Sunday, June 5, 2011

What Dreams Are Made Of

Here's part of a song someone made up.

Sitting high in an apple tree,
A giraffe came and spoke to me,
He gave advice so incredibly wise,
He taught me how I should live my life.

"Listen son, you gotta take a chance,
Don't leave your life up to happenstance,
You gotta learn how to rise above,
And live the dreams you've been thinking of."

I had a very awesome dream last night. This was just a normal dream but it was a very fun dream. A man came to me in this dream and told me that if I learned how to meditate and be one with all things I would have access to great power. So I practiced "being one with the universe" and to my surprise he was right, whatever I desired instantly took place. It was pretty cool.

When I awoke I kept day dreaming about the endless possibilities I had explored in my dream. Day dreaming (and night dreaming for that matter) is really easy. It's almost natural (at least for the young) to think about "what life would be like if..."

But I think real dreaming, dreaming as in "I have a dream," I think that can be really hard. It's hard to dream for real - to have dreams, goals, aspirations and something you're looking forward to that doesn't really exist yet. It's especially hard when you've dreamed before and got beat down, or denied your dream. It's hard to want and not to receive. It's hard to working and work and work and not achieve. It's hard to try and sacrifice when so many of our best laid plans go awry. It's hard when there's no guarantee of success - especially immediate success.

The dreamer isn't given the credit he is due. Think of what he's up against. Those that will not settle for what station is offered them in life (or in any aspect of life) have no other alternative but to dream.

These are people who have a vision of something else (however detailed that vision might be) it's something they have never directly experienced and yet they choose to believe in it. Sometimes it's hard for dreamers to believe in themselves, in their abilities or that as they progress toward their dream it will progress toward them. It might even be hard for the dreamer to believe on a fundamental level that he deserves to achieve his objective. Dreamers must continually make that choice to believe everyday. It can become exhausting to keep a continual supply of faith in something one has never seen or heard.

These dreamers are forced to grow. Nothing begets nothing. If one desires to manifest something new the current state of affairs must change. Personal growth is the key. People who don't understand this may complain about not having enough money in between TV shows. For their wish to turn into a dream that could actually come true an internal change must take place. Dreamers are constantly doing their best to purge their own souls of all things holding them back from their dreams. And that is a hard task that requires constant attention.

These are persecuted people. Doubts arise to strike down their faith. Their personal daemons or bad habits will sabotage their progress. But that is not enough of a sacrifice to achieve something that hasn't existed before. The dreamer will inevitably encounter someone or many someones dear to him that will not share in his dream. Those people will not understand and people naturally fear what they do not understand. If he does not have his guard up, if he is not substantially fortified in areas of personal faith and personal development those contrary people will stamp out his dream and he will be left a little lower and in a little darker place than before he made the choice to dream. But here's the ringer: his friends and family will believe they did him a favor by "bringing him back down to earth." His friends will make harsh judgements concerning his character or they may jump to unflattering conclusions concerning his sanity, intelligence or motives. The dreamer faces scorn.

The path of the dreamer is one that hasn't been forged and as such is fraught with peril and pitfalls. Only the determined, committed, faithful and courageous make it through.

If the dreamer's friends do not understand he must understand that they do not have eyes to see his vision. They do not know what they are rejecting. The only way to show them is to bring it to fruition. The dreamer must understand that he is a visionary. And he must gain as much intelligence on all topics concerning his dream as possible that he may have faith in all his actions and decisions.

Some have a certain level of guilt about success. Others even subconsciously feel unworthy of it. But this should never be the case, I say "Away with such thinking!"

We all have begun this earthly experience with all our needs and wants provided for. So long as we grow to handle it, and so long as we abound in innocence, character, faith and love such an abundant environment, such an abundant universe is our natural habitat.

As Parley P. Pratt has put it,

"Man is a candidate for a series of progressive changes, all tending to develop [him], ... to expand his mind, and to enlarge his sphere of action and consequent usefulness and happiness."

Dreamers of all kinds understand who they are and take full advantage of man's unique ability to dream.