Nature of the Psyche, Session 790
There are vast
distances of a psychological and psychic nature separating my reality from your
own. To some degree Ruburt’s mind is the
connective between us. As I speak in
sessions, therefore, I am not entirely myself.
I am what I am,
interpreted through your reality. I have
personality characteristics by which those who have come to sessions can
identify me. I have a peculiarity of voice
and accent that is, if I may say so myself, unique and
individualistic. Yet I come to your
reality by a strange route – one that does not involve roads or highways but psychological
dramas that wind backward like paths into the “psychological history” of your
species. To some extent, I am like
a particularly vivid, persistent, recurring dream image, visiting the mass
psyche, only with a reality that is not confined to dreams – a dream image that
attains a psychological fullness that can seem to make ordinary
consciousness a weak apparition by contrast, psychologically speaking.
We have been
speaking of dream events and waking reality, the nature of creativity and the
formation of events. We have also touched
upon psychological entities of vast proportions, in your terms, that form
psychological structures from which your own reality emerges. In that connection, the nature of my reality
becomes pertinent.
I am not
speaking here of gods, but of psychological structures different from the ones
you know. They cannot directly perceive
or experience your reality in their “present” form of organization. In a manner of speaking they are in the
background, from which the foreground of your experience emerges. They appear in your dreams in various
ways. They are like the cloth from which
you are cut. They are forces which have
no need of names except for your convenience.
Those
psychological structures are also great energy activators, and as such are
important initiators of events. They are
seldom if ever physically materialized.
Yet they are very responsive to the psychic needs of the people, and so they
“appear” at various times in history with certain messages, in the same way
that certain dreams might reoccur in a private mind.
In the most
cosmic and most minute ways, physical experience springs from inner
reality. Events are initiated from
within and then appear without. In your
terms I have no physical existence.
These books, however, initiate quite physical events as readers learn to
take better control of their lives, expand their consciousnesses, and become
aware of their own greater abilities.
You may say if
you wish that I am a dream image lacking even an image – but if so, then each
individual whose life is changed by my worlds must question: “What is a dream?” In the same way that my personality exists
without physical manifestation, so does your own. Your dreaming and waking experience has a
direct effect upon the entire universe. The
difference is that you are not consciously aware of what you are doing, but I
am. I change a world to some extent, though
in your terms I will not actually sit in a chair or walk the streets, or
shake your hand, or see the twilight come, or the sun rise.
To me
your world is a dream universe which I visit by invitation, a probable reality
that I find unique and very dear – but one in which I can no longer have direct
experience. Because I am not as immersed
in it as you, I can tell you much about it, since your precise orientation
necessitates a more narrow, concentrated view.
Now in your
dreams you often visit other such realities, but you have not learned to
organize your perception, or direct it.
If entities like myself form the background of your own existence, so do
entities like yourselves act as the background psychological structures in
which other such organizations exist.
There is always a give-and-take in all such relationships.
Your kind of
psychological reality is therefore implied in my own, and mine in yours, even
as your kind of reality is implied in that of Willy Two (our kitten) – and his in yours.
It is not easy
to explain the workings of the inner psyche, or the activity behind dreams, for
such experience exists beyond the framework of verbalization or images, and
deals basically with the nature and behavior of psychological and psychic
energy.
I am a
personified energy source – but so are you.
I have had many lives, in your terms, yet in other, terms I have not
lived physically, but rather lent or loaned my energy to lives that rose from
my reality but were not me. In the same
way you give birth to dream images of your own – hardly aware that you have
done so, unconscious of the fact that you have provided impetus for a kind of
psychological reality that quite escapes your notice. The dream stories you begin continue on their
own. No dream is stillborn. Each chapter of this book is written in such
a way that the ideas presented will activate your own intuitions, and open
pathways between your dreaming and waking states.
Your own greater
reality hovers about you in each instant.
If you knew in precise terminology how you grew physically from a fetus
to an adult, if you could consciously follow that process, you would not
necessarily be better off, but possibly hindered in your growth; for you would
begin to question: “Am I doing this right?”
The perfection of the process would make you ill at ease.
In the same way,
a step-by-step illustration of the nature of the dream state might well make
you too self-conscious. You would begin
to question: “Am I dreaming right?”
Many people are
in awe of their dreams. They are afraid
of anything they do not consciously control.
Yet if you think of your dreams as extensions of your own experience in
another context, then you can indeed learn to gain ease with them. You will recall them more easily, and as you
do you will be able to maintain a sense of continuity between the waking and
dream states.
As this happens
the contours of your own psyche will appear more clearly. Those contours will not show themselves in
terms of definite mathematical-like propositions, however, but will emerge
through the techniques, symbols, feelings, and desires usually attributed to
creativity.
The
characteristics of creativity appear most clearly in children. Creativity implies abandon within a framework
that is accepted for itself, and itself only.
EXERCISE
If in your
waking hours you playfully make up a dream for yourself, and then
playfully interpret it without worrying about implications, but for itself
only, you will unwittingly touch upon the nature of your own nightly
dreaming. Your regular dreams and your “manufactured”
ones will have much in common, and the process of manufacturing dreams will
acquaint you with the alterations of consciousness that to a greater degree
happen nightly. This is an excellent
exercise. It is particularly beneficial
for those who have a too-rigid mental framework.
The playfulness
and creativity of dreams are vastly underrated in most dream studies. Children often frighten themselves on purpose
through games, knowing the game’s framework all the time. The bogeyman in the garden vanishes at the
sound of the supper bell. The child
returns to the safe universe of tea and biscuits. Dreams often serve the same purpose. Fears are encountered, but the dawn
breaks. The dreamer awakes for
breakfast. The fears, after all, are
seen as groundless. This is not an
explanation for all unpleasant dreams by any means, yet it is a reminder that
not all such events are neurotic or indicative of future physical problems.
Ruburt and Joseph
have a kitten. In its great exuberant
physical energy, it chases its own tail, scales the furniture, tires itself out
– and man’s mind exuberantly plays with itself in somewhat the same
fashion. In dreams it uses all those
splendid energetic abilities freely, without the necessity for physical
feedback, caution, or questioning. It
seeks realities, giving birth to psychological patterns. It uses itself fully in mental activity in
the same way that the kitten does in physical play.
When you try to
explore the psyche in deadly seriousness, it will always escape you. Your dreams can be interpreted as dramas,
perhaps, but never as diagrams.
Do not try to
bring “dream interpretation” – and kindly, now – down to your level, but
instead try to playfully enter that reality imaginatively, and allow your own
waking consciousness to rise into a freer kind of interpretation of events, in
which energy is not bounded by space, time, or limitations.
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