“What will this do?” I asked the woman in the white lab coat. She was using her applicator to spread a cool gel on the back of my calf; a shiver went up my leg from the tingling sensation of the fluid.
From the edge of the table, just out of my sight, she answered, “The nanomachines are in solution in this gel. After I finish applying it they will swim between the cells on your skin and into the tissue of your leg, where they will begin to repair the damaged nerves.”
I spend a moment there laying on my side taking this in, picturing these tiny mites waving their legs of carbon atoms, crawling across cell membranes like spiders skittering across pond water, coming at last to the fine strands of nerve fiber, whereupon they would scavenge what they needed and begin to weave new tissue, trailing the gossamer strands of new neurons behind them as they wrote new sensation into my leg. I turned to look at her over my shoulder. “And so…it’ll just work? They’ll just…fix me?”
She smiled. “Yes, it will just work,” she said, and yet didn’t say at all. As before I found that I didn’t really seem to be hearing her words so much as I knew what she was saying. Certainly her lips never moved.
I turned away from her, thinking about this. Wondering what it would be like when they were done. I could sense the doctor starting to walk out of the room, and suddenly it hit me: she’d put the salve on the wrong leg. “Wait-” I said, turning over –
–and fell some indeterminate distance, falling solidly upon my bed, face down, eyes opening with a start to focus groggily on my pillow. Oh, no.
There’s a trick I learned some years ago, one that I can’t teach, can’t explain how it works, where I can push myself back into a dream if I do so immediately after waking.
pleasepleasepleaseplease
I close my eyes again, and slide back into the peculiar floating warmth of the dream. My bed gives way to the operating table. Blankets disappear, and I’m in the hospital gown again.
you have to come back, it’s the other leg, you need to do the other one
I open my eyes again, see the doctor in her white lab coat walking from the room. “Wait!” I call out to her, in the same speechless method she used to talk to me. She stops, turns towards me. I start to tell her about how it’s the other leg that needs to be treated…
...for all the good that will do me, I realize. I already know this to be false, these walls only mist, the doctor only a shadow. The magic is gone, the sudden reappearance of the hospital room no longer a miracle now that it is revealed to only have been the result of a cleverly placed mirror this whole time. For years I’ve tried to pull things back with me into the waking world, coming out of dreams with fingers locked firmly around newspapers from my hometown, fine china teacups, hot breakfasts, bicycle wheels. I’ve yet to return to my body anything but empty handed. Surely this superscience cure of molecule-sized robots will be no different. “Nothing,” I tell her. “It doesn’t matter.”
The doctor smiles at me again, and walks out of the room, no doubt dissolving back into sand as soon as she leaves my sight.
I close my eyes, open them again. Roll over on my back. Stare up at the ceiling of my bedroom.
I wonder about my dream counterpart, if he ever gets tired of driving up and down highways along the coast, walking through ever-changing yet hauntingly familiar cities, jumping off building tops to float lazily to the ground, if he ever gets weary of never being cold or having swollen joints. Maybe he’d like to change places for a while, go sit in my chair in the office, stare blankly at a computer screen all day while I ride a tiger through the park. Maybe.
Probably not, though.
Dreams, why must you vex me so?
January 19th, 2010 on 6:02 am
When one of my kids was little, he said something about “how do you know which you is real?” Finally after tons of talk and questions, I figured out that he meant “what if your dream you is the real you and the “you” you think is real is just a dream”. Since he was little I didn’t worry about it, but ever since he said that I have been thinking how interesting it would be if that were true.
January 19th, 2010 on 7:35 am
The one of me that is real is the one that has to write out a check for rent every month. The dream me lives a pretty charmed life.
Even for that, though, I can get the two mixed up sometimes.
January 19th, 2010 on 7:57 am
I rarely remember my dreams. I wish I did.
Riding a tiger sounds WAY more cool than our office jobs.
January 19th, 2010 on 1:06 pm
Ah lucid dreaming, I know exactly what you’re talking about. I can’t always get back into my dream once I’ve woken, but when I do, it is rare that I can let it unfold without feeling like I’m directing it.
How ’bout we trade dreamselves? Your dream life sounds fancier than mine though mine often does have cool architecture and the occasional stray celeb.
January 19th, 2010 on 2:33 pm
This is awesome. (I would say “awesome-sauce” but my kids have vowed to kill me in my sleep if I ever say it, so now, it has to go in quotes because I want to LIVE!)
January 19th, 2010 on 9:29 pm
Dreams are designed to problematize sleep. At least, that’s how it works for me. Other people talk about sleep being restful, but I rarely — rarely — have a night that isn’t exhausting because so much weird is going down.
January 20th, 2010 on 12:35 am
At least you don’t die in your dreams, or you haven’t told me if you do.
I die, a lot. I wonder what that says about my psyche.
January 20th, 2010 on 2:26 am
Hey V, I – for one – am always glad to know you’re still around. Me too for that matter. )
Keep dreaming.
January 20th, 2010 on 9:19 pm
Have I mentioned how much I enjoy your writing? Because I totally do.
Oh, and for the last two nights I totally dreampt about bungee jumping. With John Locke.
January 20th, 2010 on 11:53 pm
sizzle, I’ll take riding a tiger over going to the office any day of the week.
claire, maybe we can have a dream meet-up!
shari, you can say awesomesauce around me as often as you want, I find it endearing.
dana, I duke it out with sleep almost every night — it’s often a Pyrrhic victory even when I do win.
sarah, not yet, but only because I can breathe underwater in my dreams.
michelle, I’m still alive and kicking!
kerri, I am so out of the loop with pop culture I thought you meant the English philosopher until I looked up who you were probably talking about. (Also: thank you!)
January 21st, 2010 on 5:52 am
Oh I hate waking up from a good dream, and not being able to find the magic in it again. It sucks.
January 21st, 2010 on 8:23 pm
Oh man, I was thinking the philosopher too, & now feel like I should look it up but am going to let it go.
Anyway, YES! A dream meet-up free of logistical issues would be lovely. See you there! Well, inasmuch as such things can be arranged consciously. How ’bout a safari walk with tigers, African plains, waterfalls, lions, & some polar bears? With a nice icy lake for the bears, perhaps a glacier or two that keeps them cool but feels nice to us.
January 21st, 2010 on 8:44 pm
You’re such a good storyteller, Vahid. And you need to stop smoking crack before bed.
January 21st, 2010 on 9:22 pm
I have that same superpower (going back into the dream and it is fifty shades of fantastic.
Loved this.
February 11th, 2010 on 12:47 am
I just followed you over from Angella’s blog and I have to say that this was awesome. I also have the ability to go back into a dream if I try hard enough. It’s never quite the same when I get back into it, but it’s usually still worth going.
April 2nd, 2010 on 11:11 am
I love this! You have a beautiful mind. And that’s not a come-on.