Control

The song lyric, “ground control to major Tom,” comes readily to mind when I think of control.   So does the hymn lyric, “I surrender all.”  As does the Serenity Prayer.  I’m guessing even though all these reminders should help us to stop trying to control every little thing in our lives, we stubbornly persist in the habit of it.

In 1969, David Bowie wrote “Space Oddity,” which is maybe about surrendering control by cutting off communication with ground control.  A constant barrage of suggestions, information, this opinion and that one, orders from the boss, pretty pictures of pretty people and pretty things, tempt most of us to unplug the communications.

“Space Oddity” starts out with the quote from above and further on it says “this is Major Tom to ground control….  For here am I sittin’ in my tin can far above the world, planet earth is blue, and there’s nothing I can do.”  It might feel okay to unplug and let go.

There are all kinds of control but the prominent kind in my mind, is basic restraint.  Either we’re being restrained beyond our will (controlled), being restrained for our safety (under control), or exercising self-restraint for the purpose of discipline and the building of character.  One of the biblical fruits of the Spirit, is the virtue of (self-control).

Recently I had an opportunity to spend some time at “the beach.”  Watching the ebb and flow of the waves, tides, and water, was educational for this observer.  It was easy to accept that I had zero control over the powerful process of the ocean’s movements.

On social media I shared a short video of what seemed like layer upon layer of gray and white and tan from the sky to the ocean, its waves, and sand.  The robust waves tumbled one after the other toward the beach in one of the most controlled examples of power, imaginable.

The sound of water is soothing, when it’s controlled.  Two of the basic elements of life, air and water, under control, dominate white noise machines and can soothe our busy minds and help us to relax or fall asleep with greater ease.

When the noise of life with its constant barrage of communication, in whatever form, gets to be too much, I think we need something larger than life to settle us down.  Few humans, like “Major Tom,” get to go to space to get some space from the noise of life.  We need to listen to an ocean, a river, a stream or fountain.  Or go to a quiet aquarium, if you must.

We may need to putter in, walk through, and look at a garden, a forest, an arboretum.  We should probably smell some flowers, observe the grandeur of trees that tower above us, look at clouds and the entire expanse of the sky.

People need people but we need more than people, society, politics, problems, business, commerce.  I think we need to get off the highway from time to time, and walk the path, for respite and perspective.

It’s so easy to get bogged down in controlling one snippet after another snippet of procuring the food and finances of our daily lives.  I wonder if once in a while we need to glimpse an ocean or vast canyon or giant forest – stuff that is obviously beyond our control, to bring us back to peace.

The Serenity Prayer is essentially about humans accepting limits to our capacity to control what happens.  We can do something about some things.  We need wisdom, however, to know when and under what circumstances, to accept the things we cannot control; when to let go.

It should be a universal goal for us to learn to discern between what is an ocean and what is a pool, among the circumstances we face in life.  One is there to teach us to calm down, stop trying so hard against the tide, and dwell in peace at the vastness of it.  The other is to show us that we’re capable of navigating it even if it’s dicey, sketchy, deep, or muddy.

Some of us, maybe more than others, have trouble regulating our internal control mechanism in response to the external stimuli of life.  We do better with some sort of outside controls in place to even out the ups and downs and prevent the spread of an undesirable outcome.  Parents, friends, spouses, or employers can fill this role.

When personal control exceeds its boundaries, it’s a problem.  For example, when you’ve controlled your own environment and then succumb to the temptation to control the environment of others, you need to let go.  If you’re judging what is best, good, or right about somebody else’s behavior or lifestyle, you’d better step back and stick to your own corner of the universe.

Jennifer DeWeil said, “Control is the enemy of rest…. When things feel out of control, our tendency is to hold tighter, grip harder, or work more.”  I say, stop trying.  It’s exhausting. 

I once had a relative at risk for dehydration and all manner of unseemly repercussions from such dehydration.  She didn’t drink enough water.  We practically begged her to drink more water.  We’d place a glass of water in front of her and ask her respectfully to drink it.  She often said, “I’m trying.”  To us, it seemed simple, “don’t try to drink it.  Just drink it.”

Let the power and peace of the ocean have its way with you.  We can’t restrain it anyway, so we might as well let it go.

Sweet Dreams

“Sweet dreams are made of this.  I travel the world and the seven seas.  Everybody’s looking for something….”  So said Annie Lennox (David Allan Stewart), the Eurythmics, a few years ago (1983).

All the song lyric experts have varied opinions about what those lyrics mean, and I don’t know for certain, but I think it’s a bit of dream interpretation.  We literally travel the world in some of our more fanciful and sweet dreams.  Lennox goes on to refer to some of the more negative dreams where people are using us, and some of the other anxieties of life, but sweet dreams reflect the best of our emotional life.

Don’t you love it, though, when you have a dream that makes you smile, feel encouraged, appreciated, cared for, and hopeful?  Those are the sweet dreams.  The origin of the word, dreams, dates from 1200-1250, meaning “joy, mirth, gladness.” Hm

Hopes and dreams seem tied together.  What is it about dreams that make hope their most prominent buddy?

There are a couple of definitions for “dreams.”  One has to do with a fanciful or concocted scenario of the future.  It’s a hopeful but largely unreal vision of excellence in your life.  This is the concept of dreams that Roy Orbison sang about, in the first part of Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream), in 1962 (Cindy Walker, songwriter).  “Dream baby got me dreamin’ sweet dreams the whole day through.”  

The other definition of dreams, has to do with a mental activity, usually in the form of an imagined series of events, occurring during certain phases of sleep.  This type of dream is what Orbison meant with the lyrics in the second part of Dream Baby, “Dream baby got me dreamin’ sweet dreams in nighttime too….”

I wonder how these two different definitions of dreams are related.  I think perhaps the common denominator of both types of dreams is, hope.  Thusly, the reference to “sweet dreams.”

Why do we pray for sweet dreams?  From Proverbs 3 – “When you lie down, you will not be afraid; Yes, you will lie down and your sleep will be sweet.”

When we wish someone “sweet dreams,” it’s a blessing.  In my opinion, pronouncing “sweet dreams” to someone, punctuates their day with a perfect period.

My writing is a case of recording what happens to be going on currently in my head rather than some crafted work of creative writing.  I think my dreams are similar.  Are dreams just simply dramatically-set spill-over from waking life?

Dreams, in my view, aren’t some executive producer’s concocted symbolism, meant to express a deep concept.  Yet that’s how we’re supposed to interpret them, according to some dream experts.

Dreams truly are movies which are made up of symbols for feelings.  So, the bottom line of a movie or show isn’t so much that the girl gets the guy or the cop gets the perp or the soldier wins the war.

Rather it’s that good overcomes evil, love conquers fear, the turtle wins the race, the beaten-down rise up, and hope can’t be suppressed forever.

In this sense, dreams are movies and we are executive producers, who sometimes really deserve an Oscar for our dream content.  Dream symbols may reveal emotional material which we aren’t ready to confront readily or just yet, in our waking life.  Quite possibly, dreams are meant to ease us into a reality that’s brewing beneath the surface.

Some dreams are subtle, others are obvious.  Once in a while a dream is so memorable that we’re startled by it and remember it easily upon awakening.  It’s usually the shocking, absurd or scary dreams that we wake from and have to tell someone about.  But we “forget” most of our daily dreams.

So, cheers to getting your anxieties or conflicting emotions out in a few confusing dreams.  But most of your dreams, I hope reflect the best of your emotional life, spilling out in the sweetest of dreams.