Subconscious Storytelling

A writer’s brain is constantly telling stories. It floats off into fantasy when we pass a homeless man on the street, or when we witness a marriage proposal or when our friends get divorced. Our brains go into overdrive wondering what could have happened, what will happen, where does it go from here? We tell ourselves stories. What if?

Just because we close our eyes, doesn’t mean those stories stop. Many writers claim their dreams are their best material. In fact, I’ve heard three writers just this week talk about a dream that sparked the premise for their story and I’m amazed at how far they can take such a small detail, building an entire world around it. Maybe that’s what got my subconscious mind working.

In My Dreams

Personally, I’ve never found my own dreams very reliable. They’re often hard to follow and hard to remember and the times they stick vividly in my mind are usually the times I want to forget them.

Up until a couple of weeks ago, my conscious mind had a story to tell. It had a novel to finish and every spare moment it worked on it–building a plot, understanding the characters, filling in the blanks. What if, what if, what if? When I finished, my mind no longer had anything to consciously focus on. My novel was over and I had thoughts about a short story but nothing seemed to stick.

I think my conscious mind was lost because starting two nights ago, I have had the most detailed, vivid dreams that leave me breathless and lost in haze for hours after I wake and as I fill my writing notebook with pages of notes, I finally understand what it’s like to be inspired by my dreams.

Use Your Dreams As Fuel

For almost a week now, I’ve been writing morning pages and when I wake up feeling this way, I pour myself into them. Every detail of the dreams and every feeling I’ve felt in response to them comes out on the page and I sift through them looking for the bits I can hold onto–the ones that will stick with me and make me remember that feeling. And I think, these are the moments I feel most like a writer, with the ideas flowing so quickly and so raw.

I’ve studied dreams for a couple of years now and (though I haven’t had the energy or a full night’s sleep for almost a year) I understand the meanings of dreams and how to remember them. You don’t have to analyze your dreams to make them a part of your writing life. All you have to do is take what you need from them, what inspires you.

Remember your dreams by deciding the night before that you want to dream and you want to remember it. I know it sounds a little touch-feely but it works for me.

Keep a notebook by your bed and write down as much as you can as soon as you wake up. You fall out of the dream state so quickly once you gain consciousness. I’m sure you can remember times when you forgot the clearest dreams five minutes after you get out of bed.

Record how you felt about the dream. More than the meaning of the images or the players in the dream, how you felt about it is the most important part.

Like reading and writing, our dreams can be a powerful way to experience in our hearts things we’ll likely never experience in real life and harnessing those ideas and questions and emotions is just another way to become stronger writers.

Jamie Raintree is the author of Perfectly Undone and Midnight at the Wandering Vineyard. She is a voracious student of life, which is why she became a writer, where she could put all that acquired information to good use. She is a mother of two, a wife, a businesswoman, a nature-lover, and a wannabe yogi. She also teaches writers about business and productivity. Since the setting is always an important part of her books, she is happy to call the Rocky Mountains of Northern Colorado her home and inspiration.

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  1. Excellent post, Jamie! The blog I did last Saturday was about dreams too! Must be something in the air this week! I’m not sure if I was one of the writer’s you mention above, but I sure would be honored if you did check out my blog too!
    (we are already friends on FB and I follow your blog and have you listed as one of my “likes” on my Writer’s Page!
    Thanks!
    Sharon πŸ™‚
    http://color-me-read.blogspot.com/

    1. Hey Sharon! Indeed you are one of the people I was talking about! I have enjoyed all of your blog posts and I’m subscribed and following you as well. It’s always great to make new writing friends! We crazy kids have to stick together. πŸ˜‰

  2. Dreams are actually 99% of my inspiration. I have a very creative subconscious! They give me ideas I don’t think I could ever come up with on my own. Even the slightest thing can inspire so much story. Sometimes, even the emotion of a dream can inspire me. I love that you wrote this blog! Definitely one of my favorite subjects. (dreams in general too)

    1. I love dreams too. I think they’re a great insight into yourself, whether you like it or not! That’s why it’s a great tool for writing–you can take those innermost desires and fears and use them make your stories feel more real.

  3. “And I think, these are the moments I feel most like a writer, with the ideas flowing so quickly and raw.”

    Beautifully put, my friend. I agree with you completely. Not just about dreams, but about anything that inspires enough to push out of us and onto the page whether we will it or not. Writing in the raw is the best feeling and the reason I write at all. Sure polishing is fun, but the raw stuff…that’s where the magic happens.

  4. All of my novels started as dreams. All of them. They are nothing at all LIKE the dream when I’m done with them, but that’s where the seed begins to grow. Now I’ve even started using them as the basis of scenes, when one sticks with me. I take the strong emotions, the underlying situation, and it somehow morphs into what I need.

    But my story dreams are different from my regular dreams. It’s very strange, but they have “scenes”, and I can revisit them as I dream, sometimes going over certain scenes that are stronger. There’s a narrative, it unfolds like a story. I’ve learned to feel the difference when my subconscious hands me a story. Or, really, I don’t think that it’s giving me story ideas so much as it is letting me live a story because I love them so much.

    I’m pretty sure I sound insane now.

    1. Not crazy at all. Very lucky, in fact! I wish my brain was as cooperative! Too bad there isn’t a way to record your dreams and watch them back like a movie.

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