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Shepherds of the Night
How Dreams Help Artists to Develop Creativity
Susan is dining in an airport café. A loud speaker suddenly blasts
a warning that a harsh military regime is due to arrive momentarily.
Frantic, Susan jumps up and begins to bury her food under the dirt floor,
determined to cover her tracks. Doing so, however, it dawns on her that
the food's smell is a dead giveaway, and to bury it is "an exercise
in futility."
It was "only" a dream?
Whether layered and profound, or simple fragmentary flashes, night dreams
often exhort us to develop our creativity in the practical world. In
helping artists, dreams are one of my favorite tools. They hold power
to reflect, forecast, indicate new personal growth, and strengthen career
resolve. They never give answers, but they often point. Across a dream's
broad spiritual terrain, clues dwell, and once perceived, they act like
compasses giving direction. The true
Creative Voice if lost in the woods, always wants out. The actual
dreams profiled here will help artists to explore their dreams for guidance.
When Susan sought help in developing creativity, her goal was to re-activate
artistic gifts she had lost touch with. A career in child development
engaged her creatively, but that was not enough. She craved personal
expression, but fear was stopping her.
Pondering the dream, a single implication began to take full shape among
murkier prospects; Susan feared exposure and judgment, but she could
no longer deny the existence of her deeper gifts. Despite her efforts
to bury them (the food), hiding the evidence was "futile." Her gifts
exist unceasingly, as vital animating forces that fuel her "travels,"
or life path. For Susan, this news was bittersweet. Her wide-eyed excitement
was laced with apprehension. For most of us, undertaking change and
seeking help isn't purely a picnic. But it's worth it. When we're ready,
it's time for action. In our coaching process, we kept exploring the
delicate braid of her creative process, striving for clarity and setting
moderate goals during her transition.
In a later dream, a dog approaches Susan in a field. Indistinct people
command her to bury the dog alive. Aghast, she replies with an unqualified
"No!" and remains solid in her refusal. Susan's willingness to resuscitate
her personal creativity, and to protect it, was growing. This dream
was a friendly mirror saying, "Well done, look at the progress you are
making!" Susan's dreams were often potent guides, easing her transitional
anxieties, and helping her to unleash enormous amounts of artistic energy
and creativity in drawing and music.
Everyone has night dreams, remembered or not, as a part of REM sleep.
Sigmund Freud's sexual theory insisted that dreams protect us from voracious
instincts boiling up from the oily basement of the power-hungry ID.
Composed of symbolic clues to self-knowledge, the dream, said Freud,
is a "royal road to the unconscious." Carl Gustav Jung later broke with
Freud's concept of the unconscious, conceiving it as more a repository
of wisdom than a storm-filled dungeon of wishes and fears. For Dr. Jung,
dreams were less concealers, and more revealers, of truth. Our dreams
come packaged in various forms; ephemeral flashes, jolting realism,
subtle wisps, or even a confluence of seeming nonsense. They range from
abstraction to confused or coherent narratives. Their imagery can carry
innocuous, inspirational, or traumatic impact. No matter how clarified,
puzzling or outlandish their language may be, our dreams are trying
to tell us something. They often require us to dwell for a time within
ambiguities, to bathe in cool pools of uncertainty, before we profess
to know what they have in mind.
From what deep strata of consciousness do these "shepherds of the night"
emerge? Jung's theory suggests that our psyches are born connected to
a deeper collective "ocean" of awareness from which our personal dreams
flow. Like tributaries, dreams deliver ancient motifs that play a mysterious
role in humanity's evolution of consciousness. Jung interfaced with
multiple traditions and tribes, gleaning rich source material on the
nature of dreams. For ancient cultures across the world, dreams held
more than mere fascination. Indian tribes such as the Lakota Sioux,
Salish, Hopi, Iroquois, and Maya are well known for sharing their dreams
openly, and initiating interpreters to plum their depths for vital clues
to social, political and spiritual problem solving.
James, a client aspiring to become a novelist, had an inner critic slowing
his projects down. His dreams were powerful. In one, he arrives in front
of a church. Angelic melodies sung by feminine voices ring out from
behind it. Enchanted, James follows them to a courtyard outside the
sanctuary. There he sees a choir of beautiful women shrouded in gauzy
white sheets. He is emotionally moved. He enters the church through
a back door, where a curator stands accompanied by piles of art proofs.
He contends, fastidiously, that James must have a ticket for entry.
Producing one from his pocket, James is led by the curator down a curving,
stair-like contraption to a basement level under the sanctuary. There
is yet another level below this one, but no stairway leading down to
it. There hangs an alluring painting of a magnificent unicorn. The curator
jumps blithely down the stairless "cliff" and lands near to the painting.
James, still perched on the level above and watching him, is tempted
to follow suit but unable to gather his nerve to jump. The curator looks
up and scoffs at him for playing it safe.
This relatively complex dream exemplifies the need for incremental inspection.
A slow pace brings richer rewards, like a savory long-cooked stew. The
avant garde elements of the church (an outdoor choir and subterranean
art gallery) signify a spiritual context, one that defies traditional
norms. James is "called" by an unorthodox, near-angelic choir. He enters
the church through the "back door." This imagery invited James to apprehend
his creativity as a profound mystery, issuing from both within and beyond
the confines of church authority. The only authority here is a curator,
an art "editor" of sorts, who makes demands but also guides James to
the inner depths.
Tending to the images one-by-one, we discovered an over-riding insight.
The dream curator mirrored for James what his inner critic, once transformed,
might look like: an "usher" leading him to embrace and develop the hallowed
uniqueness of his creativity and his being (the unicorn.) We must aim
not to eliminate, but to soften and guide the critic back into its proper
role. Under the disguise of a Destroyer lies an Ally--a helpful "editor"
who serves the Creative Voice on its mission toward actualizing itself
in the world. Far from stopping him, the transformed critic would empower
James to view his writing with an objective eye--to evaluate, improve
upon--to uphold the standards of his initial inspiration. James' As
our artist coaching sessions proceeded, the Creative Voice took the
lead, and momentum on his novel grew steadily. This dream was a springboard.
It grew more intelligible over time, like an old book of spiritual wisdom,
revealing more upon each reading.
Far less enigmatic dreams are no less important. James later dreamed
he was driving a new car, feeling at ease, mastering its controls. This
fragment echoed the qualities of trust and reliance developing in his
relationship with creativity. Kristin, a real estate agent embarking
upon a singing career, dreamed she was flying in a helicopter. Her father
was "driving" incompetently, putting them in danger. The onus fell on
Kristin to "take the controls" away from him. This punctuated dream
urged Kristin to stop letting her artist father's negative judgments
choke her creative flow. In the same vein, Robin, a writer and musician,
dreamed that one of her artist friends could not see her, though they
occupied the same room. Through the artist coaching process, we discovered
Robin was feeling unacknowledged as the talented artist she is.
Some dreams shed light on our present or past. Others cast their rays
into the future. In one of my dreams, I am in a forest at the top of
a huge hill. I am being carried away by flood waters swallowing the
earth and trees. Feeling "uprooted" and out of control, I finally drift
to an enormous rock jutting above the ominous water. I grab hold and
climb on top to rest. Etched into the rock's surface is an ancient inscription,
awesomely powerful but inscrutable. I nonetheless feel wholly reassured
by it. When the rising water level is about to submerge the rock, I
am forced to get back in and swim. Now fortified, I instinctively know
what direction will lead toward safety. Soon, in the distance, I see
the top of an unthinkably tall ladder leading down to dry land. I swim
toward it, relieved, but knowing that heavy days are awaiting me. Shortly
after this dream, a multiplex web of transitional challenges arose in
my life at once, in the forms of death, career and personal life. I
think the dream was a talisman to hold onto when events began to "uproot"
me and threaten my faith. It struck me first as a mysterious and spiritual
poem about staying grounded. It matured to become, in retrospect, a
personal symbol of hope.
These are called "precognitive" dreams. They forecast coming events,
sometimes with uncanny accuracy. Abraham Lincoln dreamed of his own
assassination. The tutor for Austria's Archbishop Franz Ferdinand dreamed
his pupil would be assassinated at Sarajevo, the event that precipitated
World War 1. These dreams have enduring ripple affects, viewed from
new perspectives with time. They call into question spiritual aspects
of our lives, and the progression of time itself. The Jewish, Christian
and Islamic traditions are full dream life, viewed as emanations from
a realm mystics call "Timeless." The biblical prophet Daniel, for example,
interpreted the dreams of Babylon's King Nebuchadnezzar. Daniel himself
experienced "night visions" thought to symbolize future power struggles
between the earthly kingdoms (or nations) of the world. Jung wrote of
"an existence outside time which runs parallel with existence inside
time." Dreams may be a sort of universal gateway to this "Timeless"
realm, one that quantum physics might describe as the "non-material
sphere of awareness." A Christian may call it "God," a Buddhist, "Enlightenment."
Another artist, Claudia, dreamed of a gypsy woman: Four men lift a square
table by its four corners and carry it into her house. As a result,
the room becomes more spacious and open. The majestic interior is full
of intriguing artifacts and exotica. The gypsy is well pleased. In this
dream, the gypsy represented a fey, spontaneous side of Claudia that
needed "more room." The image inspired Claudia to breathe new life into
her creativity and her projects. It's a rare four-cornered table that
requires four men to move it. Four is sometimes perceived as a symbol
for transcendence, or the "fourth dimension," Great literature such
as the Parsifal myth and Goethe's Faust use "four" as a device to represent
this realm. It seemed the gypsy image was symbolizing Claudia's passageway.
One's personal history holds the vital keys to meaning, but inherited
symbols from the deeper collective past, enlarge it.
We have multiple names; the Transcendent, God, Enlightenment, Fourth
Dimension, and many others. Whatever we choose to call it, the Creative
Voice is experienced as inextricably linked to it. Even the most brilliant
and accomplished creators have had times of struggle, even grave doubts.
When the light is blocked, there are ways to ease the shades off. Dreams
may console, challenge, or plain baffle us. But one thing is certain;
they will always push at the seams of our conscious limitations, coaxing
a tear that would open us to developing greater creativity, greater
goals and a larger, more spiritual self.
Cultivate Your Dreams
- When you lie down to sleep, give yourself the gentle suggestion, "I'd
like to remember my dreams." Then, the moment you open your eyes in
the morning,
think, "What was I just dreaming?" Close your eyes again, and allow
the memory
of the dream to emerge in your mind.
- When reviewing dream content, take your time. Savor the images, ponder
their meanings. Notice how your body responds to various interpretations.
Your intuition will tell you when the meaning "fits."
- Are there animals, other humans, other beings, elements, objects?
What environment does your dream take place in? This suggests the area
of your life it is referring to. For example, a living room could be
about your family relationships or something else you associate with
that space. Taking it a step further, you might ask if it's addressing
the level of "aliveness" in your life.
- Notice how each symbol of your dream relates to every other symbol,
like a holograph.
- Strikingly bold images mean that your dream is really trying to get
your attention. It might be trying to "wake you up" to something. Repeating
symbols are important, too. Do you need more of the qualities of that
symbol in your life? For example, if you repeatedly dream about water,
perhaps you need more of it in your life, internally or externally.
Water can symbolize consciousness itself.
- Keep a journal or recorder near your bedside. The act of writing or
speaking the
dream often behaves in magical ways. It will expand and enrich your
insights and personal growth. If you're in a hurry, jot down the key
notes about your dream so you may recall it fully for later recording.
- Avoid symbols dictionaries. Your own life experience informs your
dreams. You and
your intuition are the best resources. Share your dreams with a trusted
friend or group. They may help with additional questions that lead to
more insight. Still, your own "felt sense" has the final say.
- Avoid mincing and parsing your dream images to death. Allow them to
breathe and
show you the gifts they bear.
- Dreams are one of the great free wonders of life; so have fun!
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*Essay by Barbara Bowen of
GatewaysCoaching.com - the definitive source for the creative process
and creative careers.
Contact Barbara with your questions about your
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Copyright ©2009 Barbara Bowen and
Gateways Coaching. All rights reserved.
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