What Dreams May Come

Our whole experience together was dream reality was metaphor and yes I have left you with a very rich legacy

Scott, April 1996     Channeled Writing

sshot-4

The shift in my perception was gradual, but definite. In the weeks following my return from Seattle, I came to walk my path with a new awareness and openness. The world around me may not have changed, but I saw it through new eyes. Trying my best to strike a working balance, neither desperately seeking deeper meanings or messages nor closing myself off to them, I simply paid attention. My friend Jordana loaned me a book she had loved and given to her father, Blue Dog. “I think it will really speak to you,” she said, and it did.


blue-dog

The book beautifully illustrated a tale of spiritual love between its author, Louisiana artist George Rodrigue, and the small dog he had loved intensely. Left broken-hearted by the death of his beloved companion, full of longing and seeking communion, Rodrigue had been pushed to new vistas in his art in the process of re-establishing contact.

Though the object of his affection may have been canine rather than human, the commonalities of our experience seemed to far outweigh our differences. Primarily, we had each lost our hearts here on Earth, had taken from us our surest companions, and slowly become open to the spirit through the struggle for meaning that followed. Driven by the love burning in our breasts, we had each found ourselves in new relation to the spirit and sought relief in the “safety valve” of artistic exploration and freedom. The love we still felt within called upon us to “let go” in order to once again find, to seek a new balance and learn to relate to the objects of our heart in a new way. Rodrigue’s primary passion, like mine, had become the invisible, promising a new link to himself. Like me, he had dedicated himself to finding that bridge between Heaven and Earth, finding in the process his reason for being and pushing further his artistic limits.

Each soul must travel its own journey, its own purposes to fulfill, but I found many aspects of my own experience reflected in Rodrigue’s tale. He too had embarked on a journey of the soul, feeling his way along as he went, and finally found communion with the spirit he so loved. Flipping through the book, I was stunned to see the following words in large print, filling up a page: “And I wondered when we would meet face-to-face, and not as through a glass darkly.” Triggered by that expression of pure spiritual longing, I immediately recalled the words of the first channeling reassuring me that the eternal mystery continued, Oh how you burn for me and that’s OK but trust me you’re now seeing through a glass darkly as once was said, then thought back to the message forwarded by Jeff and Denise. “He wants to reach you face-to-face of the purpose of removing your doubt.”

As I studied that page in the book, a realization began to dawn on me. Here was an expression of a bottomless longing between two souls each for the other, a pure desire promising to span the gap between Heaven and Earth by sheer force of will. Suddenly flashing back to the first words of the first channeling, I just want to touch you so bad, I received a flash of insight that the ongoing communication between Scott’s soul and mine, its unfolding joys and frustrations, was certainly a two-way street. “Those words,” I realized, “could just as easily be said by Scott as by me. He wants a breakthrough as much as I do.” Under ordinary circumstances, I understood, soul easily communes with soul and human strives for communication with human. But ours was a “mixed” relationship, each of us coming from vastly different perspectives, inherently fraught with challenges and obstacles to communication. Yet no barrier existing on either side had been able to stop him from trying, or to prevent him from succeeding in initiating dialogue.

Still unsure of the reason underlying Scott’s heroic efforts to reach me, I had no doubt of his commitment or passion to do so. And that made me love him all the more.

michelangelo-hands_of_god_and_adam

Around the same time, I experienced a couple of dreams exploring the theme closest to my heart: communication with Scott. Though the dreams excited me, they also reflected an ongoing frustration with the difficulties inherent in our situation. In the first I sat down, pen to paper, somehow aware that he was present and paying attention. I became thrilled with the realization that Scott could read the words as I penned them. I then spoke to him, though I could not see him, and knew that he could hear my words. Finally, excitement mounting, I walked down a hallway and saw his profile in a room at the end of the long hall, talking on a pay phone. When I blurted out with pure joy, “Honey, I can see you!,” he quickly vanished. Though I got the strong sense he was still present, I could no longer see him.


phone2

I awoke from the dream feeling blessed, but uncertain about its meaning. We were certainly in communion, through feelings, spoken and written words. But why could I not see him, really be with him as I longed to? What was the message here? In a similar dream a couple of weeks later, I had been overjoyed to find myself in Scott’s presence, sitting across the table from him in a restaurant. I leapt up and ran to him, kissing him hard on the mouth. Within a moment, he had either walked away or disappeared, again leaving me alone. I did not feel abandoned, somehow, but was pointedly reminded of this distance between us, a repeating theme.

If we were meant to commune, why could he not remain with me in the visual sense? Why was he so tantalizingly close, yet finally beyond my grasp at the crucial moment? Why could I not fully and simply enjoy his presence, once again seeing myself warmly reflected in his loving eyes? Why could we not give and receive at a level approaching that we had shared in life? Even in the dreams’ paradise of communication, it seemed, the cruel dragon of separation reared its ugly head. Was I being gently reminded to be open to relating in new ways, that we were not meant to be together as we had been during Scott’s lifetime? Or was I simply not ready or prepared for that experience? I did not know.

A couple of nights later, I had another dream about communication that I couldn’t help but awake laughing about. The phone rang and I picked it up, and it was Scott. Though I was ecstatic at the contact, part of me hesitated because I feared it might not really be him, that someone might be playing a cruel hoax. Seeking verification that this was indeed him on the line I began barraging him a series of ridiculous questions, my lips pursed firmly in concentration. “What was our home address?,” I asked, and he correctly answered. “What was your birthday?” After a sigh, he correctly answered “September 27, 1959.” Thinking to myself “Wow, this could be the real communication that I crave,” my excitement mounted with each correct answer. Nevertheless, I relentlessly plunged ahead with my line of questions. I needed more “proof.”

“Who was your health insurer?,” I demanded.  He seemed to pause, then answered correctly “Humana.” Check; correct!  Finally, in the last and largest insult, I asked “What was your social security number?”  He did not answer. (I don’t blame him!)  Communication between us had been broken, and he was no longer on the line. In the dream I was unsure whether it had actually been Scott on the line, or whether he had finally just hung up in sheer exasperation at my questioning. Imagine calling long-distance only to receive such treatment!

Though I found the dream somewhat humorous, its absurdity carried potent meaning for me. My beloved had initiated contact with me, and I had squandered the opportunity for communion by clinging to my doubt. With Scott on the other end of the line, ready to talk, I had effectively built a wall between us with my questions. His present readiness to communicate, it seemed, had been harpooned by my fixation on the minutiae of the past, my need for “proof.” In the dream, caught up in the foolishness of my approach, it almost seemed as if I had unconsciously tried to keep him at bay. Clearly expressive of the tensions I carried within me, my rational/ empirical orientation and my legal training clashing on the one hand with my deep desire for spiritual communication on the other, the dream vividly illustrated my dilemma.

I was a man between worlds, uncertain of my footing. The dream left me to wonder. “If it is true that communion with Scott is what I most crave, as I profess,” I wondered, “why am I not able to leave my doubts behind, to really open up to the experience?” It disturbed me to realize that my attachment to doubt, the savoring of the pain of separation, was apparently deeper than I had realized. Though embarking upon a journey of faith, and well along my way, I looked within and found trust lacking. If push came to shove, I wondered, would I be willing to rise above my limits, to let it all go, in order to seize the possibility of once again knowing communion with my beloved as it was meant to be?

I fervently hoped so. A big part of me hoped that I had no choice.

To: Chapter 38

Published in: on December 11, 2008 at 12:48 am  Leave a Comment  
Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Jeff Reminds Me of a Vision

and the experiences of risk are generally powerful and when the time comes to put over that line   to get right up to the edge and jump off to fly freely into energy as a creative spirit   and feel flames lick at our psyches and burn with fury and love and fear and take us up and down and around and feel our stomachs tighten and our palms sweat and our brains feel like exploding   but do it anyway and then please God, touch someone with our talent   we’ve achieved Nirvana and I’m left with your eyes  you who were there  bored holes in my reality and let creativity drip out

Scott, September 1990       Journal Entry


along-the-way-post

Along the Way 2003            P. Crockett

Over lunch the next day, Jeff and I talked.  As fellow sojourners on spiritual journeys of our own, we shared a common, burning question.  What did it all mean, and why was this happening to us?  He, as a man open to the spirit, increasingly aware of the power of the invisible, speculated that Scott and I were apparently completing some dance of the soul, and that he had either always been or somehow recently become part of it.  I reminded him that his name had come up, in no uncertain terms, in my last session with Dee.  “Your spiritual growth has been certified”, I laughed, “by virtually all of my dead lovers.  They said ‘he’s really different; you should go see him.’  With all that’s happened, I can’t believe that it’s any accident I’m here.”  He listened for a moment, deep in thought.  From his perspective, too, the entire experience was highly unusual to say the least, a provocative lesson.  Exactly why had he run into Scott’s soul on his journey, prior to my arrival?  What was the meaning of the trance state he’d experienced the night before?  Why had Scott’s form become visible to him, and his message so clear?

Though clear answers remained elusive, we shared a sense of having been jointly handed keys to a great mystery.  For some reason beyond our conscious understanding, Jeff had assumed an important role in the unfolding spiritual drama of my life.  In so doing, he had broken through the limits of his historical placement in my mind under the fixed label of “first lover” and rapidly assumed a vital and dynamic role in my life as both a real friend and fellow explorer in this shared new adventure.  My expectations and preconceptions fading fast and rapidly dropping by the wayside, Jeff had become a bridge to the missing piece of my heart, part of the promised bridge to span the gap.  We were on a new journey together, with no map.

Nevertheless, we seemed to be finding our way.  As we talked that afternoon, Jeff suddenly paused, sinking deep in thought.  “You know,” he said, “I’m thinking about that dream I had.  What it might have meant.”  My curiosity piqued, I asked “what dream?”  “Don’t you remember?,” he asked, “I told you about this right after Scott died.”  Although merely the slightest shadow of a memory now tentatively began to come to mind, the days after Scott’s death had mercifully become a blur to me, the pain too much to bear.  I had called my closest friends during the weekend that followed to break the impossible news, crying from my gut, hardly knowing what I was doing.  I remembered that much.  I had talked to Jeff, I knew, but the substance of the conversation was lost to me.

Looking into my eyes, seeing that I was lost, he said gently “I’m not surprised.  You weren’t really with us then.”  After a moment, he continued.  “But I did tell you about this when you called.  This dream freaked the hell out of me.  It was so vivid, so nerve-wracking.  I dreamed that I was sitting by your bedside, and you were sitting upright in bed, your legs out in front of you underneath a blue-stripe comforter.  You were leaning against the headboard, and had a glass full of some kind of clear liquid in your hand.  I was filled with sadness, sitting there by your bed.  You were obviously so sick, so near death.  And there was nothing I could do about it.”

Quiet for a moment, appearing pained by the memory, he turned to me again.  “Just sitting there by your side, I really felt the need to reach out to you, to say something.  In my mind I was thinking, and meant to say, something like ‘Gosh, Paul, you’re really ill, aren’t you?’  Instead, I came out with the words ‘Paul, you’re not very solid, are you?’  You looked at me, then down at yourself.  With this expression on your face I’ll never forget, you said ‘No, I guess I’m really not anymore, am I?’

weeping-angel_post

Suddenly, I had this sense of crying, that everyone was just crying.  A feeling of deep grief.”  As Jeff spoke, his words triggered distant memory.  He had indeed shared the dream with me, but I had been entirely unable to deal with his disturbing vision at the time.  Even now, separated from the trauma of Scott’s passing by time and distance, I found its imagery horrifying.

“Then I woke up,” he continued, “and I was a wreck.  The dream had totally shaken me up.  It was a really nerve-wracking experience.”  Even now, months later, amidst a lunchtime crowd, he seemed haunted by the memory.  “I remember looking at the alarm clock in the darkness, and it was just after 6:00 in the morning.  It was that same Friday morning, before you called.”  “Oh, my God,” I said slowly, a realization dawning.  “You had that dream on the day he died.”

“I know,” he replied, reflecting, “I told you that when you called.”  As he looked over at me, I began to make a stunning connection.  “Did I tell you that Scott had died just after 9:00 that morning, in bed?  That was Eastern time.  But you were asleep in Seattle, on Pacific time.  You had that dream at the exact time he was dying!”

Jeff looked at me, his mouth falling slightly open.  Immediately, our minds reeled with the implications of this new mystery we’d been handed.  In my mind’s eye, I recalled Scott in the moments before his death, laboriously pulling himself up to the bedside, blue-striped comforter twisted up beneath him, reaching for his glass of Gatorade.  What could it mean, this extraordinary communication between souls, one deep in dream on the West Coast and the other awakening from his dream of life on the opposite side of the country?  Could Scott’s soul, suddenly free of all blinders at the moment of departure, have left this message for me as a gift, to be discovered in the fullness of time?  Or had he for some reason needed to share the powerful experience with another, as graphically and as literally as possible in the world of dream?  Or had the message perhaps fulfilled some deep need of Jeff’s soul, still unknown to us?

Though easy answers eluded us then and defy us still, we could not doubt that Jeff’s extraordinary experience that morning reflected an important connection, an expression of the spirit as richly loaded as poetry.  As always, I interpreted this dream, tendered back to me by another, as a message and a gift.  He had dreamed of me in Scott’s place, I felt intuitively, because our two souls were so intertwined.  Also, had part of me not died with my beloved that morning, leaving me less than solid?  Strangely, the dream warmed me, reflecting the same sense of wonder at his transition as that raised in his first message through Dee, “He’s surprised that he went so quickly.”

We talked at length, digging for meaning and exploring the potential significance of the dream against the larger backdrop of Jeff’s shamanic sojourns, his encounter with Scott’s soul, and his visitation of the night before.  The answers were far from clear, but it was obvious that the three of us shared a soul-level connection.  Scott had pointed me toward Seattle for a good reason, and had been busily breaking down walls between Heaven and Earth ever since, pointing us toward greater lessons.  It dawned on me that Jeff was even now serving as a bridge between us, in the sharing of the experience.  For some reason unknown to us, both Scott and I, in our ways, had communicated with him about the momentous experience of his passing.  Yet another connection had come full circle.

In a later telephone conversation with Jeff’s life partner Dean we further probed the mysterious occurrence, and I mentioned some of the avenues Jeff and I had explored in seeking out the challenging depths of its meaning.  At some point into the conversation, I asked almost rhetorically “What exactly was it that could have drawn Jeff and Scott together like that, at that time on that morning?  What was the link there?”  With virtually no hesitation, Dean answered my question with a simple response that rang true even as it somehow deepened the mystery before us and raised still more unanswerable questions.  “Well, Paul,” he’d responded easily, “that link was you. You called him.”
How or why, I didn’t exactly understand.  But I felt that his answer bore on the truth and offered a rich source for mining.

Following our lunch together that day Jeff and I made our leisurely way home,  both of us quietly watching the city pass by through the open windows of Jeff’s truck as we listened to the music playing low on the radio.  Suddenly he turned to me and spoke.  “I don’t think I’m going to be able to let you leave Seattle,” he said, a look of concentration on his face, “without doing a journey for you.”  I returned his gaze and nodded, comfortable with his instinct and judgment.

Then, as if to himself, he said “Scott still wants to get through.  There’s more he has to say.”