My
last year at camp I had an intriguing dream, and I'm still not sure
what to make of it. My grandfather died of the paralysis that comes
with Lou Gehrig's Disease. I tend to dream about him at camp, perhaps
because I did so much camping with him when I was little. In the dream,
I am in the tourist town where we take the campers to do laundry on the middle Saturday.
I walk into a restaurant along the row of shops and find my entire
extended family sitting around a large table, having a reunion. Grandpa
is down at the end of the table, alone, in his wheelchair. Immediately
I become angry with my family because everyone is talking and having a
good time, but no one is paying any attention to Grandpa. He is happy
to have me join him, and asks if I want to take a walk.
I say yes, and jump up to push his wheelchair, when he surprises me
by getting up and walking out of the restaurant. No one notices us.
Outside, in the manner of dreams, the street has changed into the
1930's. Old jalopies chug up and down the steep, rutted roads of Eureka
Springs, Arkansas. Grandpa walks over to a parked car and gets in. I am
amazed at his hands on the thin, black steering wheel, and I remember
watching his feet work the old-timey foot pedals as he drives us out of
town. We take winding roads, climbing, through a wooded area. The
forest falls away as we reach the crest of a hill.
From the hill I can see we are out of the Ozarks and somewhere else,
maybe Wisconsin or Minnesota, our native states, overlooking a city. There is a fork in the road,
and Grandpa stops so we can get out and see the view. Dusk has crept up
on us, and in the city below lights are just starting to come on. I
think the city may be a customized version of St. Paul that is familiar
to me from other dreams. One fork of the road will take us there.
I point to the city and tell Grandpa I think we should go that way.
I remember him putting his hand on my shoulder and turning toward the
other fork, which is barely even a road. It is overgrown with
vegetation on both sides, and tree limbs meet over the top in a dense
web of branches. Tall grass grows between the tire ruts. "Wait a
minute," he says. "Over here is the way you need to go."
That's it. The dream ends there. I don't know why I wrestle with it
so much. It is a Freudian field day with a tunnel-path overgrown with
foliage. And I have no intention of ever moving into the woods. I'm not
sure how much I believe in the symbolism of dreams anyway, although I
still unnerved by how Grandpa was invisible to everyone but me in the
dream.
The dream brings me back to Thoreau, and life choices. Thoreau wrote, "No man ever followed his genius till it misled him."
(263) The first time I read that line I decided it was a hasty
generalization. "How does he know that?" I thought. Can he vouch for
everyone on earth? Surely there are many who have been mislead by their own ambitions or ideas.
When I read it again later, I saw that the statement was neither true nor false about humanity, but rather an assertion about the relativity of one's own mind, or perspective. But how much of what we do is solely based on our own points of view, and how much of it is the group mind of homogenization?
Thoreau went to the woods to attempt to shut off the distractions of
the group mind so he could hear his own genius. Whether he actually
heard it is not is beside the point.
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