Observations from the Invisibility Cloak

When I was 28 and writing poetry, I wrote a poem lamenting the feeling that I was invisible because I was no longer the youngest, cutest thing on the block --- and I had become a mother. Now I'm in my sixties and really invisible. And I like it!

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Between spaces

Where do you go when you sleep?

I've long been fascinated by the betweens. Dreams. Pretend. Reverie. Hallucination. What is the difference between vivid sleeping dreams and hallucination?

When I was in sixth grade, I used to get in trouble for daydreaming in school. My teacher, Mrs. Patrick, was strict but I liked her. We had just moved from the small towns of rural Iowa and fetched up in Germany on an Army base. It was 1961. Everything familiar was gone; I didn't even have favorite objects because our household goods hadn't arrived.

My desk was one row over from the windows because of course, we sat in rows. I gazed out the windows that overlooked the playground and grassy space and fell into deep thought. Mrs. Patrick thought I was dawdling; I knew if I didn't "daydream" I would cry.

People who dwell in imagination, children or adults, are often accused of being out of touch with reality. Lazy, head in the clouds, not all there. You've heard the words, whether they apply to you or not. "Why can't you just pay attention?" "Snap out of it!"

The netherworld I occupied most often was found between the covers of a book. It was there that new worlds opened and I could travel to distant times and places. It's a bit of a chicken and egg question: did I begin to dream because of the stories I read and those read to me, or did the stories I encountered mirror my innate inclinations?

I've reached a point in life in which I can dream more freely, just as my ambitions and "real world" options seem to be narrowing. In that regard, it's much like childhood. I have more agency now, and the ability to call my own shots. Nobody is going to move me from one continent to another without consultation. Perhaps that lack of decision-making gives rise to a rich childhood imagination for some kids like me.

I love being asleep because of the vivid dreams that come to me. At the same time, I resist going to sleep because being awake is so interesting and I'm afraid I'll miss something. So I stay awake "past my bedtime" (sorry, Mommy) and fall into a colorful panoply of stories and actors that I then resist waking from.

I've often heard people say they don't dream when they sleep. I don't know the physiology of that because I don't understand the mechanism of dreaming. But it's surprising to me how often that pronouncement is made with pride.

"I don't dream." (subtext: dreaming is a namby-pamby waste of brain power)
These are often the same folks who brag about only needing four hours of sleep a night. Hmmm. Is there a connection?

Me, I have taken to sleeping 8-10 hours a night and spending so much time in dreams that sometimes I can't remember what's real and what I dreamed. With my background of two parents with Alzheimer's Disease, that can be troubling, but there's no sense worrying. In the meantime, I reap the benefits by waking up with stories buzzing around in my head waiting to be written down.

Next year, ten short months from now, I will turn 70. Just as childhood is a time of rapid growth and change, I feel like this time of life is filled with questions and answers I would not have anticipated. As my body begins to change in ways I don't approve of, I find myself renewing my acquaintance with the pastimes and enchantments of my youth. I may not travel the world in real life -- too expensive, too difficult -- but I am once again loose in the liminal world between worlds and it's a welcome return.

Mom reading a bedtime story on the picnic table.

3 comments:

  1. Oh that photo, and those jammies... your story brings back many, many similar memories.
    And regarding daydreaming, books, etc.: I have always lived in a world populated by elves, fairies, talking animals, ghosts, visitors from other other planets, and more. And I, too, wonder, as you describe here, whether it is those beings in my world that attracts me to certain books, or vice versa? The answer no longer matters. I can still hear the voices of the tiny folk who lived behind the small waterfalls that ran over the flat slabs of rock in the streams in our back woods. Books that matter to me: The Borrowers, Mistress Mashem's Repose, all the Dr Doolittle books, Paddle-to-The-Sea, The Wind in the Willows, the Miss Bianca and Bernard books (Miss Bianca in the Salt Mines, for example), Stuart Little, and later Watership Down, and more -- so many more. Thank you for reminding me.

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  2. I dream but most of my dreams evaporate almost immediately upon waking. My wife, on the other hand, has dreams that are so real to her that there are times she has problems knowing the difference between her dreams and reality. It's a shame we can't just order up our favorite dreams from a menu kept in our subconscious.

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    1. Uh oh. There may be a short story lurking in that suggestion!

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