tumblr page counter
the latest across schmutzie.com
Nature Conservancy CanadaAlli Worthington's iPhone Photography: The Visual
Create your own online store!
Schmutzie at TEDxRegina
for more Schmutzie, see:
Ninjamatics Ninjamatics' Canadian Weblog Awards Grace in Small Things Schmutzie's Hipstamatic Lens, Film, and Pak Guide Violence UnSilenced Blissdom Canada
link to Schmutzie.com
Copy and paste the code below:

Schmutzie.com
<a href="http://www.schmutzie.com" title="Schmutzie.com"><img src="http://tinyurl.com/schmutzie-badge" alt="Schmutzie.com" /></a>

Five Star Friday
<a href="http://www.schmutzie.com/fivestarfriday" title="Five Star Friday"><img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v491/schmutzie_pickles/buttons/fivestarfriday.jpg" border="0" alt="Five Star Friday" /></a>

#365poems at Schmutzie.com
<a href="http://www.schmutzie.com/schmoetry/2013/1/2/what-is-365poems.html" title="#365poems at Schmutzie.com"><img src="http://tinyurl.com/schmutzie-365poems" alt="#365poems at Schmutzie.com" /></a>

Entries in dreams (39)

Friday
Feb222013

Crossroads

I had hard dreams last night, and when I woke up this morning, I felt this nostalgia-flavoured grief in my chest.

nonsensical church sign

In my dream, I was in my mid-twenties. I travelled up north to spend a weekend with my family at Waskesiu, a place we've been going to for at least forty years. When I arrived at the lake, I was a barefoot child exploring a small town alone in the evening sun. My attention wandered to watch strange children play around unkempt tennis courts. Weeds and tree shoots pushed through cracks in concrete everywhere, not just on the courts but in the streets and through the sidewalks. It felt both familiar and foreign, like my parents' hometown did to me as a child.

I stepped on some glass, and when I pulled the shard out of my third toe, I held the glass up to the sun to inspect the blood along its edge. In that moment, I became larger; I was grown. I put on shoes, went to my father, and told him that I needed to leave.

We drove for a long while until we arrived at what was a new home for me, one I had not yet lived in. We unpacked large containers from his van and stacked them in the front yard. As he backed down the driveway and out onto the road, I waved from my collection of boxes, knowing that I would not see him again. It was sad to know he would be gone, but I knew that this was just the way things had to be, so I turned to the unfamiliar house, tugging a box behind me, and accepted my fate.

Aidan doing his camera thing

I know that it was a dream, but I was so emotionally invested in the experience of growing up over one night and losing my father, ageing and accepting my adulthood, that it set me on some fairly sombre ground for the day today.

I think this dream, while obviously heavy in symbolism, was also my brain's short-form retelling of a day I had when I was twenty-four. My younger brother was eighteen and difficult, my parents were newly-minted empty-nesters, and I was adrift, having no idea what to do next or what I wanted from my life. The four of us went up to Waskesiu to spend time together, and, over the course of that first day, each of them took me aside individually and told me who I was to them, what they needed from me, and how I could help them. Each of them also swore me to secrecy.

In an odd twist, I had been made the covert leader in an embarrassingly obvious screenplay to which no one would conceivably buy the rights. It was all tell and no show, as though my life were being scripted by a fifteen-year old attempting to do a hard-boiled, 1950s crime drama crossed with the neurotic conversation style of 1970s Woody Allen films.

post-memorial drinks

I walked away from that day feeling like I'd been forcefully grown up. I felt bitter and awkward. I didn't want to be what I was to them, and I didn't want to bear the responsibilities I had been handed.

I have become much softer over the years since, and much more thoughtful, so I am not surprised that I met last night's dream with less anger and more grief, more resignation. I was not proud of how I handled myself at twenty-four, but, although my response has changed, I am no more pleased with how I handled it at forty, dream or not.

orange chair

Grief and resignation are not the emotions I want to speak for me at the crossroads of endings and beginnings. Saying both goodbye and hello can make for clumsy transitions, but I have had a tendency to concentrate on the goodbyes, to protectively shelter myself with my back, as though from a blast, while facing my past head on, as if that were the thing I was marching into.

We trust the devils we know more than the ones we don't, because we mistakenly believe that we can't hunt what we think we can't see.

Do you ever have dreams that could write their own books? Because I want to hire mine as a ghost writer and idea man. He's onto stuff I'd like to buy the rights to.
Monday
Oct152012

Growing What You Love As a Daily Practice Grows Your Courage

I've been quietly working to become better at the things I love without rushing, without chastising myself when I am not already at my goal, and without losing my love for these things while I still occasionally fail at being good at them.

me in a window at the Farmer's Market

When Susannah Conway wrote about how she does one thing or commits one hour towards her dream every day, I realized that this is what I have been doing. It is easy to get caught up in jobs and laundry and emotional entanglements and so lose focus on the ideas, pursuits, and dreams that actually feed us most when we are so caught up. I realized some time ago that, over time, I had relegated what were once my dreams to the domain of mere hobbies, mentally shelving them with my unused yarn and dried up glitter glue, and that doing so had left me with a life full of tedium, tasks that kept me physically cared for but spiritually empty.

I have made a practice of spending, if not an hour, at least 20 minutes a day on one of my dreams outside of paid work projects. I don't have to make great headway, and some days I do little more than look at the thing I am working on, but I at least keep my eye trained on my dreams.

It's this type of daily practice that has grown this weblog, my writing, my design work, and the creative community that sustains me.

Lately, I have my eye trained on writing poetry. I've been a once-a-month poet for a long time, and this does nothing to further my ability or my goal to be published, so I have been chipping away at writing poetry as a daily practice for the last two months or more. I am not perfect, and I am not great yet, but I can feel myself training a new voice, and it is powerful. It's like learning how to turn a cartwheel. Every time I hit the landing without twisting anything, I have more confidence to carry me through the next turn.

Growing yourself beyond the daily pattern changes you. It doesn't just grow your skills; it grows your courage. It grows your ability to say I can or I will be able to.

Growing what you love, growing yourself beyond the pattern of daily life, grows your courage.


If you are waiting for a burst of courage to start working toward a dream, stop waiting. You can actively grow your courage by putting one foot toward your goal, even if that foot is terrified and shaking in its boot. I'm not shitting you.

What would you grow if you carved out 20 minutes just for you every day? What are you growing right now?
Monday
Sep102012

Big Change, Fear and Loss, and the Need to Let Go

test paint patches at the new apartment
test paint patches drying on our new condo's walls.

I had a dream last night that my cats were bored. I looked at them being bored, and I thought about how they could live for 20 boring years in my home, or how they could live for five brief but interesting years out in the world.

I spent the remainder of the dream weeping inconsolably for the horror of my actions, because safety to the point of boredom had robbed their one shot at living of most of its potential for meaning. There is little worse than that.

----------------------------

A few nights before that, I dreamed of a giant, illustrated bumble bee. It had a large mouth filled with triangular, menacing teeth. Its mouth opened in the shape of an engulfing wishbone and scooped up an entire dog, which was barking at the bee. The dog didn't know that the bee could eat it, and it believed until it was swallowed whole that its barking meant something or would have some effect. It didn't.

The bee didn't hate the dog, or even want to scare the dog. The bee was just doing what the bee was made to do, which was to eat what was in front of it.

My dream kept juxtaposing my position as observer and my identity as self on top of the bee and the dog so that I became confused about whether I was the bee eating or the dog being eaten or the observer neglecting to step in and change the course of events. I felt powerful and annihilated and guilty.

----------------------------

Taking out our first mortgage and being in this limbo space of not having moved yet but preparing to do so has me anxious. It has me feeling like I can't play anymore, like I have to take everything that much more seriously now that the walls that house me are mine.

In a lot of ways, this makes my life much more secure, but rather than that translating into a feeling of security, it's translating into a heavy feeling of loss and fear.

I am sure that this will pass. This is a natural reaction to change. We mourn what we will no longer have or experience, even if that experience was not ideal, and we fear what's coming, because it hasn't popped out from around the corner yet to show itself.

I think I need to take Maira Kalman's advice: go for a walk, empty myself out, and let wonderful things happen.



That walk will end with me buying paint for our new home and heading over to start the work of making it ours, and I am excited about putting ourselves into the space we live for the first time together. We are banishing Rental Apartment White forever!

------------------------

Help 40 gain access to clean water for my 40th birthdayPS. My 40th birthday is on December 29th. I'm celebrating my birthday by raising $2,650 with Charity: Water to bring 40 people clean water for life, and we're already 24.5% there!

So, as a gift to me and to the world, let's make this happen.