Recurrent nightmares: Coming out of hiding and feeling again

I’ve been experiencing a number of dreams with lots of fear, frustration, loss and anger most of which has been triggered by current political insanities. These dreams are forcing me out of my comfort zone.

But other material is surfacing as well. This posting reflects upon an earlier time when my life was full of triggers that forced me out of my safety shell and into the world around me where I felt compelled to answer another call to arms . . .

During my tour in Vietnam as an Avionics tech for helicopters, I played it safe, as safe as could be in an unsafe environment, kept my head down and did the job I was tasked to do. After a day’s work I would hide in my bunk with one of J.R.R. Tolkien’s books to distract from what was going on around me. Many a reading was interrupted by incoming rocket fire where’d we make a beeline for water filled bunkers in the black of night.

After a number of near misses and the death of a few good friends from both these attacks and aircraft that had gone down during missions something clicked in me, something that sat somewhat hidden for my two decades of life. I was always hiding, never really engaging with the life I was given. But something had awakened in me much as it had in one of Tolkien’s characters i.e., the Hobbit, Bilbo Baggins, “Then something Tookish woke up inside him, and he wished to go and see the great mountains, and hear the pine-trees and the waterfalls, and explore the caves, and wear a sword instead of a walking-stick.”

Something became more and more insistent within me, and I found myself signing up to become a helicopter door gunner. Within the week I found myself in another world where I was being trained on new weaponry and defense techniques. A month later I suited up, checked out my 50 Cal machinegun, an M79 grenade launcher, a holstered 38 revolver and trudged out at an ungodly 03:30 toward an aircraft that had become more than just a vehicle that needed repair but was now a machine that would carry me into battle. What the hell was I doing? Fear sat like a rock in my gut and heavy on my shoulders. But for the first time since boot camp, I felt like a real Marine.

The night was alive with the sound of aircraft jet engines whining in the dark. A hundred rotating red beacons of light cut through the dark as aircraft up and down the many squadrons gave evidence that something big was brewing. This was a “super gaggle” combined to insert thousands of troops into a combat zone to meet a large advancing enemy that had been spotted to the north of us. For eleven hours we flew inserting platoon after platoon into narrow valleys with updrafts and down drafts tossing our descent and lift off as though we were no more than paper planes in a windstorm. My brass catcher was filled not only with spent cartridges but also with my breakfast. 

By the end of the day, we were spent and virtually crawled off the chopper. Stripping off my flight suit and bullet bouncer I staggered into a cold shower to wash off the effects of the day and reflected a little as to what I’d been through. It was the last time that I took to reflect on a mission. For the rest of my tour as a gunner, I put everything out of mind, kept my head down and did my job. It wasn’t until years later that I brought up the feelings I had buried. For us hiders somethings take a long time before we feel them again.

“Throw a line into the darkness”

The Nightmare by-Henry Fuseli

The other day while watching a rather intriguing detective series on PBS titled Anika I became aware of the background music and its rather haunting lyrics. The theme song “Bringing Murder to the Land” by Newcome and Allison spoke to me in another way than perhaps it was intended as a theme song for a murder drama.

“Throw a line into the darkness

Oh, we are shadows, blaze inside

This light will shine unbroken tonight

Shine inside

And this light, it can blind us

Torch the shadows for all time

And you can color in my dark nights

Paint your promise over me

This light will shine unbroken tonight

Shine inside

Shine tonight

Shine tonight

Shine tonight

Burn

Burn

Burn

Burn

Burn”

The first line, “Throw a line into the darkness,” reminds me of what the mind is doing through a nightmare. It’s also reminiscent of “fishing,” a metaphor for bringing up something from the spiritual and the deep so that one can deal with it in the light. While trying to bring this darkness into the light of consciousness, “Oh, we are shadows, blaze inside. This light will shine unbroken tonight; shine inside. And this light, it can blind us, torch the shadows for all time” these lines suggest to me that we can be overwhelmed and blinded by the darkness of our shadow self as it grows in brightness, entering our awareness. Bringing the dark into the light can add color to our darker natures, and by looking more closely at the nightmare, it can hold much promise for bringing light into our future nights and “burn” away our fears.

Perhaps it was the mysterious and haunting way the music was sung and the slight reverb in its presentation that wormed its way into my soul, or maybe it was the cryptic lyrics. Still, it struck me as the perfect theme for the nightmare dreaming and interpreting genre.

Murder in a dream can conjure the need for change or the effects change can have on one’s status quo. It can also be about ending some vexing issues, habits, or behavior.

Bright lights can symbolize spiritual awakening from the darkness of the ego coming through the hidden aspects of the unconscious, which can be quite shocking at first when one sees a different reality than the one they have been living.

The ‘’burn, burn, burn…” in a dream can be about something that you can’t just ignore. This may be true of any occasional nightmare. If one is human, There is repressed material in the unconscious mind that can affect everything done in the conscious world. Nightmares bring light to that hidden material, especially when it causes problems that must be addressed.