Archive for dream journal

With Tiny Angels

I woke up suddenly in an 8-seat passenger jet. The engines were humming loud, desperate dissonance. My chest was heavy and I felt wheezy. I watched the ocean below me because I had been told that sometimes people see schools of whales swim by. If it’s a particularly dark night, the water glows gentle neon blue when living things move inside of it. No one knows why. 
 
 Years later, my girlfriend and I were orientation leaders at a small, prestigious, coastal liberal arts college. The second day of school we kidnapped 3 sleeping freshman and drove them to the beach at 2 in the morning. The water was flat and calm. The sky was flat and calm. We all took off our clothes and stepped into the ocean. Our bodies were flat and calm. The same neon blue glowed brightly in small droplets on our slippery skin. My girlfriend kissed me softly and our lips lit up. They stayed that way for a few minutes once we were done swimming and faded as we dried in the moonlight. I wanted to glow like that forever, mostly so I’d feel electric and alive. I hadn’t in years.
 
On the airplane, I watched the sea, looking for a small pink swim-noodle. My grandfather had just disappeared while his whole family built sandcastles a handful of meters away from him. We realized he was gone by sundown. Drowned probably— he wasn’t all that fit anymore and his heart wasn’t good. My mom thought his mind was going too. I thought he was doing great for 75, but I guess I was wrong. My grandma paced the beach with a carton of orange juice. She was worried about his diabetes. My dad walked, waste deep and fully clothed, out into the ocean with a snorkeling mask until we couldn’t see him 
anymore. I ran barefoot down the beach, cutting my feet on conch shells. My sister hid in the closet. She didn’t really understand what was going on. 
 
By the time search planes got there, it was morning. We found his glasses, a book, a pair of sandals, and empty swimming-flipper tracks down to the water, but no grandfather. The diving equipment rental people charged us for the missing gear. My dad stayed behind when we flew home.
 
I remember my grandfather well. He, for a long time, was the reason I lived. We used to cruise around suburban New York State in the dead of winter, top down, heat on, no seatbelt. He used to buy me toys and then loose the parts when we tried to assemble them. He used to turn the heat up in the swimming pool so we could swim when it rained.  I don’t remember the day he died well at all.
 
I had a panic attack while surfing by myself on a cold blue day in Miami, Florida. The lifeguards dragged me and my short board out of water so calm it looked like glass. I passed out on the beach. 
 
This is my future. Next to me is a line of naked women. They are all pale. They are all twitching slightly, like eager children or uncomfortable teenagers, sort of vibrating like they are electronics that aren’t grounded quite right. They smell like tanning oil and lotion. None of them look at me at all, though I am making it pretty obvious that I am looking at them pretty hard. They are all beautiful and done up just right. Every one of them glows a soft white from within, bubbling with secret promise, smiling sweetly with every tick. At once, all of them pour cold water down their bodies in unison. A synchronized arm raise, the coordinated bend of every delicate wrist, a soft saliva smack as the water and skin connect. I look down as together they unfold their legs and realize that each of them has a snarling monster-mouth where they shouldn’t. The mouths are drinking of the water that has cascaded down naked flesh. The mouths seem very, very thirsty. I realize I am also thirsty, but the mouths are not inviting me to share a sip.
 
When I come to, I’m surrounded by lifeguards with bulging Speedoes and olive complexions.  These are lifeguards whose damp biceps are peppered with sand, whose hair is going sun-bleached blond, and whose noses are white with sunscreen and zinc. I cough up cold, clear, fresh water, which smells like coconut oil and pineapple—definitely not from this ocean, I think. Every single one of them looks oddly like my grandfather when he was a young man. Every single one of them sounds like me. They all move like my father.
 
Back on the airplane, my head is pressed against the cold plastic window. I can feel the hum of the engine, I can feel the fabric seat through my jeans, and I can feel the weight of the air around me. No one is talking, or even (it seems) breathing. When we land in the Bahamas, it is grey and raining. When we land again, home in Miami, it is black and raining harder. 

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This is…

…the way it was. I was always small, dark, and serious. I guess was and always don’t really emphasize how small, how dark, and/or how serious I always was. I was never not small, dark, and serious. For example, I slept only a couple hours out of the night, but that sleep was always deep. In my dreams I was always plotting and learning. I’d leave a pen and paper by my pillow at night and when I woke, it was always covered in small, dark, serious writing.
By the time I was in the Third grade, my mom thought I had a problem. She asked everyone we knew what my problem was. “What’s his problem?” I’d hear her ask in the hallway after school and on the telephone. Sometimes, I’d hear her ask it over and over in her sleep. No one seemed to know. “He’s just young,” they’d always reply “some day he’ll grow up and learn to have fun.”
One day, a small, dark, and very serious box was sitting on our front porch when I got home from school. It was addressed to my mom, which I didn’t mind at all. “What’s this?” I asked myself in my tiniest, deepest, most business-like voice. No one said anything because no one else was there.
After organizing the mail into three piles (fun, junk, and bills), eating a snack (celery and peanut butter), and scanning the front page of The New York Times, I decided to open the box up. Inside was a pocket sized, grey electronic dictionary. “Oh, boy!” I said. “Oh! Boy,” I said again, making sure to rearrange the spoken accents so anyone who heard would understand I had moved the exclamation point. No one said anything because no one else was there.
By the time my mom got home, I had already worked up through the word commove which I told her meant, “to move violently”. She smiled, but I could tell it was a fake smile because her nose wrinkled up a little. I felt it was an astute observation, and so I said, “This is a very astute observation. You’re smiling a fake smile.” She laughed, said I could keep the dictionary, and got herself a bowl of ice cream with chocolate syrup and almonds. It looked delicious, which was also an astute observation, but this time I didn’t tell her because I couldn’t think of a better word for delicious.
We ate dinner while watching the news, which was my idea. I thought about the dictionary the whole time. I could feel it in my pocket. It felt warm and electric against my leg, even though it was turned off. Every few minutes, I’d forget about it and then move to grab some bread or shovel some fish into my mouth and there it’d be in my pocket, heavy as lead. I was in love.
That night, I dreamt I was older, larger, paler, and just slightly more jovial. The dictionary and I lived in a petite, brown, practical house on top of a hill. There was a fireplace, a guest bedroom, and a pantry. My vocabulary, as it would be assumed, was ridiculous. My dream self kept saying these short, dismal, serious words that I didn’t understand and drinking cups of black espresso. The dictionary just sat there, across the table from dream-me, looking slightly less shiny. “I’m aware I’m content!” dream me said aloud. He said it again, with more anticipation “I’m aware, I’m content,” making sure to shift the accents in a way I knew all too well. No one said anything because no one else was there.

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In a recent dream, I’m walking through some sort of outdoorsy outdoor hospital in Africa with my family. It’s fuckin’ hot and one of us is badly hurt. We’re following a big (I mean BIG African man and his smaller wife/lady/whatever. The dude is carrying a baby and the wife is hitting him and screaming). Some how, the dream me becomes convinced that this is a problem that I am personally obliged to fix. As I start attempting to annoy the aforementioned dude into some sort of subdued (ha! sub-dude) and suggestible state, we enter the nurses office. A rather disorienting commotion ensues and I find myself watching as Mr. Dude hurls his tiny baby at the desk in the corner. Upon landing, the baby explodes into millions of tiny pieces, which scatter all over the room. Some of them make words, though I can’t, for the life of me, remember what they said.

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