Monday, August 26, 2013

Kavi's Vivid Dream Journeys: Speaker for the Soul

Category:  Recycled Visions
Journal:  Dream Journal
Date:  8-25/26-2013


Aug 25-26 Dream:  Speaker for the Soul

I had been called upon to perform a soul release ceremony for four young adults who died in a car crash.  I am not sure who set it up for me to do this, because all of the families involved seemed very confused and, at first, a bit leery of what it was that I was supposed to be doing.  “Perhaps it was the souls, themselves, that moved me into this position?”  I remember thinking to myself while talking with the families and understanding that they had no idea what it was I did.  “So, you’re like a Speaker for the Dead?”  A brother of one of the deceased asked after I told them it wasn’t going to be your typical funeral service.  “It’s similar, I suppose.  But I’m more like a Speaker for the Soul.  The soul lives on.  Death is of the body.”

I began asking the families about different images and messages that kept coming up about each of the four who had passed.  In medicine wheel formation, four totems spoke up for me to translate to the living:  Butterfly in the East, Rattlesnake in the South, Swan in the West, and Tortoise in the North.

I decided to start with Butterfly, who spoke to my own Butterfly totem.  “Who would be the one who was very colorful and underwent a significant transformation in their life?”  A father and mother looked at each other.  The mother’s eyes watered and she covered her mouth, so the father spoke up.  “That was our daughter, Chloe.  She was our artist, always painting colorful flowers.  She always said her favorite color was ‘rainbow’.  There was a difficult time in her life when she was addicted to drugs, we felt like we didn’t know her anymore…like she was a completely different person, or…like she wasn’t even there anymore.  But she got clean, about a year ago, and the change was very significant.  She was absolutely vibrant afterwards, still the little girl we raised…but also this beautiful young woman we were just meeting for the first time.  We were so proud of her.”  He choked up and tried to hold back a flood of emotions.

“Does it make sense to you that she would speak to me as a Butterfly?”  I asked.  The mother looked at me with wide eyes.  “I used to call her my Flutterby when she was a little girl.  She was always flitting from flower to flower in my garden, touching each one with her finger.  It was so precious.  The butterflies seemed to love her.  When I see them in my garden, I always think of her.”

I nodded.  “There was another who went through a significant transformation, but wouldn’t be described as colorful.  Someone who physically blended in with their surroundings but could command attention with their voice?”

“That sounds like Hunter.”  A young mother holding a toddler said.  “He joined the Marines after he graduated from high school.  He served two tours battling insurgents and protecting Iraqis in the war.  It was constant fighting.  He was suffering from post-traumatic stress.  He couldn’t sleep, he was depressed, and he began drinking more heavily.  All of his initial requests for help were ignored.  He decided to give up on seeking help.  He watched other Marines around him behave like zombies on their medication, some of his friends had committed suicide.  He didn’t want to become like them.  He told me he had to keep our baby, Hope, in mind when he would feel himself slipping.  Then somewhere along the lines, he began using marijuana because it was the only thing that helped him relax.  Shortly after, he failed a surprise drug test and was discharged without honors.  He appealed, after his release, and they eventually changed it to an honorable discharge after determining that his plea for help had been ignored.  Even still, he was battling his personal demons at home.  He refused help at first.  He was so angry.  He’d be very quiet for long periods of time…but then something would set him off and he would lash out verbally.  He never hurt us physically…but he would yell a lot.  I felt like he didn’t want me around him.  He would hibernate in his room in the basement, and I would just take care of Hope.  For a while, it felt like he never really came home…there was just a ghost of him living in our basement.  I was afraid to talk to him most times because I didn’t want him to snap at me.  One night, I did go downstairs to tell him that Hope said her first word.  I thought he’d be happy to hear that she said ‘Dada’.  I saw him sitting there in his chair with his gun in his mouth.  It scared me and I screamed at him.  He came to me and held me on the stairs.  He agreed that he needed help.  It was the first time we’d really talked since he was home.  It was the first time I felt him again.  He did get help after that.  They found that he had suffered a brain injury as a repercussion of a bomb exploding.  They treated him for that.  And he went to therapy to work though some of the things he saw while in Iraq.  He was starting to get better.  He was better.  And now he’s gone.”

“It’s Rattlesnake who speaks for him.”  I told her as the rest of her family huddled around her while she sobbed.  The father nodded.  “My boy loved snakes.  He could tell you anything you wanted to know about them.  He’s been catching them since he was a kid.  Always made us laugh that his mother was so afraid of them.”

“And who would be the graceful, intuitive one?  Someone who was very emotionally in tune with others, and perhaps had musical talent?”  I asked.

“That was Bridget Grace, my daughter.”  A woman holding a white veil in her hands spoke up.  “This was my veil when I married her father, and she was going to wear it at her wedding.  Liam, the one who was driving, had recently asked her to marry him…and they were on their way home after taking Chloe and Hunter out to dinner to tell them the good news.  Chloe was going to be her maid of honor, and Hunter was going to be the best man.  I was so happy for Bridget; she’s been in love with Liam since they were teenagers.  They were such a cute couple.  She wrote a lot of love songs about him.  She was going to sing one she had just wrote at their wedding.  The last time I talked with her, she sang it to me.  It was so beautiful, it made me cry.”

“She comes to me as a Swan.”  I said.  “Yes.  That’s her.”  Her mother replied with a sad smile.  “She also played the violin.  She has a swan feather attached to her bow.”

“And the Tortoise must be Liam.  Was he a very patient, peaceful person?”  I asked.

“Yes.  He was very thoughtful; focused.  He never rushed into anything.  He had been planning out his life with Bridget since he first met her.”  Liam’s brother answered.  “I would always try to push him to make bigger moves, but he knew what he was doing.  He couldn’t be rushed.  He meant to have his whole life secure before he popped the question.  He just bought a house, and that was the last step he meant to make before asking Bridget to be his wife.  He had everything together, always, more than anyone I ever knew.  He was so wise and careful, I thought he would outlive us all.”

“He was very much like a tortoise.”  His mother added.  “He was our rock.  Always so grounded.  The most trustworthy person, it’s hard to believe anything could happen to them with him behind the wheel.”

“It was an accident, honey.”  Her husband hugged her while she cried into his chest.

“What will you do in this ceremony?”  The brother asked me.

“I’m here to guide their souls into the afterlife.”  I told them.  “And to help you all to grieve and release.  The ceremony is as much a celebration of their lives here with all of you as it is an initiation into their next journey.”