me could release him, as well, from his own commensurate soul-level
dilemmas.
Benny
had always scared me a bit. On one occasion, his flirtation with
power almost killed me. While I was skin diving near the Mexican
town of Puerto Vallarta, Benny lofted a volcanic rock in my direction
"just
to see if he could reach me." The rock plunged into the water a mere
foot
from my head. If I hadn't drowned from the blow, it would have
been
a miracle; for I was seventy yards offshore in 20 feet of water.
Benny made a lot of people nervous with such displays of uncontrolled
aggression.
Before
the series of dreams came to a powerful end, I had an opportunity to be
"spiritual" in one dream with Benny. He appeared in front of me,
holding a knife. He said, devilishly, "I want to show you my new
knife."
Suddenly,
I realized that I was dreaming! I knew what to do then. At least,
I thought I did. I said, "You are only a dream. May
the
light of the Christ surround you. Go away." Nothing
happened,
and Benny crept closer. He was obviously amused by my
ineffective
tactic. Without wondering how I obtained a knife of my own, I
began
doing battle with him until I eventually disarmed him -- an unlikely
outcome,
since Benny was much larger and faster than I was in real
life.
I did not complain.
Then
came the culmination one night while I was on vacation in
England.
In the dream -- the final one with Benny -- he had me pinned down,
pummeling
me with his fists. I knew that he would eventually kill me if I
didn’t
free myself. I managed somehow to free one arm. Instead of
hitting him back, however, I reached up and gently stroked his
shoulder.
Looking back, I don't know why I thought this would do any good.
But he stopped hitting me immediately, and he began to cry. His
tears
fell into my face, and he said, "I only want to be loved."
Years
before in "real life," I had made the mistake of making an obscene
gesture
at him. I was about six at the time, and he was ten; so it wasn’t
a very good idea. Sure enough, he pinned me down; and he
spit
into both of my eyes to show me how foolish I had been to defy him. It
was a singularly humiliating and disgusting moment.
Now,
however -- through the avenue of powerful dream encounters -- our
relationship
had become fulfilled. I had found the courage to fight him, and
then
the heart to embrace him. He, in turn, found it possible to voice
what his aggression had so effectively obscured -- his need for love.
If
one
looks back on this series of dreams, one can see that the whole purpose
of the dream series was to elicit new responses from me. The
dream
was not so much a message as it was an opportunity to respond in a new
way. It was an initiation -- a test that was fulfilled only by
acting
in a new way and by expressing a new spirit. Any interpretation
of
the early dreams with Benny would have been largely useless and
misleading,
unless they included an analysis of my inadequate response to
him.
That is why I often say that much of what we call dream analysis misses
the whole point of the dream.
Before
most of us can see the dream as an initiation, we must undergo a
paradigm
shift in our view of the purpose of life. Indeed, most of us are
deeply wedded to a view of dreams that matches a view of God that is
deeply
entrenched in our Western spiritual tradition. Influenced by
traditional
approaches to religion, we tend to believe, without thinking much about
it, that dreams are oracles or messages from God or the
unconscious
that we need to interpret. Along these lines, we assume that if
we
can figure out what we are being told, we can revise our plans
accordingly,
and avert unnecessary pain and suffering. Further, we can obtain
glimpses of unfolding opportunities, and be prepared to capitalize on
them.
Like Moses, we are left trying to read the small print on the tablets
of
our dream. All of this "works," as most of us know from
experience.
But unfortunately, this view relegates us to a rather passive,
underling
status, as we await the good parenting of the divine or unconscious
Other.
Fortunately,
the dream "source" does not fully accommodate the view that God, or the
unconscious Other, is principally a source of information and
guidance.
Indeed, the dream source seems to function much more as a mentor, an
initiator,
or even a provocateur who tells us frightfully little, but who brings
us
the very things that we have neglected, or refused to accept about
ourselves.
One dream therapist, Dr. Montague Ullmann, has described the quality of
the dream as intrusive and novel; that is, not providing
the
kind of "answers" that we expect to hear, but presenting with intensity
and purpose those aspects of our being which we have neglected or
disowned.
Once we shift our perspective away from looking primarily for answers
in
dreams, we can see what has been there all along -- opportunities to
confront
and resolve deep issues through altering our responses to the
challenges
that are being presented to us.
The
value
of this approach is quite evident when we compare dreams that are
similar
in content, but which differ significantly in dreamer
responsiveness.
For example, a good friend of mine dreamed that UFO’s were approaching
her childhood home, spewing fire from their undersides. She
somehow
knew that they were going to destroy the world. Not surprisingly,
she ran like the dickens from this spectacle. In short order, she
ran into her bedroom, and climbed under her bed (even though it wasn't
fireproof).
Now this
friend came to me, knowing that I liked to analyze dreams.
She asked what many of us would ask: "What is this horrible thing
that I am being warned about?" I knew something was fishy about
this
question, but I hadn't developed my current understanding of dreams at
that point. There are many answers to the dreamer's worried
question,
and many of them might prove useful. Certainly, there's always a
lot ahead to be concerned about. But the question itself leads us
down a particular path, away from examining our responses to the
dream and how other
responses
might have turned the whole experience around. In contrast
to the dreamer's question, we might ask, Why did she assume that the
UFOs
were hostile? Her reaction in the dream and her question
after
the dream effectively obscured the simple fact that she decided
to
run when confronted with the spectacle of the UFOs. Everything
went
downhill from that point, and we are left wondering would have happened
if she had not run away.
At the
time of the dream, the dreamer was struggling with the decision about
whether
to enter the ministry. She admitted to me that she was afraid of
what God would make her do if she submitted to her calling. In
particular,
she feared that He would send her to Africa as a missionary.
Eventually,
she overcame her resistance to her calling and serves to this day as a
Methodist minister. But it easy to see that her response to
the UFO and its transforming power mirrored precisely her fear of
responding
to her own higher calling.
If the
dreamer succeeds in "inducting" us into his or her biases, then we will
also fail to see the opportunity that most dreams represent. If,
on the other hand, we are willing to consider the dream as primarily an
initiation rather than an oracle, then the most important questions to
ask in our analysis of dreams are, "What did the dreamer do?"
And,
"What was the best, or most appropriate, thing that he could have done
in the context that he found himself?" And, as we look
ahead
to future dreams, we might also ask, "What is the response that
the
dreamer is being called to make in this circumstance?"
Another
UFO dream dramatically illustrates what can happen when we suspend our
automatic reactions to our dreams, and respond in a way that "opens up"
the dream to become all that it can be in the moment.
In this
dream, a young man was also in his childhood home. He somehow
knew
that UFOs were approaching, and would soon destroy the earth with
fire.
Sounds familiar, does it not? His family hurriedly prepared
to leave, and urged the young man to join them. But the dreamer
hesitated,
realizing that if the aliens intended to destroy the world, then there
would be no place to hide. He wondered if the aliens would stop
attacking
if they knew that people meditated on earth. So, as his family
fled
the home, he sat down cross-legged in front of the living room window,
closed his eyes and meditated. Then, he pulled back the
curtains
and saw that the UFOs had stopped spewing fire. The next thing
the
dreamer recalled was walking with thousands of people toward the UFOs
that
had landed on a beach. They were all singing as the aliens
emerged
from the UFOs and greeted them warmly (but not hotly!). The
seven-foot-tall
aliens looked like monks: They wore saffron robes, had shaved heads,
and
hailed from the "Osage" star system.
The only
thing that distinguishes the two UFO dreams is the dreamer's
response.
The content was virtually the same. If we ask, What do UFOs
mean?
What does fire symbolize? and What does the childhood home represent?
we
might arrive at the same "interpretation" for each dream. This
should
indicate to us that the crux of these dreams ultimately has nothing to
do with an assessment of their symbols or visual content: It has
to do with the dreamer's attitude and response to the initiation that
the
dream presents. In terms of content, these dreams were identical,
but in terms of response they were as different as night and day.
That
is why, I feel, that many of us find dreams so hard to interpret.
We approach them as oracles, which they can be. But they are,
more
fundamentally, initiations that challenge and provoke us into
responding
to life more deeply and courageously. Until we grasp this truth
about
dreams, then the fruits that we will reap from dreams -- and from life
-- will be meager compared to the process of becoming that a path
of true initiation offers us.
If you
are ready to examine your responses to your dreams and to all of life
from
this standpoint, then you would do well to start from the premise,
articulated
in a most succinct way by the teacher in the movie, Dangerous Minds.
As she confronted a group of complaining teenagers, she startled them
by
asserting, "There are no victims here!" Now I realize that we can
take this idea too far. Of course there are victims in the world;
and it is tragic and dangerous to overlook this fact. As the
Buddha
and Christ demonstrated, it is even incumbent on us to feel their pain
and to share their struggles. But, in most cases, we take our own
passivity and victimization much too far and demonstrate the truth
Trollope's
words: "A huge living, daily increasing grievance, that does one no
palpable
harm is the happiest posession that a man can have."
While
there are many techniques that naturally fit into my approach, the most
important thing that you can do right now is to begin looking at your
dreams
as a test, even the ones that are ostensibly pleasant or
"ordinary."
An initiation test usually lurks behind every dream. Then,
look at the points in the dream where you reacted -- inwardly or
outwardly,
emotionally or mentally. Do not take these responses as necessary
even if they seem justified, especially any response prompted by fear
or
avoidance. Begin to question every dreamer reaction and to
speculate on appropriate, bold and creative alternatives.
In
this way, you may begin to see what might have happened in the old
dream,
and what still could happen in your future dreams. This exercise
of critiquing the dreamer's responses will, in itself, increase your
internal
readiness for future dream tests as they arise. You may surprise
yourself with the creativity and fearlessness that springs forth in
your
dreams, and in waking life as well.
If you
think about it, this approach to dreams translates into a wonderfully
responsible
attitude toward life as a whole. Instead of regarding ourselves
as
passive witnesses in live's unfolding drama, we begin to see ourselves
the way we really are -- as "co-creators" with God, capable of
transforming
our experiences of life through altering our responses to what is being
presented.
In
one
unforgettable dream, I dreamed I was running from another man who
wanted
to kill me. I ran and tried to hide; but each place offered no
security
from his approaching threat. In my fear, I began to realize I
would
soon die -- that is, unless I was dreaming! At that point, I
realized
that I was dreaming. At that point, I saw my good friend Mark
Thurston,
and told him that I was going to meet the man who wished to kill
me.
He wished me the best (but did not volunteer to accompany me).
I came
to a door, and opened it. The man was sitting at a desk with his
back to me. He saw me, whirled around, raised his revolver and
fired
-- once, and then again. I felt the "bullets" like a sharp wind
passing
through me. Then, I walked up to him, reached up and touched his
face. He looked alarmed and mistrustful. Then, his face
softened.
He reached up and touched my face, too.
As
we
move out of a passive role in our dreams -- and in our overall approach
to life -- our criteria for success changes. Instead of judging
ourselves
and others by the outcome of our efforts, we begin to evaluate our
progress
by the quality of our responses to life. By so doing, we move out
of a childlike dependency on oracles: We are ushered into a fuller
appreciation
of what we can become as the dream of life unfolds its endlessly
frustrating,
forever intriguing, multifaceted initiation.