DREAM ZINGERS
It had occurred to him on nights
like these to focus his consternation on something other than sleeplessness, as
if his frustration with passing another night without sleep had not eroded his
ability to do so. At times, he thought
of phantom heart attacks, that sick feeling in his chest which always turned
out to be heartburn or a pulled muscle or something. Medical paranoia was a
subject with which he had no little familiarity. It usually frightened him for some reason
and, with all hope of slumber lost, would usually result in a three day boycott
of bowel movements. He could not say
why. His name is profoundly pedestrian.
He is Dinsdale.
He slept alone these days, his
wife having chosen to occupy a much larger bedroom on another floor. He did not regret the new accommodation, for
he no longer shared much with his wife anyway and therefore had no interest in
pursuing some sort of renewed arrangement.
She was in menopause or so she claimed, a misfortune of which he had
heard much over the past several months.
So he could not think any further about it, having already been supplied
with enough of her observations to last a month of sleepless nights. Still, he was comfortable with calamities of
such obvious consequence and so was able, though involuntarily he thought, to
allow them into his mind and consequently to live with them. Sometimes the
situation became intolerably tiresome, an eventuality which, while it did not
afford him any sleep, provided him with the raw materials for a depression of
considerable resiliency. At least that
was something worth contemplating.
This night, he had been
lucky. He was drowsy, a state with which
he had not recently been blessed, particularly since his doctor ordered him off
sleeping tablets. Usually it was not
so. Either he slept badly or stared wide
eyed at the ceiling, listening like a guard dog for the small sounds produced
by whatever world existed at two o'clock
in the morning. When he was drowsy,
drowsy and depressed, he would look upon things with the kind of dejection and
torpor that he could easily eulogize into tragedy. He would invite remorse in himself by
reducing everything he had accomplished during the day into something spent and
worthless. At times, he would moan
aloud, quietly of
course as to not alarm his
brittle wife sleeping in a room above him.
There was the frequent temptation to cry out, to fling open the windows,
and to announce to a silent neighbourhood his discovery of despair. But he resisted and inevitably was rewarded
with the dream of sleep, which to a man facing such circumstances and such
deficiencies, was very much like the real thing.
He is in advertising, an
occupation which has, in exchange for some thirty years of inspired insomnia,
provided him with a large house, an embarrassingly high salary, and a number of
second thoughts. His success had come
early. In fact, it could be safely said that he has
accomplished very little over the past several years save the acknowledgement
of his promotions. At one time, he
demonstrated both his precociousness and his position easily. He would boast of
his conquests with all the bravado of an athlete. But now he often finds himself repudiating
his own achievement in front of others, particularly at the many parties the people
in the neighbourhood stage. Most regard
his remarks as basic self-depreciation, a conversational manoeuvre which, while
not all that rare, is barely acceptable to the climbers about him.
He is an executive tactician now
and is no longer concerned with decisions of any sort. So he feels inadequate these days, obsolete
and isolated, and seems to think that his career has miscarried somewhere
between one office and another. While
things are generally easier, he misses the struggles required by boundless
ambition, ambition he no longer has. He
now has old age to face and he finds that it is not simple to do so. He wanders about his office during the day
like an alien. He looks for projects to
absorb him but is unsuccessful much of the time. A friend tells him that he is being groomed
for an early retirement. He cannot but
believe the friend. He cannot refute
him.
He begins to dream most nights,
that is once sleep allows him to. He is
astonished at first for he has not dreamt so regularly since he was a boy. He thinks he may be approaching a nervous
breakdown, so persuasive are the rudiments of his anxiety caused by frequent
dreaming. He is not accustomed to such
wealth of vision. His dreams take on odd
shapes, they are full of faceless figures with unfamiliar names. His wife does manage to appear in a great
many of them but her face has been inexplicably altered. He still recognizes her. He wakes in the middle of the night
frequently, determined to come to a conclusion about the dreams but is unable,
any interpretation annulled by confusion.
He seems prevented from thinking clearly about anything these days. He considers psychiatry for a time but does
not pursue the thought, abashed as he is by submitting to what he thinks is a
fraud.