120718
21:40 for grief for PTSD
From
Rumi through Coleman Barks
with
profound gratitude for healing a process that never ends the wounds of
the heart but leaches away the suffering . . .
The
Dream That Must Be Interpreted
This
place is a dream.
Only a
sleeper considers it real.
Then
death comes like dawn,
and you
wake up laughing
at what
you thought was your grief.
But
there's a difference with this dream.
Everything
cruel and unconscious
done in
the illusion of the present world,
all
that does not fade away at the death-waking.
It
stays,
and it
must be interpreted.
All the
mean laughing,
all the
quick, sexual wanting,
those
torn coats of Joseph,
they
change into powerful wolves
that
you must face.
The
retaliation that sometimes comes now,
the
swift, payback hit,
is just
a boy's game
to what
the other will be.
You
know about circumcision here.
It's
full castration there!
And
this groggy time we live,
this is
what it's like:
A
man goes to sleep in the town
where
he has always lived, and he dreams he's living
in
another town.
In
the dream, he doesn't remember
the
town he's sleeping in his bed in. He believes
the
reality of the dream town.
The
world is that kind of sleep.
The
dust of many crumbled cities
settles
over us like a forgetful doze,
but we
are older than those cities.
We began
as a
mineral. We emerged into plant life
and
into the animal state, and then into being human,
and
always we have forgotten our former states,
except
in early spring when we slightly recall
being
green again.
That's
how a young person turns
toward
a teacher. That's how a baby leans
toward
the breast, without knowing the secret
of its
desire, yet turning instinctively.
Humankind
is being led along an evolving course,
through
this migration of intelligences,
and
though we seem to be sleeping,
there
is an inner wakefulness
that
directs the dream,
and
that will eventually startle us back
to the
truth of who we are.
From
Essential Rumi
by
Coleman Barks
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