Random thoughts about dreams and writers by Sandra Horn
The poet M R peacock has talked about the creative process
as arising from that part of the brain where dreams are made, and she suggested
that calm and quietness are prerequisites for both. That seems to me more like
day-dreaming than the dreams that come in sleep: day-dreams, the slipping of a
cog in the brain towards unfocussedness,
letting thoughts drift as they will. I’ve found that story or poetry
ideas sometimes float through in that pleasant, what-looks-like-idle, state.
They may just be fragments that float off again and never make it into
wholeness, but occasionally they grow and settle into something worth working
on. My children’s story Goose Anna came from that out-of-focus state on a long
motorway drive (I was a passenger, I hasten to add) with a soft-toy goose on
the back seat, and picture book The Crows’ Nest formed from a chilled-out
evening (with wine) in a friend’s garden, half-listening to crows gossiping in
nearby trees.
Days out in the wind and sun between Keyhaven and Hurst
Castle Spit, with nothing to do but stroll along the marshes or take the little
ferry across have produced two poems. On the Ferry is obviously directly
related to the sea, the little tethered boats with their poetic names and watching
a kite-surfer soaring over us. Here’s a bit of it:
Oh, I am nudging threescore years and ten,
Slack-fleshed, stiff-jointed,
Needing to feel my feet flat on the ground;
But now I’m up there with the surfer – past him –
Riding the wind on strong and tireless arms.
The ferry chugs below.
Skugga and Sylph, Sea Eagle, Seren Wen
Clatter and tug and fret;
Sea-bound, earth-bound, while I surf the sky.
But The Name came out of the blue while we were walking;
years after my last pregnancy had ended in a miscarriage, the urge to name the
lost child came surging up out of the blue:
the ache – the need
to name her, came from everywhere.
It called across the waves, sang in the salty wind,
and could not be denied.
It was odd, inexplicable, and disturbing – why at that
moment, after all this time? why there? - until I could release the tension it
created by putting it into a written form.
It made me think that, sometimes at least, the creative process owes
more to the strangeness of night-dreams than to the more familiar state of
day-dreaming.
Sometimes it’s obvious where the issues and anxieties in the
dream have come from, even though they will have been transformed by the
mysterious processes involved in dreaming. On the other hand, sometimes the
content of a dream is so off-the-wall that it defies understanding. In a recent
Fb post by writer Katherine Langrish, she recounted an incomprehensible dream
which, if I remember rightly, involved being in a railway carriage with
Margaret Thatcher, papers being spilled and people arriving with chocolate
cakes. Katherine could not make any sense of it – not surprisingly, perhaps. Jung’s
explanation is that we dream in symbols, but that’s not much help in
understanding the content unless you know what the symbols stand for. Freud
translated some of them (you know, sex, penis envy...) but they are so many and
so various that they mostly remain unaccounted for – although they may be very
useful for writers, gleaners of odds and ends to weave into words.
I like the ‘clear store’ theory of dreams, the idea that
while we sleep, our brains sift out the accumulated bits and pieces of the day
and bring them to the sub-surface, where we are aware of them albeit in
transformed guise, and they can then be removed to leave space for the next
day’s lot. Something like that, anyway. Neil Gaiman once set a theme for a
mini-opera libretto based on the idea of a Sweepers of Dreams, whose job is to
‘clear the store’. I was very taken with the idea that if the Sweepers didn’t do their job,
people would be driven mad by all the swirling junk in their heads:
Sweeper:
The
scrapings and the tatters of your day
The
guilty thoughts that will not go away
The
fury and the lust you keep inside
Your
avarice, your envy, sloth and pride
Your
naughty habits, secret fears, your lies
Lurking
between your ears, behind your eyes,
Swirling,
heaving, jostling in your brain
You
hide them there - we dig them up again.
While
you are sleeping we will peel away
The
inhibitions of your waking day
Your
Dreams will set them free!!
But if you can use them creatively instead of going mad, perhaps you’re a
writer.
Comments
As for weird dreams like the one Kath had -- the dreamer understands them on some level because they invented them. But the 'dreamer' uses visual code because it doesn't have language. Kath should ask the Thatcher thing in her dream why she's there - and just let the answer come without reaching for it. My guess is that it's something to do with all the disasters overtaking us, almost all of which had their origin in Thatcher's policies -- but that would be my interpretation, not Kath's.