Dream: Dance of the Arrows
I'm standing alone in the
center of a wide, barren plain that stretches to the horizon in every
direction. The sky is clear, and sits like a hemispheric blue cap over the
plain. I look at the horizon, follow it around. It is featureless... but wait:
there is a solitary figure, a speck on the horizon. That figure and I are the
only visual interruptions of the universe bounded by earth and sky. I'm
invigorated by the feeling of spaciousness, but recognize that I must be
watchful. Sure enough: the figure on the horizon is an archer. He draws a
powerful bow. Alarm, my warrior's antennae say. The archer shoots an arrow
into the sky. The arrow's trajectory says that it is perfectly aimed at me. The
arrow disappears from sight, but I must track its flight. I do so by moving my
head as though my initial observations had actually programmed the arrow's
trajectory into my nervous system. I track the arrow forward, from the point
where it disappears in the sky until it reappears, a deadly dot in the blue,
now on its way down to kill me. I jump around. I try to dodge it. But it never
wavers: no matter how I move, I feel the tingle of its anticipated penetration
just below my navel. The arrow swoops toward me, visually accelerating in the
way I've seen machine-gun tracers appear to speed up as they come nearer, after
having seemed to be moving quite slowly toward me as I observed them from a
distance; or the way the ground swoops up toward a parachutist during the last
seconds of fall. Just before the arrow hits me, I make one final, quick
sidestep. The arrow's feathers brush my belly; it thunks into the earth. Alarm.
I look up. Comes another. Again I am able to dodge it only at the last instant.
Again the feathers brush my abdomen. Again the arrow stabs the ground at my
feet. There is an infinite succession of them. I have figured out that the
arrows, while seeming to remain perfectly aimed at my center, never waver in
flight, no matter how I jump and dodge. This, I learn, is because the arrow
simply knows where I will be when it arrives three and a half feet off the
ground, and is aimed there. So my jumping about as the arrow descends is
irrelevant. I learn that, with each shot, I am given one, and only one, chance
to save my life. This is what Japanese martial artists call suki, or
"opening": that tiny window in time - often far less than a second -
when an opponent's attention is interrupted or distracted, when only an
instinctive, forceful, and unhesitatingly intentional motion will be quick
enough and sure enough to enter the opening. So I must watch each arrow as it
leaps out of the sky to kill me, and I must wait. I must let it come. As the
arrows continue to come and I tire from exertion and fear, I must force myself
to relax so that in dodging one arrow I don't overexert and fail to recover in
time for the next. Each time, I must wait, closing out the fear that tries like
a pack of howling dogs to crowd my mind, to panic me. I must wait until the
steel of the broadhead is about to puncture my belly. Then I must perfectly -
without protest, without excuses, without appeal to fairness or justice,
without asking for help -execute the one quick movement I'm allowed for dodging
that arrow. Then I must forget that arrow, allowing no thought of relief or
victory or pride in accomplishment, and be ready for the next. The arrows come
in a perfect rhythm. So my sidesteps adopt the same rhythm, thereby becoming,
of necessity, a dance. I'm never released from the mortal urgency of the
situation, but it begins to strike me as funny. At the end of the dream, I'm
still dodging the arrows, which never relent in accuracy or intention. But I'm
laughing, as at something in a Chaplin movie, funny but urgent, as I dance my
dance of survival.
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