Most mornings when I wake up I can only remember fragments of my dreams, but occasionally some will stick with me for much longer.
Such as the dream I had when I was in first grade. It was such a delightful one that I had to share it with my schoolmates while we were eating lunch the next day. Our teacher overheard my story and I got thoroughly scolded for it, but I felt quite unrepentant about dreaming it, or sharing it. Even now when ever I happen to think if it it still gives me a bit of the same thrill it did back then.
I was out in our garden and spotted a huge red flower that towered above everything else in the garden. I ran into the house and grabbed my favorite little chair and dragged it outside, setting it down next to the flower. I stood on it but it was wobbly as one of the legs was sinking into the dirt. I grabbed onto the flower petals and stretched as much as I could to look inside the flower, and suddenly I was sitting inside the flower, I was looking at everything from my lofty perch when I started moving and I slid down the inside of the flower stem, plopping out into the middle of a beautiful field filled with happy children and all kinds of nice things.
Before I could go join them I woke up.
Another dream
I was driving home. Next to me, in the front seat was an armload of hay. The best hay available; a nice soft, third cutting alfalfa hay. I approached the next road I needed to turn on just as three police cars came speeding up the road. One of them headed up over the steep bank into a field and started driving after a bull. The other two parked across the road to block traffic and keep the bull from getting away. Wanting to get out of harm's way, I grabbed the hay, and ran over to a nearby house where an old family friend was sitting on his front porch. He smiled in welcome as I dashed up the stairs. "I brought your cats a treat," I said and proceeded to fill the cat bowls with handfuls of hay.
"They probably don't think it's a treat," he said.
Embarrassed at what I had just done I gathered up the hay and started walking across the porch to leave, and then I noticed Grandpa sitting there smiling and watching me. He didn't mention the hay but said, "Mary Ann, do you remember where to find the verse I like so well "'Bless the Lord, o my soul, and forget not all his benefits."'
"Yes!" I said excited. "It's in Psalms 103." I quoted the first four verses for him and his smile grew bigger as he sat there listening. I couldn't wait to have a nice long talk with him and went to sit next to him.
And then my alarm clock went off.
I don't know why these particular dreams have stuck to me so long, but I still find them interesting.
Dreams that stay with us in this way do not need any reason. I have some, as strange and incoherent as can be, but they make me want to write a book, or just enter that dream. All of them makes me happy when I think of them, so thanks for reminding me.
ReplyDeleteAlso today no boks, except something in your wording reminds me of the Borrowers.
The dreams I remember are usually vivid nightmares...I remember writing down one short synopsis and it eventually became the opening of my first mystery book!
ReplyDeleteDonna: Click for my 2025 A-Z Blog
Both are very interesting dreams. I remember one dream from my childhood very vividly still today, but it was a nightmare, so I won't share it here.
ReplyDeleteOne of my oddest dream fragments - a particular house - has shown up in my dreams over many years. I don't mean I'm dreaming the same dream over and over; I mean this house shows up in various dreams. Even now I can close my eyes and picture it - and as far as I know I've never seen it in real life. I've often wondered whether I really *did* see it somewhere as a child and it imprinted on my consciousness but not my memory.
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