ysabetwordsmith (
ysabetwordsmith) wrote in
rainbowfic2013-10-12 05:42 pm
Entry tags:
Poem: "Sometimes a Cigar"
Name:
ysabetwordsmith
Title: "Sometimes a Cigar"
Story: Stand-alone
Characters: Sigmund Freud, Rainbow Serpent
Colors: Moonlight #14 Antediluvian
Supplies and Styles: None
Word count: 236
Rating: PG
Warnings: None
Summary: Symbolism and dreams are complicated.
Notes: Feedback is welcome.
"Sometimes a Cigar"
Sigmund Freud presented the idea of dreams
as symbols which could be interpreted for psychoanalysis.
He proposed a set of guidelines for divining the meaning
of objects and events appearing in dreams,
antediluvian ideas dragging themselves
slowly up the sandman's shore.
This is a thing that shamans have done
in cultures around the world,
and however universal
some people may think dreams are,
they aren't.
The images may remain the same
but the symbolism can vary;
or images may appear often in some cultures
but rarely if ever in others.
Sometimes a cigar is a penis.
Sometimes a cigar is a holy object.
Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
Sometimes a snake is a devil and temptation.
Sometimes a snake is a goddess and transformation.
Sometimes a snake is just a reptile.
These are the things that are learned
not by a master scholar
but by a student of dreams,
for it is their nature to whisper secrets
into the listening ear of the mind by night.
There is no ivory tower where dreams cannot go,
no book whose answers they cannot question,
no credentials they are unable to sprinkle with doubt.
Old men clutch their cigars and their wire-framed glasses,
scribble important notes onto sheets of paper,
and insist that they know what they're doing.
In the mists between waking and sleeping,
Rainbow Serpent sheds her skin
and hisses a laugh.
Title: "Sometimes a Cigar"
Story: Stand-alone
Characters: Sigmund Freud, Rainbow Serpent
Colors: Moonlight #14 Antediluvian
Supplies and Styles: None
Word count: 236
Rating: PG
Warnings: None
Summary: Symbolism and dreams are complicated.
Notes: Feedback is welcome.
"Sometimes a Cigar"
Sigmund Freud presented the idea of dreams
as symbols which could be interpreted for psychoanalysis.
He proposed a set of guidelines for divining the meaning
of objects and events appearing in dreams,
antediluvian ideas dragging themselves
slowly up the sandman's shore.
This is a thing that shamans have done
in cultures around the world,
and however universal
some people may think dreams are,
they aren't.
The images may remain the same
but the symbolism can vary;
or images may appear often in some cultures
but rarely if ever in others.
Sometimes a cigar is a penis.
Sometimes a cigar is a holy object.
Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
Sometimes a snake is a devil and temptation.
Sometimes a snake is a goddess and transformation.
Sometimes a snake is just a reptile.
These are the things that are learned
not by a master scholar
but by a student of dreams,
for it is their nature to whisper secrets
into the listening ear of the mind by night.
There is no ivory tower where dreams cannot go,
no book whose answers they cannot question,
no credentials they are unable to sprinkle with doubt.
Old men clutch their cigars and their wire-framed glasses,
scribble important notes onto sheets of paper,
and insist that they know what they're doing.
In the mists between waking and sleeping,
Rainbow Serpent sheds her skin
and hisses a laugh.

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