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"The Antecedents of the Experience of Light in Dreams"
Gregory Scott Sparrow, Ed.D., Asst. Professor
University of Texas-Pan American
Since the beginning of my work with dreams, I have
maintained a special interest in the ecstatic experience of light in
the dream state. While the white light is the predominant, if not
exclusive visual element in such experiences, the ecstatic feeling,
perceived healing, and sense of holy presence that accompany the vision
of light puts the experience in a category all by itself. Jung's words
capture the universal significance of the vision of light.
The
phenomenon itself, that is, the vision of light, is an experience
common to many mystics, and one that is undoubtedly of the greatest
significance, because in all times and places it appears at the
unconditional thing, which unites in itself the greatest energy and the
profoundest meaning.1
Not surprisingly, the experience of light represents an
especially elusive phenomenon, both from the standpoint of the one who
seeks it, or seeks it again, and from the perspective of one who wishes
to understand what precedes or gives rise to it. Of course, we
have the literature of the mystics, both East and West, who have
described their moments of ecstasy through their own metaphors, and
within their own systems of philosophy and faith, thereby enriching
their accounts with the uniquely personal context of their spiritual
journey. However, such accounts reflect the particular orientation of
the recipients in such a way that may effectively obscure the state of
the mind and of the heart that typically precedes what the Tibetan
Buddhists refer to as "the dawning of the clear light."
I propose to you that we can learn more about what
accounts for this core mystical experience by examining, in particular,
dreams which culminate in the experience of light. By analyzing the
antecedent images alongside the dreamer's subjective state, we might
ascertain the processes that are at work without depending as much on
the retrospective analyses of the recipients, or imposing constructs
that may subtly appropriate the experience into convenient theories.
Out of such a study one might be able to articulate an approach to
dream work and spiritual practice which would make previously
inaccessible experiences more available to a wider population. Before
we examine a few light experiences in the dream state, and their
antecedents, let me share with you a so-called failure dream that
may set that stage for appreciating the dreams that follow, and the
hypothesis that will emerge in the process. I had this dream when I was
in my 20s.
I become lucid and decide to search for the white
light. I begin to see it here, and then there, as it seems to shine
through the form of every ordinary object around me. I see a bicycle
shining, and concentrate on the shimmer in hopes that it will expand
into a full-blown experience of radiance. However, as soon as I do
this, the shimmering disappears, and the bicycle becomes "just itself"
again. I am frustrated when I notice a woman approaching. She walks up
and says, "You must first learn to love the form before you can see the
light within it."
With an economy of words, the woman implies that the
dreamer must love the world of form––the realm of metes and bounds––in
order to experience the uniting essence of everything. The
woman's message to the dreamer suggests that if one wishes to
experience the highest states of ecstasy, one would do well to respect
the particular imagery that arises in the dream state, regardless of
its outward appearance. Certainly, lucid dreamers have considerable
freedom over the forms that arise in their dreams, and in many
instances can modify them or avoid them at will, and so an attitude of
embracing the specific form of the dream may seem to curtail
unnecessarily the creativity and freedom of the lucid dreamer. If the
dream is, as some say, a self-created reality, then why subordinate the
creator to the created?
There are two threads––transcendence and
immanence––running through every spiritual tradition. The path of
transcendence promises enlightenment through an elevated, unifying
perspective, whereas the path of immanence offers enrichment through a
complete, wholehearted involvement in the diversity of here-and-now
events and relationships. Along these lines, I once had a dream that a
woman and I were both seeking heaven. I knew that we had to pursue our
common goal in different ways. I had to embark on a journey through a
dark, wooded land, whereas she had to find her way to heaven through
deep meditation. This balancing act between transcendence and
immanence, between spirit and soul, can be found in every spiritual
tradition. But instead of digressing into a topic that is much bigger
than this format allows, I will examine some dreams in which the
dreamer has succeeded in experiencing the interior light to see if this
conversation between transcendence and immanence can be discerned.
The following dream of a middle-aged man reveals a
remarkable progression of strategies for engaging the form of the
dream, each of which resolves the dream conflict with dramatically
differing outcomes.
I
am alone in a log cabin on a barren plain. The door opens and three
figures come inside and stand before me, side by side. They are
Dracula, Werewolf, and Frankenstein. At first I am terrified as I
recall my childhood fear of these three characters. However, I suddenly
realize that I am dreaming and my fear subsides. My first thought is
that they are only a dream, and that I can make them go away. So I say,
"Get out!" And they disappear immediately.
I begin to think that I didn't do the best
thing by having them leave. I think, "Maybe I should have surrounded
myself with light instead." So I shout, "Please come back." The door
opens, and the three figures enter again and face me. I mentally
surround myself with light, and a bright white cloud appears all around
me. I peer through the haze, and can barely make out the three
characters standing there quietly.
Again I wonder if I have done the best thing.
I think, "Maybe I should invite them into the light." So I say, "Please
come into the light." I see them walking toward me, and suddenly the
light comes into me. The characters and the cabin disappear in the
radiance of my inner experience. I am on fire with love, and remain in
an ecstatic state for some time before coming back into consciousness
in my bed. The effects of this most exhalted experience of my life
remained with me for weeks.
In this remarkable experience, the dreamer applies three
approaches to the unsettling encounter. The first two reflect common
"transcendent" strategies for dealing with threat: banishing the threat
from a perspective of the dream's self-created nature, or insulating
oneself from the imagery through invoking the protection of higher
power. Both remedies seem to work, but neither satisfies the dreamer's
felt sense of the "very best." It is only the third
strategy––that of respecting and welcoming the threatening form of the
dream––that gives rise to the interior experience of light.
The second dream is one that was included in my book Lucid
Dreaming: Dawning of clear Light (1976). It is as follows:
I am the prisoner of the devil, along with a crowd of other
people. The devil appears as an ordinary man, who is very powerful,
cold and brutish. We are free to walk around, but the understanding is
that there is no escape from his power. Even so, a woman and I decide
to try to escape while he is distracted. It is night time, and we run
across a lighted expanse of lawn toward an area that is not lit by the
light. As I run, a voice says to me, "If you go further, you will fall
into a well." I stop abruptly, not knowing what to do. Then I see a
shadow creep pass me, alerting me to the devil's approach. Feeling
powerless, I turn around, drop to the ground, and say, "Lord have
mercy!" However, instead of seeing the devil, I see a woman clothed in
white, surrounded by light. She walks up, bends down and touches my
forehead. Immediately, I am infused with light and ecstasy, and I know
that I have been healed. The light pours through me for some time
before subsiding as I awaken in bed.
In this dream, the dreamer is also aware of a profound
dilemma. The dreamer resorts to a standard strategy when dealing
with a threat––flight––but in the process, he become aware of another
problem created by his initiative. The dreamer is caught between two
untenable choices with no apparent way out. In a state of utter
resignation, the light comes to him through an unexpected source.
These first dreams reveal clear conflicts of which
the dreamers become starkly aware. The dreamers do not resolve
their respective dilemmas by piercing the illusion of the dream's
reality. Instead, they come to the point where they accept that they
must face, and even coexist with, these troublesome influences.
The thesis that emerges from these experiences and
the ones that follow is this: that the recognition and acceptance of an
apparently unresolvable internal division can precede the experience of
light. The light, in turn, seems to incorporate the contradictory
perspectives into a greater whole. The dreamer's apparent role in the
process does not appear to be one of solving the problem, nor of
transcending it, but rather to acknowledge and to accept the burden of
irreconcilable conflict.
Another dream––again, a nonlucid dream––reveals a
conflict for which there seems to be no resolution available; that is,
until the light appears.
I am with Mike on the streets of a Mexican border town. It is
evening, and we run into an attractive woman, who may be a prostitute,
but we are not sure. We flirt with her, and make arrangements to get
together later that evening. Just at that moment, I notice my father
standing nearby. He wears a stern look, as if to express his judgment
of me. I am unsure of what to do or to say. At that moment, there
is an explosion to the east. I turn and see that an orb of white light
has appeared about 100 yards away, hovering above the ground. I look at
my father and see that his face is rapt with wonder, and illuminated by
the light. We stand together, transfixed by the sight. The orb
approaches us, and passes slowly over us. Again, there is an explosion
and the orb appears to the east of us again. It is so powerful that it
begins to attract everything toward it. I feel the wind becoming so
powerful that I lose my footing and rush upward into the light, until
there is nothing left of the dream but light and a sense of intense
love and fulfillment.
The dreamer is clearly caught in a conflict between competing
values. However, the light appears as an unexpected solution that
unites, or supercedes, the respective ideals of father and son.
Finally, the following dream commences with a stark
view of the dreamer's impoverished condition, but which gives ways to
ecstasy and healing.
I am aware that I am terminally ill, and I am with a woman who
also will soon die of an incurable disease. We are at a spiritual
retreat, and sleeping in open rooms. She and I have beds beside each
other, but we do not sleep together. That night, we lie down in our
respective beds and fall asleep. In the middle of the night, I am
overwhelmed by a white light that comes in intense waves, subsiding
briefly between each exquisite pulsation. For a while, there is only
light. I receive the light more fully than on many other occasions
where I resisted somewhat out of fear or discomfort. I am aware that
the light is pouring through me into the sleeping woman beside me, and
that we are both being healed of our illnesses. As I surrender
completely to the light, a voice says, "Your mortal life is
over." Then later, we both awaken, and realize that we have been
healed. Further, I know that she and I will remain together for all
eternity.
This non-lucid dreamer comes to the realization that he will soon
die. In effect, the dreamer experiences his fate and everyone's else's
fate. Like the Russian poet, who begins her poem, "I know the truth,
you can forget all other truths," referring to the fact that we all
will soon die, the dreamer apprehends the gritty truth of his own
faulted existence. But in the context of this bleak realization, the
dreamer is infused with radiance.
We are seeing in these dreams a clear view of what
precedes, at least in some cases, the experience of inner light. First
of all, a sense of inner division, impoverishment, or disease––for
which there is no apparent solution––sets the stage. Then the dreamer
comes to terms, or even accepts, the specific form of one's divided
condition. Out of this sober realization comes something wholly
unexpected––the fusion of irreconcilable differences into a greater
whole, signified by the experience of radiance and ecstasy. It is
significant, I believe, that the experience of light is not merely one
of mental clarity and unattachement; it is also an experience of deep
love, exquisite feeling, and abiding presence. That is to say, the
experience is profoundly immanent or soulful, as well as spiritual or
transcendent. While it announces the presence of something higher
that is uniquely capable of resolving the inner division, it crosses
graciously to the human side of the equation, as well, by intensifying
one's experience of love and relationship.
One might assume that once a person has learned to
accept the form of whatever arises in dreams and waking life––that is,
to accept his or her own limitations, and to move comfortably in the
harness of life's daily losses and contradictions––then the level of
inner conflict will presumably lessen. If so, the experience of the
light should arise without as much antecedent conflict. In
support of this view, consider a final dream. Recall, if you will, the
first dream that I shared with you in which the woman told me that I
first needed to love the form in order to experience the light. In the
following dream, which took place 30 years later, I finally seem to
know this. It was a simple dream.
I am with an unknown man in an outdoor scene, and I abruptly
become lucid. I say to my companion, "If you want to see the
light, meditate on whatever you see." Following my own advice, I
immediately see a children's outdoor swing set. I lie down on the grass
and meditate on the image of the swingset. The light comes after a
moment's hesitation, obliterating the imagery and leaving me to receive
it in gentle pulsating waves of ecstasy.
Perhaps one can never know why some momentous dreams give way to
the fullness of light, and some do not, but we can point out to
dreamers the profound significance of their willingness to become aware
of the apparently unresolvable conflicts of their lives. Rather
than representing a negative indication of growth, the awareness of
conflict in the dream can be reframed as a state of awareness which may
invite or culminate in an experience of profound reconciliation.
One might ask, since very few people report having
dreams of interior light, how can this thesis be useful to a broader
population of dreamers? The anecdotes reported herein support the
view that dreamers may be closest to the experience of interior light
within their most unpleasant dreams––which, of course, is a
counterintuitive notion. However, if we know that grappling with our
intractable inner conflicts brings us closer to––not farther from–– the
light, then we can be on the lookout for when dreamers are engaged in
such a struggle and could, therefore, be open to such experiences.
Encouraging them to embrace their dilemma could be the intervention
that "tips the scales" in the direction of profound ecstasy and
healing.
It is also true from my personal and clinical
experience that the light appears with surprising frequency in our
dreams, but that the dreamer typically fails to recognize it for what
it is. For instance, a 49-year-old woman recently shared a dream with
me in which she saw a UFO hovering overhead. Actually, all she really
saw was a large white orb surrounded by small red lights, but because
she concluded that it was a UFO that had come to abduct her, she became
afraid and ran. In discussing the dream with her, I was able to
explore the dreamer's resistances to the light and relate them to
unresolved fears related to sexual childhood abuse. By drawing on my
own experiences, and examples from other dreamers, I was able to
present the possibility that she might be able to experience the light
by turning toward, and acknowledging the source of her fears. In
response to my suggestion, she spent two weeks exploring her
experiences of violation and how they had infected her relationship
with higher power. Soon after, she had a dream in which she
looked up and saw two birds flying toward each other. As she watched
them, they became colorful spiralling discs. She thought, "This is
probably the light!" The objects turned into a brilliant spectral
display of color, resembling in her words, "a peacock's colors." She
awoke with a feeling of deep connection and hope.
In summary, anecdotal evidence suggests that when a
dreamer is willing to embrace the specific form of the dream––however
afflicted it may appear to be with its inherent duality, conflict,
limitation, or perceived threat––the dreamer may experience the
fullness of light. Of course, a much larger sample of dreams
would be required to establish if this relationship between internal
conflict and the experience of interior light applies to most such
dreams, or only a subset thereof. This dark, troubled journey contrasts
with the view what we need to do is to recognize the self-created
nature of the dream, and to rise above it. Instead it suggests that we
must become aware of the complex division within us––the apparently
irreconcilable aspects of impulse, habit and character that may seem to
prevent us from becoming the person we aspire to be, and which often
appear in our dreams as fully autonomous, shadowy characters with their
own agendas. The courage to acknowledge and accept the apparent
irreconcilability of our complex inner condition seems to be the price
of admission into the mystic's ecstatic vision. In the words of Yeats,
"Nothing can be whole or soul that has not first been rent." The
apparent paradox in all of this is that by accepting the burden of
one's apparent brokenness, the experience of light may become more, not
less, available than ever before.
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