Dream & Waking States
M Suresh
msuresh at INDIA.TI.COM
Thu Jul 11 19:55:05 CDT 1996
After so many earlier postings on dreams the reaction of many of you to
this post would be "Oh not that again!". But I am somewhat new to this
group and had another idea on the difference between the dream and waking
states. So please bear with yet another posting on dreams.
I am only giving another difference between the two states and not trying
to disprove the opinion of anyone especially of Gaudapaada or Shankara or
Ramana Maharishi.
The commonality between the 2 states is that one does not doubt the
reality of either the waking state or the dream state while in that
state.
Let us consider another fundamental capability pertaining to the 2
states. The ability to analyse the other state while experiencing one
state. We find that we can analyse the dream state in our waking state
and pronounce it as just a bunch of mental creations, having no more
reality than that. But can we do any kind of an analysis of the waking
state from the dream state? We find that such a thing is impossible
because the dream state steals the entire waking state reality for
building the dream experience. One just CANNOT question about the waking
state as another state when dreaming because one is deluded that he is
awake while dreaming, the very basis of the dream state is the stolen
reality of the waking state. In my last posting on the subject I had
only said that I had not encountered the situation. But on analysing I
find that such a situation is impossible.
So in the dreaming state I can at the most analyse the dream state itself
since I am pretending to be awake. I have had such a dream.
The dream was that I was walking along a familiar road and musing to
myself about Ramana Mahrishi's pronouncement that the world was a dream.
I was saying to myself "What nonsense is this concept about this world
being a dream. I suppose I am expected to beleive that this road and all
the people on it are part of a dream!", just then a fire engine comes
along ringing its bell and I continue with my thoughts "..and I suppose
this fire engine which would have been built by so many people so
meticulously is also part of a dream". The dream ended with that when I
woke up to the alarm clock's ringing ( which was translated into the
dream as the fire engine's siren/bell ) thoroughly amused at the irony of
the whole dream in which I was denying having a dream dreaming all the
while.
Coming back to the comparison between the waking and dream state, we find
that it is possible to analyse the dream state from the waking state, but
the reverse is not possible. So the waking state is a higher state from
which you can look down upon the dream ( and deep sleep? ) state but from
the lower dream state you cannot look upto the waking state.
So in my opinion the waking state is superior to the dream state as long
as the talk of states comes in. But if one denies all states ( ajaati
vaada ) then that is okay.
Namaskar,
Suresh.
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