Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Skunk Dreams

I have to say, reading this essay re-sparked my obsession with dreams, their meaning, and how they effect our conscious lives. The essay is a strange fusion between a romanticized recollection of the authors teenage transitional phase, and vividly transcribed dream sequences. Because of this innovative format, it is difficult form me to do an analysis of the essay as a whole. Instead I will share a couple of the passages I found particularly interesting and give you my thoughts on them.

"After a few years of living in the country, the impulse to simply get outside hit me, strengthened, and became again a habit of thought, a reason for storytelling, an uneasy impatience with walls and roads. "

Recently in my life I've felt a similar melodramatic lust for adventure; coincidentally, as a result of dreams. Dreams vivid in nature have always effected me more deeply then they probably should, so when I have a dream filled with adventure and fulfillment, I awake wishing to attain that structure in my conscious life. It always seems out of reach, however.

"The obstacles we overcome define us. We are composed of hurdles we set up to pace our headlong needs, to control our desires, or against which to measure our growth. 'Without obstacles,' Phillips writes, 'the notion of development is inconceivable. There would be nothing to master.'"

I like this passage because it's a great wording of my (common) philosophical view that we are mostly shaped by the events in our life. The passage only strengthens this view, explaining that without developing in order to overcome events (obstacles), we are but nothing.

Overall I liked what the author had to say, though I wasn't really feeling the skunk metaphor. I can't like everything I suppose though.









1 comment:

  1. Good response here, Cody (and in your other posts). I like your use of text quotes to support your analysis.

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