Some days feel pointless. I wake up and I wonder what I am
doing. I get this hopeless sense that life is meaningless. When I am in this place, I feel like it
is going to stay that way. I feel stuck. It feels like there is nobody or no
thing that will ever be able to pull me out of it.
Dream:
I am sitting alone in a broken down old car. There is a
hole in the floor of the car where my bare feet are sticking through to the
sand underneath.
The dream reflects the truth of that part of me that sometimes
feels hopeless and stuck. But there is
hope because I also know what it feels like to be in a place that is the
opposite of stuck. A place where I can feel a sense of movement or fluidity.
A week after my father died, I was swimming in the ocean. The
water was warm and felt like silk on my skin. I stayed in the water for a long,
long time. My feelings moved through me as the water flowed around me. I felt
sadness melt into wonder as pelicans swooped down low and then delightful
surprise as a dolphin swam within an arms length of me.
It is curious to me that a person can live in such different
states of being. Being stuck vs. being in a state of fluidity. Dreams like this
one can help us see when we are stuck. Dreams can also help us move towards a
more fluid way of being.
I experienced this sense of fluidity during my string* at a
dreamwork retreat in October. Strings between my dreams connected feelings of
fear, pain and joy. With the connection, I was able to move between these
feelings seamlessly. There was a feeling of fluidity similar to what I felt in
the ocean that day. When I feel that, it feels easy, normal – like that is
exactly how it is supposed to feel. The energy flows easily and it feels
limitless.
But still, I often feel stuck. The word stagnant comes to
mind.
A quick google search gives this:
1. Not moving or
flowing; motionless
2. Foul or stale
from standing
3. Showing little
or no sign of activity or advancement; not developing or progressing; inactive
4. Lacking vitality
or briskness; sluggish or dull
Yes, that’s it! Stagnant. That is what I often feel and have
felt off an on for years. All of the above. Stagnant is a familiar place for
me. I remember times as a young girl, sitting on my bed staring out the window.
I felt a tug inside me because I knew I wanted to do more; be more. But so
often I’d sit there paralyzed, not knowing what else to do – just as I did in
the dream with the broken down old car.
Somewhere along the line I lost the divine connection to my
soul self. Dreamwork has opened me up to a taste of what it feels like to have
this free flowing energy and fluidity.
I believe that this fluidity is my true default, not stagnation.
Stagnation has been a persistent pathology of mine. I’ve had it for many years
and apparently it is not going to give up easily. But there is a deep longing within my soul that won’t give
up either. It’s that same tug I had inside of me as a young girl. The force of
that tug won’t let up. It comes from a flowing place full of energy where
stagnation cannot exist. Stagnant water cannot exist when flowing water moves
through it just as darkness can no longer exist when a light is turned on.
Metaphor can bring us to a deeper place of understanding
through the imagination. The metaphor of stagnant and flowing water helps me to
imagine what might be true about myself. When I am in this pathological stuck
place, I am in the stagnant water on the surface. It’s a stale place, lacking
vitality. But I can sense that just underneath the surface, the water is
flowing with amazing energy. One way for me to start to access the moving water
underneath is to drop into my feelings. Dreams are an invitation to feel. Dream
homework is our chance to bring the feelings into waking life. When I imagine
the dream scene from my homework, I drop into the feeling in my heart to sense
it. This is like dipping down below the stagnant water and feeling what is
there. It may be a feeling that I am resisting – like pain or sadness. But with
the feeling, there is movement. This is fluidity.
*string
At Archetypal Dreamwork retreats, actual pieces of string
are often used to signify the connections between dreams. Because of the use of strings, the acting out of dreams
with their connections is referred to as a “string.” See northofeden.com for more information.

Hi Kathy,
ReplyDeleteI am sorry I have missed some of your posts. I thought that I was already subscribed but see that I am not. I sent an email today. I am really enjoying reading through your blog and appreciate very much hearing your journey.
Warm regards,
Bill St.Cyr
dreamdescent.com