As we trekked up the river, we soon came to a fork, where a narrower river on our left and a wider one on our right flowed together. Neither of us was sure which of the rivers we should follow to reach our destination, though I was leaning more towards the one on the left. I woke up before we had made a decision.
In the afternoon, I started reading Why Beauty Is Truth by Ian Stewart -- one of my two books with blue morpho butterflies on the cover -- but before opening it up, I had a strange hunch. In The 7 Secrets of Synchronicity by Trish and Rob MacGregor -- the other blue morpho book -- there had been a section on stichomancy, which means divination by opening a book (typically either Virgil or the Bible) at random. I decided that before starting Stewart's book, I would ask what I could expect to find in it and then get a truly-random Bible verse to answer that question. The Truly Random Bible Verse Generator gave me this:
And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat (Gen. 1:29).
This is God speaking to Adam and Eve, explaining that there will be plenty for them to eat in the Garden of Eden.
I opened up the Stewart book and read the preface, which was about Évariste Galois and had no relevance to the Bible verse. Then I finished the preface and came to page 1 of the book proper. Here are the opening sentences:
Across the region that today we call Iraq run two of the most famous rivers in the world, and the remarkable civilizations that arose there owed their existence to those rivers. Rising in the mountains of eastern Turkey, the rivers traverse hundreds of miles of fertile plains, and merge into a single waterway whose mouth opens into the Persian Gulf.
That very specific reference to the confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates reminded me of my dream, which had also had two rivers merging into a single waterway. The rivers in my dream could not have been those rivers, since the Euphrates (on the left) would have been wider than the Tigris (on the right), but it was nevertheless a sync. Then I read this in the second paragraph:
The rivers brought water to the plains, and the water made the plains fertile. Abundant plant life attracted herds of sheep and deer, which in turn attracted predators, among them human hunters. The plains of Mesopotamia were a Garden of Eden for hunter-gatherers, a magnet for nomadic tribes.
Right there on the first page, Stewart refers to "a Garden of Eden" and clearly means by that expression a place where there is plenty of food because of the "abundant plant life" -- a stichomantic bull's-eye.
5 comments:
The 'excommunicated' reference is really interesting in the context of the dream and then your stichomancy journey. Seems to me to also tie to Humpty Dumpty's "Fall".
Out of curiosity, have you actually been "basically excommunicated" from Mormonism or was that only true in the dream?
I haven’t been excommunicated or received any other disciplinary action. I tried to have my name removed back in 2002 but never received any confirmation that it had been, so I’m not sure if I’m still technically a member or not.
I would guess the excommunication reference doesn't have anything to do with Mormonism.
In the literal meaning of the dream, it did refer to Mormonism. I was saying that my ambiguous membership status made me ineligible to participate in a baptism.
Symbolically, it likely meant something else. Excommunication literally means exclusion from the Communion of the Lord’s Supper. By following a river until it parted into the Tigris and the Euphrates, I was symbolically leaving Eden and losing access to the Tree of Life, whose fruit, like the emblems of the sacrament, represents Christ.
In the Bible, the river flows out of Eden and divides into the Tigris, te Euphrates, and two other rivers. In the dream, the direction of the flow was reversed, bringing to mind the symbolism in Euripides of the sacred rivers flowing uphill, or Lehi’s language about a river flowing into the fountain of all righteousness.
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