King of Dreams
Breathtakingly beautiful art from John Watkiss – lovely, evocative, and going up for auction.
To have a budget for art again would make me such a happy person. Some year, some year.
"the hardest thing in this world is to live in it"
Breathtakingly beautiful art from John Watkiss – lovely, evocative, and going up for auction.
To have a budget for art again would make me such a happy person. Some year, some year.
For various reasons, and one rather specific one, it became necessary to stop using my office as a large storage room, and get it in working order rapidly. (So now my living room is a large storage room… sigh. But I’m working through it, albeit slowly.)
Anyhow, now that I can sit at my desk, I can see some of the collective wisdom I’ve opted to attach on the side of my filing cabinet. And it’s rather weird to realize that these are things I had hanging up on my cube wall at eWorld, some 12 years ago.
I guess as much as things may change, they stay the same. (And rather, as an aside, solidifies the notion I’ve been a pragmatist long before I knew what it even meant.)
When you lose your temper, the other person gains control.
-AnonymousA person is not hurt so much by what happens, as by his opinion of what happens.
-William James
Of course, the two bumper stickers up are equally apt, tho not quite so old:
I’m not paid enough to be this pissed off!
I’m not gonna drink anymore…won’t drink any less, either!
Yep. That about sums it all up.
“Why does anybody tell a story?” Ms. L’Engle once asked, even though she knew the answer.
“It does indeed have something to do with faith,” she said, “faith that the universe has meaning, that our little human lives are not irrelevant, that what we choose or say or do matters, matters cosmically.”
-Madeleine L’Engle, 1918-2007
…instead, it looks like it just makes it all come true. If not in actual action, in intent.
My brain had a mental field day on me last night, throwing me into nightmare after nightmare. And my nightmares, they’re not bad dreams. They’re more like night terrors, the sorts of terrors that people with PTSD report.
I don’t like my nightmares. They’re vivid. Real. I have, in the past, woken up and been unable to determine if something was real or not. I have held grudges for slights that have occurred during dreamtime, simply because it was so real, so true, so believable. Often my only clue to the reality (or not) of a terror is whether I am wrapped in my sheets.
My dream logic works like daily logic. When I touch someone, in a dream, I can feel their skin under mine, the roughness of an unshaved face, the stickiness of blood. I can hear their voice, delight in laughter, the pain with wet tears. Sheets pulled up to my shoulders, heads resting on shoulders, bodies touching, legs twined. Sunlight and darkness, fire, heat and pain.
Last night, they progressed like they always do. Normal dreams slide sideways, become clearer, more everyday life. Sitting with friends, working, chitchatting and switching seamlessly from work to play and personal life and back again. The sort of thing so normal, it’s hard to believe it wasn’t true. But then my brain begins to ramp things up, bringing up issues, problems, and accelerating them, making them bigger, worse. I went from lazily tracing patters in condensation on a fish tank, lazily talking about life with friends, to escorting a friend to his hotel room, only to return later to find him dead, by his own hands, in the bathroom.
I can clearly see myself kneeling next to the body, cradling head in my lap, hands sticky and wet with blood.
That dream slid again, rewound, replayed, only this time I got there earlier in the dream, early enough to make a difference, to change how it plays out, and it does, but ends equally disconcerting. I have dried away his tears, my heart insists this to be true.
And then the violence, anger, mutilations, fires and all the below surface fears come roaring forward, situating themselves logically, becoming dreamed experiences so hard to discern from the real. I wake up with days, a lifetime, of new memories that must be sifted and thrown away.
I’m tense today, waiting to hear from people, if they’re okay. To see those that I can, and verify for myself that they are fine, and it was all just a nightmare. Just a bad dream. To touch them, solid warmth beneath my hands.
And it will be weird, because my hands have memories that don’t exist.