The Dreamgourd and the I Ching
The Dreamgourd and the I Ching
Like many things I write and speak about publicly, the Dreamgourd had its origin in a dream. I will devote this site to the presentation of the I Ching as a way of working with dreams and as cast by the Dreamgourd method revealed in this dream. Where this dream came from, where it is going, and its future via the Dreamgourd, will be the focus of my postings. Your contributions are most welcome.
The Dreamgourd Dream
It was clear I was to cast a hexagram from these stones by drawing two of them out of the gourd. The two stones together would form one of the sixty-four possible hexagrams of the I Ching oracle.
To determine whether each of the six lines was a fixed or changing line, I was instructed in the dream to draw out two stones in turn for each line. If I drew out two white or two black, the line was unchanging. If I drew out a black and white stone, the line was a changing line.
Even in the dream, I knew this was an unusual, perhaps unique, manner of casting the oracle. And, in the dream, I was about to cast the hexgram for this very dream.
My first effort in making the complete Dreamgourd as pictued in the dream is now finished. Below are some pictures. I am now working on a commentary on this first query of the oracle concerning the origin of the Dreamgourd.
I am sharing this dream in this form because in the dream there was a strong sense that this was a gift to be shared...a com munus, a "gifting together," a sense that people would be interested in this. Whether that is true or not, I present the opportunity for such interest to be expressed.
A Note on Casting the Dreamstones...
Dreamgourd pictures
The picture shows the results of drawing out the first two stones to form the lower and the upper trigrams. This hexagram is then recorded on the written dream. The stones are then drawn in turn to determine whether the line is a fixed or changing line. The result is recorded on the written dream. As can be seen, this first casting resulted in hexagram 51, in which the lower and upper trigrams are the same: Zhen, which means "shock" and is symbolized by thunder, in this case, thunder above and thunder below.
The changing lines bring forth the hexagram 42, Yi, meaning "profit," "benefit," "increase." The resulting hexagram is formed from the lower trigam of Zhen, "thunder," and the upper trigram Xun, "wind."