T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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594.1 | | 38636::AUGUSTINE | What do humanitarians eat? | Mon Dec 14 1987 14:44 | 34 |
| [i'm a "2"]
Peggy,
Ouch. that kind of dream can be terrifying. i've had cycles of bad
dreams, often when i feel that my life is out of control. it can happen
whether or not i'm alone. my aggressor is not always human. sometimes
it's a strange and large animal. in the dreams i can never get away or
i wake up just before something unmentionably horrible and inescapable
happens.
when i wake up, i feel terrified. i don't always know where i am. i lie
in bed and listen for sounds in the house. [i'm always sure i hear a
few.] my heart pounds wildly. i force myself to keep my eyes open so
that i don't fall back to sleep and continue the dream. sometimes i
turn the light on to orient myself and to keep myself up long enough
to calm down. i write in my journal, or i just sit up and wrap my
covers up to my chin and think.
lately, what's really helped (after my heart calms down) is to think it
through very rationally. even though the situation seems inescapable on
the surface, it helps to decide how i could have gotten out of it.
there's been a way (ever since i've started trying to figure it out),
and it makes me feel much more powerful to discover it.
it also helps to take some time the next day to examine what in
my life is making me feel so crazy. [my md says that dreams have
different stage settings but tend to tell the same story...]
btw, it's hard to read your note and NOT to draw parallels with
some of the other issues you've written about lately. are you feeling
that connection?
liz
|
594.2 | real and surreal get confused.... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | a collie down isnt a collie beaten | Mon Dec 14 1987 16:23 | 26 |
| Often, if I do remember a dream, it is because it was particularly
horrifying (although they don't happen that often). When I do
particularly heinous things in my dreams, or have them done to me,
I always have trouble getting back to sleep. Things that help include
turning on the TV to something interesting (cable TV is great for
this, there's always some special on the Tanzanian Tiger or Buddhist
Art or NewAge Videos on at the strangest times...), and if my SO
isn't there (being a student he tends to keep odd hours) I grab
the nearest stuffed animal. Thinking the dream over helps a bit,
but getting back to "the real world", and realizing that what I
dreamt was NOT real, is the most helpful thing for me.
I also try to tell myself that although I dreamed the dream, there
is no reason it will come true. I find that the more horrible dreams
seem to have no rhyme or reason, and no connection with my current
life...perhaps it's just my subconscious blowing off steam...and
if I have bad dreams several nights in a row, I will go into
self-hypnosis for 15-20 minutes at bedtime and will instruct myself to
go into a deep, normal, trouble-free sleep instead of waking from the
hypnotic state (but this part isn't for everyone...)
-Jody
p.s. "From ghosties and ghoulies and long-leggity-beasties and
things that go bump in the night may the good Lord preserve us!"
|
594.3 | visualization to free your mind... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | a collie down isnt a collie beaten | Mon Dec 14 1987 16:29 | 12 |
| wait, wait, I just remembered this technique that helps if "pictures"
or "frames" from the dream keep drifting back when you try to go
back to sleep....
Visualize the scary/offending "picture" very clearly. Now surround
it in a balloon, and allow it to float up out of your head towards
the ceiling. Do this time and again until all the offensive thoughts
are gone. Try to replace them with pleasant things, and once the
bad thoughts leave your head, know in a firm/positive way that they
cannot return (balloons only go one way, right, up?)
-Jody
|
594.4 | edit the dream or redirect it | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Dec 14 1987 16:37 | 19 |
| Two things that I have done when troubled by particularly 'bad
dreams' are to edit the dream, and in the case of a recurring
bad dream take charge within the dream and change it.
I have waked up occasionally from some really awful ones and
been able to get back to sleep by redoing the ending in my
head visualizing all the scenes in my mind.
and when I was a girl I had a recurring bad dream that I finally
learned to deflect. Then when I was a young woman and had the
same dream again I went through the scarey part again and discovered
that it no longer had any power over me.
Of course this only deals with how I manage to get to sleep again
in the face of such a dream, not the content or why I have/had them.
Bonnie
|
594.5 | | VINO::EVANS | | Mon Dec 14 1987 16:42 | 19 |
| I don't know a lot about this subject, but from what I've heard,
dreams are often loaded with symbols. Even if something may seem
to be a real-life possibility, it may indeed symbolize something
else. Like - somebody puts their hand over your mouth. Is there
some reason you feel gagged in real life? Stuff like that.
It might be a good idea to dissect the dream and see if you
can find anything in it relating to issues you're currently working
out, or maybe some you aren't, but need to.
Some people advocate programming yourself to talk to the "problem
person" in the dream and ask them what they want from you. I've
never done this, nor known anyone who has, so I can't vouch for
....well, ANYthing, when it comes right down to it...
Take care,
--DE
|
594.6 | Go for the light. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Dec 14 1987 17:18 | 20 |
| Yeah, I've had dreams like that. I also have another, um, style
of nightmare. Sometimes the two merge....
So I've slept with a (sheathed) hunting knife under my pillow.
Sometimes the act of getting it out has been difficult enough
for me to wake up and realize It Was Just A Dream. (I hate cliches.)
Other times I just bolt out of bed (It's amazing what feeble
muscles dream-people have compared to your waking self.) and head
for the lightswitch. When it's *really* bad, I skip the light,
and dash right out the door. Once I can see the nightlight in the
bathroom, I know It Was Just A Dream.
I put in the nightlight when a friend who also had nightmares (male.
abused child.) told me that's what he used.
Once you can think again, take the advice you find best among what
you read here.
Ann B.
|
594.7 | Thanks for sharing | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Toto and moi are On the Road again. | Mon Dec 14 1987 17:20 | 17 |
|
This is the first time in years that I have been unable to do any
of the things so far suggested and not shake the feeling - this
time it stayed. I could not move for almost 5 minutes much less
put the light on or even meditate it away.
I feel that this came out of the blue, though it may be related
to my daughter. Sometimes when I have a strong dream or feeling
that I can not explain it is related to something she is going through.
_peggy
(-)
| I am writing more now because
Cakes took the month of
December off.
|
594.8 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Mon Dec 14 1987 17:23 | 13 |
| Re: .0
I stay up all the rest of the night, with every light in the house
on, and do something like houseclean. The latter makes me feel
like I'm accomplishing something (the house usually needs it :-)),
and it beats staying there in the dark, terrified to fall asleep
again. In the morning, everything looks better.
I think living alone is not the root of this problem -- women are
attacked all the time even though someone else is in the house.
At least if you're by yourself, only one person is harmed. On that
cheery thought, I end my reply.
|
594.9 | Bad Dreams | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I *am* pregnant :-) | Mon Dec 14 1987 18:27 | 6 |
| I do not live alone, but a couple of nights ago I dreamt that another
woman and I were raped and murdered.
It stayed with me all day.
Carol
|
594.10 | ack | 3D::CHABOT | I have heard the VAXes singing, each to each. | Mon Dec 14 1987 19:05 | 15 |
| I've never lived alone, aside from an occasional weekend when all
the roomies are away.
My prefurred solution is to get up and grab the nearest cat. Gently.
Unfortunately, in the current living situation, the nearest cat is
down the block. :-(
It's odd how long the fear and or outrage can last. From any
nightmare, but especially the life-threatening ones. Especially
the ones where men are part of the life-threatening stuff.
You know, it's just real hard to discuss this with men. Even best
friends. er, <clearthroat>, um well, just be patient, and
<deepbreath> appreciate that you get to overhear, guys.
[I'm at tears' edge, and I haven't even said anything.]
|
594.11 | Dreams or Reality? | BARAKA::BLAZEK | A new moon, a warm sun... | Mon Dec 14 1987 20:52 | 19 |
| re: .0
Do you usually feel safe in your home?
I lived in an apartment for about six months (couldn't take
it any longer) where strongly felt *something* would happen
to me one day. It was a good neighborhood, but I was on the
first floor and for some unknown reason I was terrified of the
accessibility of my bedroom window. I constantly had violent,
lasting dreams, and finally it got to the point where I was
afraid to go to sleep -- I was afraid of the dreams, and I was
afraid someone would break in while I slept.
I've since moved and the dreams are pleasant once again. *8-)
I'm a firm believer in outside influences/fears/worries/loves
making symbolic appearances in dreams.
Carla
|
594.12 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Dec 15 1987 10:09 | 28 |
| Like Lisa, warm, breathing, purring cats (and big dogs) are my
best ways of getting back to "present time" after waking up terrified
during the night. People will do in a pinch, but I prefer the
animals. ;-) I often sleep with the bedroom lights on.
I am terrified of the city. When walking around New York I am in
such constant fear that I cannot enjoy it. It's like the nightmare
feeling coming back during the day. I lived in Cambridge in a basement
apartment for a year, and was so stressed from that that it colored
my whole year. There were bars over the windows, so I worried about
not getting out in a fire as well as people intruding. I lived
in the suburbs for a while, and that was better. I didn't wake
up terrified as often as I did in the city.
I finally moved back out to the country. I felt so relieved to be away
from the city and to feel safe again. (I had lived in a cabin in the
woods for 2 years near where I am living now, and had felt very safe
there because it was so hard to find! I was not scared of going out in
the woods at night.) After a few weeks of feeling relieved and of
having no nightmares, a brutal murder of a woman and 2 children was
committed 2 miles away during the afternoon. I know people who
know both the victims and the alleged murderer which makes it more
real for me. I realized that my illusions of safety had made me
feel so good, but they were just illusions. We really aren't safe
anywhere. And the nightmares are back along with a feeling of
being watched even though no one seems to be around.
Holly
|
594.13 | Oiling all the hinges... | GNUVAX::QUIRIY | Christine | Tue Dec 15 1987 10:37 | 20 |
|
For a short period of time, when I was troubled with a not-particularly
nasty but tenacious recurring-bad-dream, I decided to get out of
bed and write it down. After doing this two or three times, it
stopped appearing so frequently, and eventually went away.
Funny, I had a bad one last night. I don't remember what happened,
but I do remember waking up terrified, because I thought I'd heard the
bedroom door squeakily swinging open (I don't even know if the hinges
on that door squeak). It took what felt like ages to turn my head
(which was facing away) towards the door, to look into the entrance to
the room... I don't think there's anything you can do At The Moment
but wait it out and hope it's only a dream, or plan your course
of action. My bad dreams are usually of the Someone Threatening to Do
Bad Things variety. I've been known to sleep with lights on in
other parts of the house. That makes me feel better.
Good luck!
CQ
|
594.14 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Dec 15 1987 12:58 | 23 |
| Ah dreams... My last one was worms. Three kinds, all white and
icky, squirmy, gah. Coming out of my flesh. Don't even want to
imagine what it means; the memory of the dream is too uncomfortable.
Living alone can be scary, especially if you are on the first floor.
I had a peeping tom a couple months back, and so have been locking
ALL the doors, tho the porch window is still unlocked so I can let
the cat in & out.
To keep away the fear, I ignore it. It seems I ignore it pretty
well, since my dreams don't include fear of being alone. It may
be that the REASON I can ignore it is because I've already been
beat up and raped... somehow I know that I've lived through it before
and if it happens again I will live through it again. That may
be an uncautious way of looking at it, but there is really little
choice I can see: live in horrible fear, or decide to cope with
whatever happens.
Which is worse and harder to bear? A lifetime of fear, or an incident
(or two)? I think the fear is harder, but that was a very concious
and difficult choice...
Lee
|
594.15 | Vicky-dreams | TARKIN::TRIOLO | Victoria Triolo | Tue Dec 15 1987 14:01 | 42 |
|
Ever since I was little, I had dreams where burglars were entering
through the window. I would wake up and see shadows. But, I never
screamed because I thought if I pretended I was asleep, they won't
touch me. But, my heart was always pounding a mile a minute.
I still have those dreams. And I hate them. I am a rational,
intelligent human being who can't stand to be afraid of anything.
So, when I have one of those very REAL dreams, if I'm alone, I will
do stupid things just in case someone is in the house.
I will drop a book on the floor (there is always one by the bed)
so as to make a loud noise so if someone is in the house, they might
leave. I will loudly talk to myself saying things like "Boy, am
I thirsty, think I'll go downstairs and get a drink". Sometimes,
I'll even yell at the top of my lungs. It feels good and lets
some of the tension I'm feeling release. (I've only done this since
I've moved out of an apartment and into a house)
Then I feel stupid and scared. So I think to myself FEAR NO MORE
and try to go to sleep.
And if this doesn't work, I watch tv the rest of the night and play
zombie for the rest of the day.
If I am not alone, I usually just hug the heck out of my husband.
But, actually, I normally only have these dreams alone. And mine
are not recurring, because I'm so mad at being afraid, I try and
program a happy dream for the following night. ( I have wild
dreams and if I think pleasant thoughts before I sleep, I normally
can start to dream happy dreams. It works)
Anyhow, I hate to admit these things, but I've just had one. I
think I've pinpointed them to the fact that there have been two brutal
murders in the Mass area and my husband was at DECUS so I was alone.
On a happy note, my weird fantastic dreams outnumber the few
nightmares I have. My dreams have become famous among my friends
so whenever they have a strange dream, they refer to them as VICKY-dreams.
Sleep well and dream softly,
Vicky
|
594.16 | | PAGAN::VALENTINE | | Tue Dec 15 1987 14:38 | 15 |
|
I had nightmares many years ago about a man attacking
me in my home, usually at night while I was asleep.
The nightmares increased as I became aware of the number
of women raped and knowing there was a rapist loose in the
neighborhhod, whom the police had not caught. After
waking up in a sweat one night I realized that I did not
have to live this way. I went out the next day and bought
a gun, which I keep at the top of my bed on the headboard.
I have two dogs, who would give warning if anyone tried to
break into my home. The nightmares about being attacked
and/or raped have not reoccurred since buying the gun.
|
594.17 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Tue Dec 15 1987 15:20 | 9 |
| Re: .14
About that porch window... you can do a number on it so that the
cat can get in and out, but someone still can't get in from outside
too easily. There are little gizmos that you can attach to the
frame, specifically for holding a window partly open (cat-opening
size, not people-opening size) but "locked", and so forth. Or,
perhaps a cat door instead.
|
594.18 | Maybe they won't touch me if... | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | God is nobody. Nobody loves you. | Tue Dec 15 1987 15:20 | 11 |
| Re .15
I know what you mean about having those dreams of an intruder and
believing if you lie *very* still, he will believe you are asleep
and not touch you. I used to do that too - even did it once recently.
It certainly is not rational - if someone is in the house with the
intent to rape or kill you, lying still will not help. However,
if he is only there to steal something...maybe it's a rational thing
to do. But since when are nightmares rational?
Elizabeth
|
594.19 | TURN ON THE LIGHTS! | WITNES::DOUGHERTY | DOUGHERTY | Tue Dec 15 1987 17:57 | 8 |
| Every once in a while I'll wake up from a dream and still feel the
presence of the dream figure in my apartment. Sometimes its friendly,
sometimes its threatening. When ***FEELS*** threatening,
I turn the lights on and either (1) try to
go back to sleep; (2) write down the experience and my feelings in my
journal; (3) read; and/or (4) turn on the TV.
|
594.20 | | SHIRE::BIZE | | Wed Dec 16 1987 11:09 | 31 |
|
Though I am not alone when I dream, I once in a while get pretty awful dreams
mostly about insects crawling all over the place (insects make me physically
sick) or about something happening to my daughter (I don't even want to verba-
lise it here, because I am so TERRIFIED of it).
Several things that could possibly help are:
- try to understand why you dreamt that. Are you really worried that
you may be attacked, like in your dream, or is your dream a sign
that something is worrying you, about yourself, about someone
you love?
- if the aloneness is really the root of the problem, would you
consider sharing appartments with somebody, like taking a
boarder in a spare bedroom (this may not be realistic depending
on the size of your appartment) or inviting a friend to sleep
in for a while ?
- would you consider having a pet ? Several noters have said
they'd "grab for the nearest cat", and I think cats and dogs
are very comforting to have around. They are great company,
even though they represent an extra responsibility which not
everybody is willing to take.
I'd really like to help but, sad to say, though being alone is definitely
worse when you wake up from the dream, not being alone will not
automatically mean that the dreams will go away (I know...).
Joana
|
594.21 | a thought | 3D::CHABOT | Let well-tuned words amaze with harmony divine | Wed Dec 16 1987 13:36 | 14 |
| "Dreams often more than waking passions move."
from a poem by Thomas Campion ~1613
(Found this when I was too restless to sleep last night.)
|
594.22 | Other suggestions | TOLKIN::JOYCE | Maryellen Joyce | Wed Dec 16 1987 14:15 | 27 |
| Currently I live alone. When I first moved into my house, I was
bothered by dreams of this type too, even though the neighborhood
did not seem to be a threatening one. It definitely seemed to be
related to living alone. But I have had them when not alone,
too. So, having someone stay over didn't always help.
For a while I would leave a light (not just a nightlight) on all
night long. Then, in my science-fiction binge reading, I read a
story where the main character talked about his nightmares as a
child. He said they went away when his father gave him a weapon
(gun) and told him to use it (in the dream) the next time he felt
threatened. Not being a gun person, I settled on a baseball bat
near the bed. I'm not sure how much help it would be if I was
really attacked, but I certainly felt better and the nightmares
stopped.
One of the other things I did at the time was think about what I
was really afraid of. My conclusion was that I *was* (am?)
afraid of being attacked because of being a single woman living
alone. I also concluded that if someone really wants to attack
*me* (as opposed to any random available victim), they will and
there's not much that I can do to stop it. But I don't have to
live in constant fear of it either. But I can reduce the
probability of being chosen as the easiest available victim and
have done things to prevent that.
Hope this helps.
|
594.23 | Bad Dreams | AKOV11::EARLS | | Wed Dec 16 1987 15:00 | 23 |
| I to have a very bad nightmare that has been with me for the past
ten years. I live alone and when I have this dream it scares the
death out of me. It goes like this...
I'm sleeping, then it is as if I wake up..I try to stand up or move
to put the light on but I'm paralyzed I can't move a muscle, and
at the sametime someone is trying to get me. The dream is so real
one time I remember walking up the stairs and banging on my neighboors
door to get help but then I woke up and was wondering if I really
did go upstairs cuz it felt so real. Then when I do wake up I try
to stay awake but I feel the dream pulling me back to sleep and
when I do fall asleep again I find myself back in the dream.
I told my girlfreind about this and she told me that is is because
I don't like to be alone. Which fits in, because 99% of the time
when I have this dream is on Sunday night and that is the only time
I'm really alone.
I don't know if this helps, but at least you know your not alone
I wish I knew what to do and why I have this dream, yet I have not
had it for a while (I hope it stays that way).
Randi
|
594.24 | | MANTIS::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Dec 16 1987 15:27 | 35 |
| When I first got divorced (eleven years ago) I worked in emergency
admissions in a local hospital. We had a little boy admitted for
burns which turned out to be a case of child abuse. I played an
active role in getting case heard before authorities and the people
involved knew that. At one point they came in with about ten people
and tried to take the child from the hospital. We had gotten a
restraining order allowing us temporary guardianship. That little
boy had third degree burns on his genitals from being held on a
hot stove and we (hospital personal) felt very strongly that we
must protect him. There were five police cars at the hospital
that night.
After that I started having some very strange nightmares.
In my dreams I was in my house in my bed in the dark ... just as
I really was... when I heard voices and noises that sounded like
someone trying to get into the house. I'd wake up in a cold sweat,
shaking. My own two little ones were very little at the time and
I feared for them too. I spent more than one night sitting in the
kitchen with the phone in my hand.
Gradually I came to terms with myself and my aloneness. In the
final analysis we are all alone. We are born alone and we die
alone. Although I too carried a knife and have always had big dogs
but thats really just my own pacifier. After awhile one must put
one's fears aside and trust in fate and whatever God you
believe in to take care of you. You can't allow fear to comprise
you, you must defeat it. We cannot allow the dark side of life
to effect our decisions, our goals, or our integrity.
Death will confront us all one day, some sooner than others.
A woman confronts death frequently during life, when having children,
when caring for our sick families, when faced with the responsibility
of little lives totally dependent on us.
We live the best we can and when death comes, we'll face it
in style_;-).
|
594.25 | Never-ending nightmare | FSLENG::HEFFERN | | Mon Dec 21 1987 00:59 | 14 |
| My worst nightmare (in terms of after-effect) is always just some
unknow terror in my home. It opens doors that I've closed. Opens
drawers, I'll close them, leave the room, return and they'll be
open again. The incidents continue until the moment when the
the "horror" is about to unveil itself, and I wake up. But I'm
not really awake, I dream I woke up, but the same things start
happening again. I'll "wake up" like this several times before
I am really awake. By the time I am really awake, I don't know
if I'm asleep and the horror will start again, or I'm really
awake. I tell you, I get so disoriented. It takes me the whole
next day to get over it.
cj (*yawn*)
|
594.26 | Black Cloud? | JUNIOR::TASSONE | The age of our cruise director, 65 | Mon Dec 21 1987 15:11 | 17 |
| re .25 That happens to me, sometimes, I mean the part about thinking
you're awake but you're only dreaming you are awake. When I am
under stress or I discover something new about myself (negative),
I have this nightmare, that I wake up (but I"m really asleep) and
I can see this black object flowing by the side of my bed, tempting
me near it, but then I pull back into myself and shake as hard as
I can so that I can "really" wake up. I say hello to God and then
off to true sleep I go.
The funny thing: I tried sleeping on my other side and I still dreamt
about the black object. That was only for 2 nights in a row two
weeks ago. Now, my dreams are weird but they don't scare me.
Cathy
p.s do you ever dream you are falling and your foot shakes or
something, and you wake up for an instant?
|
594.27 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Mon Dec 21 1987 19:11 | 6 |
| Re: .26 falling/ foot/ etc.
Yup. Does this have a physiological basis, I wonder? I seem to
recall that it has something to do with the way one's muscles/brain
go on leave during various phases of sleep.
|
594.28 | I guess I'm lucky... | WARLRD::CFLETCHER | Short Stuff | Tue Dec 22 1987 11:52 | 20 |
|
I wonder if I'm the only one who dreams this way?....
When I have a bad dream, I am aware that I'm dreaming - so then the bad
stuff isn't that bad, because the whole time I'm dreaming - I'm
saying to my self "It's just a dream, I'll wake up, and it will
be gone, so this is no big deal".
Pretty Strange?
I've only had one dream in my life that I can consider a "nightmare",
all the rest have been unpleasant, but not terrible. I had this
nightmare when I was probably about 5 or 6 years old. ( A dragon
was chasing my brother and I) I still can remember some of it.
Bye!
Corinne
|
594.29 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Dec 29 1987 02:34 | 18 |
|
Some years back, I went through a series of "bad dreams" where
I was fully aware that I was dreaming and merely *ordered* myself
to wake up (and I did wake up.) It was definitely a strange
feeling (and left me wondering for several moments whether I
had, in fact, awakened or if I was still dreaming.)
Another strange experience I've had several times is having
dreams that come equipped with memories that are specific to
the dream (i.e., they are not part of the action of the dream
itself but manifest themselves as thoughts I'm having *during*
the dream about fictional past experiences that have been
invented as *part* of the dream.)
Nowadays, my worst dreams usually involve some sort of personal
crisis or a serious problem at work.
Suzanne...
|
594.30 | It's all in a night's work | FENNEL::SLACK | | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:07 | 11 |
| Well well well, stumbled across this topic just in time. Last night
I had a very bad, scary, blood-curling, horrifying, nasty, panoramic,
technicolor, dolby sound, shocked out of my mind dream.
Kept me up half the night. I do what .4 does...re-write the script.
I liked the color, symbols and imagery so they stayed. I didn't
like the action. The plot was good so I expanded it into Nightmare
Part II. Woke up several hours later refreshed and here I am
developing other plots, other ideas, new strategies to meet tomorrow's
frontiers. This is called working.
|
594.31 | A little challenge is good for the mind. | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | An Ancient Multi-hued Dragon | Tue Jan 05 1988 01:05 | 35 |
|
I think it is time for me to explain why I started this note.
1. I did in fact have a severe nightmare - I wanted to know if
other women suffer from them and if they did how did they cope.
The worst part of the dream was the inability to convince myself
that "it could not happen to me" even after I woke.
2. We (some of the women) in this conference have wanted to discuss
life experiences that for the most part men do not experience in
the same way. We have been told - many times (espeically lately)-
that we can not, it is against the rules. (I have begun to notice
that the rules keep changing everytime we agree to them.)
3. I would like there to be a closed conference but there is not
one around so I am using this one to get what I want out of it.
4. So many of the males have stated in their intros that they are
here to learn about women? Huh! As a female student of Socrates
has been quoted "My arm my be lovey but it is not on public display."
Thankyou. If you want to learn about women first learn about your-
selves, we have no great secrets, we are not all the same. There
are as many different sides to women as there are to men.
5. Sometimes I get bored and do things to see how others react,
especially if the "others" have been particually annoying.
I am back from the Heartland and know why I stay in Massachusetts.
I also know why I stay in this conference.
_peggy
(-)
| Sometimes it is worth the effort
|
594.32 | Thanks, Peggy | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | U.S. out of North America | Tue Jan 05 1988 09:16 | 9 |
|
Peggy, I'm glad you decided to take a risk like this in order to
get more of what you needed from this conference. I think this
gesture of yours enabled a number of us to start finding each other
again.
Thank You!
Justine
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