Symbols are a language of the unconscious mind. This is why our dreams are full of them.
A person sits alone in a rowboat on the ocean at night, looking up at the stars.
That symbol – whether expressed visually or in words – speaks to us of spirituality and practicality; deep thoughts and big challenges.
But how? Nowhere among those 17 words is any reference to thoughts or challenges. We are given only a person, a rowboat, water, darkness and stars.
The scene is awesome, majestic and lonely.
President John F. Kennedy, deeply aware of the awesomeness of his responsibilities and the majesty of his position and the loneliness that comes with both, kept those 13 words forever before him as a plaque on his desk in the oval office.
Ernest Hemingway animated this symbol in his novella, The Old Man and the Sea. Alone and far from shore, Santiago faces the task of landing a fish bigger than his boat and then defending it from a mob of sharks. Looking up at the stars and down into the water and fighting with all his strength for 3 days and 3 nights, Santiago’s soul-searching self-talk won Hemingway the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature.
Forty-seven years later, Yann Martel conjured this same image to sell more than 10,000,000 copies of The Life of Pi. In the opening line of its summary, Wikipedia says the book “explores issues of spirituality and practicality.” Go figure.
I often begin the second day of the Magical Worlds Communications Workshop by asking the students,
I do this because the first day of that class is filled with lots of big ideas coming at you too quickly to digest and assimilate. Dreams are a just side effect of your unconscious mind’s processing of unresolved ideas during the night.
Two weeks ago, a first-time Wizard Academy student, a 65 year-old man, raised his hand and said, “I dreamed I was on a gondola in Venice, Italy, when an incredibly beautiful woman came onto the boat and seduced me.”
The class laughed, of course, but then the man asked, “Why do you think I had that dream?”
“Did you enjoy the day yesterday?”
“Very much! It was magical.”
“Would you say that you’re on a journey, in an exotic place, overwhelmed by incredibly beautiful new ideas?”
The man brightened. “The woman wasn’t a woman at all! She was just a symbol of what I learned!”
“Makes sense to me.”
“Me, too!”