A little while ago I woke directly from a dream. Since getting my  
iPhone I have been grabbing it and using it to record whatever I could  
remember from the dream as fast as I could, before I started the  
forgetting.
Like all dreams this has some back story. (right now I'm trying to  
resist the memory of Debra Winger in Sheltering Sky complaining about  
how boring it is to listen to people talk about their dreams)
I have been on a musical discovery kick lately. I've been exposing  
myself to a large catalog of music from the last ten years that I had  
been ignorant. If you would like to follow along just tap on my lastFM  
box and go through my charts for the last couple of months. Jenny  
Lewis, Doves, Decemberists, Neutral Milk Hotel, and I Am Kloot are all  
artists that I think will be audial companions for years to come. They  
were all unknown/ignored by me until very recently.
And what does this have to do with the price of boys made out of gold  
paper you might ask? I have been thinking about how poetry and music  
so often comes from the young mind. I was thinking about how long its  
been since I truly loved anything new from three of the musicians  
whose early works all rank among my all time favorates: Paul  
McCartney, Elvis Costello and Bruce Springsteen. I have not bought or  
even taken the time to download a new album from any of them in ten  
years. That led me to thinking about my own work. I doubt I have  
written ten poems in the last decade. And while I have never really  
liked anything I have written I am utterly convinced of the  
worthlessness of those alleged ten poems. My poetry all seemed to come  
out in a short burst in my late teens and early twenties. If anything  
my life should be more attuned to all my favored themes. I still long  
for old friends and lovers. In fact now I have more of them and they  
are farther away in time, space and emotional availabilty than they  
ever were when I was young. I would have thought living in the land  
beyond redemption would be conducive to writing the kind of poems I  
used to. But no, that has not been my experience.
Work is having one of those meetings where the company pretends it  
cares that you have other cares besides its profitability. It is going  
to be followed the very next day by a meeting reminding all of us  
about how the only thing that matters is their profitability. I don't  
really mind the hipocracy so much anymore I just wonder if it has to  
be so blatant. The touchy-freely meeting has us all bringing a shoebox  
filled with momentos and possessions that define ourselves. I am not  
all that keen in this particular exercise. For the most part my peers  
are good people who I like, respect, and trust. Ditto for my boss. But  
like any group there are those few who are duplicitous, selfish, and  
mean liars. If there is one thing I have learned in my life it is not  
to give away anything of myself to people like that. The other thing I  
have learned is that even if your boss has nothing like those  
qualities his job description requires them from time to time. The  
best you can hope for in a boss is that he takes no pleasure from  
their application.
That whole tirade was simply about the fact that I have been thinking  
about my poetry lately because the book I self-published 18 years ago  
happens to fit in a shoebox. (I put the current odds of me actually  
taking it to work at a hundred to one.)
So about this dream of mine. (I could never be a journalist with my  
habit of burying the lead in the sixth paragraph) It took place in a  
middle school and I was a student. It wasn't one of my junior high  
schools, in fact I'm pretty sure I wasn't me. It was more like I was  
in a television show about middle school. I'm pretty sure that all of  
the people I met in my dream were played by tv actors. Or maybe the  
cast of Adventures in Babysitting. I don't know. Except for the Boy  
Made of Gold Paper. Him I've never seen before.
It was a dream about adolescence. About sexual confusion, feeling  
powerless, and trying to define yourself. It climaxed with me being  
interrogated by an assistant principal (is there any title besides  
maybe Führer that inspires such revulsion) and having to cold read a  
poem that was written on a piece of the Boy Made of Gold Paper. It was  
a good reading and the poem wasn't bad. Not at all. I don't remember  
it of course but it had a good cadence to it. It read easily and I  
felt satisified when I was done. I awoke realizing that I had dreamed  
the poem. That it was something completly new. That I has actually  
written a poem I liked, albeit in a dream and now totally lost. So I  
grabbed my phone and began to take notes. What surprised me was the  
form the notes took. Usually my dream notes are very literal and  
filled with as much detail as I cab remember. This morning was  
different. This mornings notes came out in what I would guess passes  
for verse from me. I make no claim to liking it but am simply  
surprised to find myself publishing a new poem this morning.
What does this half to do with the iPhone? Only that I am still lying  
in bed and never would have written any of this longhand or on my  
laptop. But now I have to get up and go to work.
 
 




1 comment:
Enlightenment is a glorious experience. Go with it-keep it alive.
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