“Mais, ou sont les neiges d’antan?” wrote Francois Villon in a poem about beautiful women long gone. Villon was a colorful character in France’s 15th century past who was a thief and perhaps hanged by the government. I wonder if he composed his poetry after having just awakened from a dream and maybe he wondered what had happened to the pleasant part of his past. Was he in the prison at Meung-sur -Loire when these thoughts about life raced through his mind?
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I find when I dream now, I don’t conjure up the future or nightmarish scenarios stoked by anxiety or caused by a late-night spicy snack. What comes to me as I doze, at this stage in life, are nostalgic memories. I dream of my maternal grandma chuckling at something I said while she sips tea. I dream of my mom taking us to the large white hill in the next town to zoom down on metal saucers in the snow. I dream of my dad, attired in his business suit waiting in the foyer of the department store to pick up 17-year-old me after my first day at my first summer job—a Bamburger’s clerk. Sometimes, I dream of past pets— a long parade of loving dogs and affectionate cats— never the hamsters, parakeets, or tropical fish.
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