Jim's Notes

Sitting for what I believe in.
posts - 296, comments - 247, trackbacks - 0

A Dream Within A Dream

"All that we see or seem, is but a dream within a dream."  -- Edgar Allen Poe

I had a cathartic experience on the drive home from work today. For whatever reason I thought of the ending to a book I just read, Lighthouse, by William Monahan.  It was a good book and the ending was particularly poignant and dream like.  That got me thinking, here is this world that doesn't exist, yet I can picture it in my head all the same.  That led me to think about the real world, the one we all share, and how it is largely projected from within us.  I know that the concrete stairs that lead to my front door exist, and are real, but those stairs are different to me than they are to a fly or an ant, or a chipmunk (or even my neighbor).  I also thought about how there are infinite mes. There is the me who walked up those stairs and into my apartment, (present) and there is also the me who turned around, got into the truck, and drove to Reno with nothing but the clothes on his back and the crumpled ten dollar bill in his wallet (elsewhere). 

I know that all this can easily be dismissed as armchair philosophy, but consider this:  mathematicians and physicists lend some credence that alternate universes exist and that for every action you take or decision you make, reality splits and there is an alternate universe where the opposite happened. 

Print | posted on Friday, August 15, 2008 7:34 PM | Filed Under [ Personal/Random ]

Feedback

Gravatar

# re: A Dream Within A Dream

Weird, you leading into your dream philosophy with Light House: A Trifle. Anyhow, have you read his subsequent work: "Dining Late with Claude La Badarian"? This is incredibly dream-like, and more along the lines of who is "me"? There is a whole the-author-and-his-fictional-creation-living-parallel-lives thing going on.
8/15/2008 9:35 PM | Jean Tremblay
Gravatar

# re: A Dream Within A Dream

No, I haven't read that yet, but will, as I really enjoyed Lighthouse. There was that great little scene where he states something along the lines of the author has lost control of his characters because he is drunk. Good stuff. Thank you Mister Vonnegut.
8/16/2008 5:15 PM | Jim
Gravatar

# re: A Dream Within A Dream

Two notes,

Why my picture showed up for someone else's comment is undoubtedly a "glitch" but it is incredibly coincidental to be a) in a post where I am talking about alternate mes. and b) one of the rare occurrences where someone who I don't know through our physical world actually posted on my blog.

Also, for compelling discussion on alternate universes, read some of the comments posted here.
8/17/2008 9:06 PM | Jim
Gravatar

# re: A Dream Within A Dream

That's from the chapter "I Don't Care Anymore", where Magdalene and Simone talk about how they got it on. Their lesbianism. The chapter ends weird, especially when you've forgotten who Dr. Locarno is supposed to be. Possibly a riff on Lorenzo de' Medici. One of my fav lines (p. 94) is: "I am late for my Fiction Workshop. I am in no mood to endure the worthless conversation of an autodidact. Thank you." But, to what I wanted to say, how do you link Vonnegut to the losing control of characters quote?
8/18/2008 11:11 AM | Jean Tremblay
Gravatar

# re: A Dream Within A Dream

Haha, in that same chapter: "At that moment there was a blast of celestial light and what appeared to be a canoe, containing several periwigged scientists, one of them screaming, "Sic omnia designantur," shot through one wall and discharged through the opposite wall."
8/18/2008 11:16 AM | Jean Tremblay
Gravatar

# re: A Dream Within A Dream

I just meant by the Vonnegut bit that he famously introduced himself as a character in Breakfast of Champions. I don't know if he was the first to do it, but he certainly made it famous. So I think we have him to thank for the idea of the author becoming part of the book.

Sorry for the late reply, I am with sparse internet access for a while.
8/22/2008 8:59 AM | jim
Gravatar

# re: A Dream Within A Dream

I wasn't familiar with Breakfast of Champions, but I see that 'Kilgore Trout' appears in the novel. I may have to read it. I enjoyed Slaughterhouse-Five.
8/23/2008 7:18 PM | Jean Tremblay

Post Comment

Title  
Name  
Email
Url
Comment   
Please add 8 and 6 and type the answer here: