The Norman Transcript

Columns

March 19, 2010

From dreams they come

Norman — One can learn a lot from his dreams. Like how screwed up his mind must work while his subconscious is in control.

That being said, I’ve had stretches during my life where I’ve made the effort to keep track of what rattles around in my head while it’s resting, comfortably or otherwise, on my fluffy blue pillowcase.

It often seems to involve being on some sort of trip. Usually I’m driving in the middle of nowhere, headed to somewhere else in the middle of nowhere.

It sounds a little like my days as a small-town Oklahoma sports writer, but it’s different.

No, it seems I’m always looking for something. And I always seem to have brought way too much stuff with me and have way to much to pack back up before rushing off to the next destination.

“Ah,” my dream analyzing friends say, “you have a lot of baggage you are carrying with you on your journey. Maybe it’s a sign you are carrying it along with you.”

Wow, tell me something I didn’t know.

It’s not to say it’s all bad. Plenty of times while I’m on these journeys I am surrounded by loved ones, sometimes even those who have departed this world many years ago.

Surprisingly, I never seem to be hungry when I dream. Maybe the fact I have perfected the midnight snack has something to do with that.

And maybe that midnight snack has finally broken me of being the “tall skinny guy” after all these years.

But that’s another column.

Back to the here and now of the world of sleep.

I think there is something to learn somewhere from all this. Perhaps the answer to some big upcoming stage in my life is hidden in there, the answer to all my big questions right there in my head.

Or maybe it’s indigestion from one too many jalapeño hot dogs while watching the fourth re-run of SportsCenter.

It’s kind of amazing to me looking all around the Internet at how serious a lot of people are on this topic.

They’re sure they can solve the day’s problems based on what they were thinking of when they climbed out of bed.

“Ha,” say the naysayers who then go to their horoscope to plan out their own day.

Personally, I always got a good laugh out of the horoscope. And for all the years I tried to remember to check it on my birthday, I always managed to forget, every single year.

Charting dreams is a lot easier to remember.

My latest dream involved a crazy scenario where my children had spent all my money and then decided to drive me out into the desert and leave me there.

I don’t know why they were driving and I don’t know how they were paying for gas. It sure wasn’t with their own money. Of course, I guess in a dream they might actually spend their own money instead of mine.

Unfortunately, the buzzing of my cell phone next to my head was the last I remember of my fateful journey to the desert. I don’t know if they succeeded in leaving me there, but my wallet was empty the next morning, probably for the same reason as in the dream.

For as many secrets as these dreams may hold, I think I’ll stick to the here and now of my awake life. It’s hard enough to keep up when I’m actually conscious.

Christian Potts

366-3544

cpotts@normantranscript.com

Text Only
Columns
  • Outhouse enthusiast’s hobby more than a relief

    Editor’s note: This previously-published column has been a reader favorite and is one of the most requested columns....

    May 27, 2012

  • What features create a cultural center?

    The question has been raised whether an aquatic center somehow constitutes a cultural center. Although the more thorough response would be to ask, in turn, what features create a cultural center, this short treatise will simply focus on ...

    May 24, 2012

  • End marriage war by redefining license

    Excitement raged across the political spectrum last week when President Barack Obama came out in support of gay marriage....

    May 22, 2012

  • Concerns with the proposed NEDA

    My concerns for the Norman Economic Development Authority (NEDA) as proposed do not have to do with any aversion to economic growth. As an economist, to be against economic growth is a concept as alien as being against plant growth is to a ...

    May 21, 2012

  • A key for every lock and every user

    Folks differ about the care of keys. Paranoid as some are about keys they constantly check on them. Others never think about keys until they can’t find them....

    May 20, 2012

  • Landmarks, people bind community

    A previous column on Brooks Street generated quite a few comments. Some of them about their own experiences on Brooks and other streets in Norman. We all get attached to landmarks....

    May 20, 2012

  • Now is not the time to lower taxes

    State lawmakers soon will vote on whether to lower state income taxes. Because of state law, it will be very difficult to ever again raise the state income tax if it’s cut, and state income tax is the main source of schools’ funding. There ...

    May 18, 2012

  • We benefit from Staggered Board law

    Oklahoma fared better than most states in the recent recession, due to the robustness of our energy industry. Regardless, Oklahomans continue to want their state government to put forth policies to create, as well as protect, jobs. We are ...

    May 17, 2012

  • Neighbors become friends on porch

    Many activities take place on a long front porch: Breaking string beans, shucking corn, eating watermelon without worrying about drips, sharing homemade ice cream made with real cream. On clear nights, some chase fireflies, while others ...

    May 15, 2012

  • Truth about U.S. Postal Service reform

    Now that U.S. Senate has passed a bill, SB 1789, to reform the ailing U.S. Postal Service, critics are trying to disable the bill on its way to the House of Representatives. Business Week recently catalogued unhappy stakeholders, including ...

    May 12, 2012

The Business Marquee
Facebook