Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Borrowing Trouble From the Future (Again)


Jean didn’t plan on writing about dreams, grief, or the strange places the mind wanders at night. But then she woke up crying—something she hadn’t done in months—and the moment insisted on being examined. She’d cried at the doctor’s office the day before, too, which was even more unusual. Jean is not a woman who cries easily, not even when life has handed her the kind of losses that would buckle most people. But something about that dream, and the day that came before it, tugged at her in a way she couldn’t ignore. So she followed the thread, the way she always does, to see where it led…. AI

I woke up crying. And yesterday I cried at the doctor’s office. What’s going on with me? Waking up with tears in my eyes from a dream has happened before, but crying at a doctor’s office? That hasn't happened since 1968 when a doctor lectured twenty-six year old me about the evils of having premarital sex. And trust me, I’ve had plenty of reasons to turn on the waterworks when doctors delivered bad news about my husband. I didn’t even cry after I had to make the decision to pull the plug on his life support, and ten minutes later he died. I saved those tears for when I got home.

The dream-tears that woke me featured my mom hanging clothes on the line at our family cottage, my dad tinkering with something nearby, and my husband driving his yellow Chevy Cutlass convertible. I was walking home from a sleep lab in a far off city and I woke up when Don pulled up alongside me and said, “Why didn’t you call? I would have picked you up.” Since I’ve been using my BiPAP machine, I haven’t remembered many dreams, but this one was an exception. I can’t wait for my follow-up appointment with the sleep doctor to ask if not recalling dreams is normal when getting treated for Central Sleep Apnea.

I used to keep a dream journal and spent time analyzing my dreams each morning. The long walk from a sleep lab wasn’t hard to figure out. I had my first appointment with the sleep doctor last December, and it took until a month ago to finally get a BiPAP machine because his final diagnosis didn't come until after he'd sent me to three additional specialists plus an overnight stay at the sleep lab. Getting all those appointments scheduled took time. I had to see an ears, nose and throat doctor, a gastroenterologist, a urogynecologist, the sleep lab technician and last but not least, I had to go in for an out patient surgery plus go to the durable medical supplies place to get fitted for a mask. 

My mom hanging clothes in my dream was no doubt symbolic of airing my “dirty laundry” at the doctor’s office—the thing that made me cry. I had asked my primary doctor’s Nurse Practitioner if I was a candidate for one of the new weight-loss drugs on the market, and she listened—actually listened—to my history with weight gain. Unlike my primary, who told me several months ago to “just move more.” She said severe sleep apnea is one of the qualifying factors for the weight-loss shots. She ordered a bunch of blood work and will submit the request for Medicare approval. (Fingers crossed.) I’m not sure how long that will take, but that’s what made me cry. Not the full-blown ugly cry of a toddler whose candy was snatched by the family dog, but she could tell I was trying to hold back tears. I would have managed it, too, if she hadn’t turned around as she was leaving to ask, “Do you need a hug?” I thanked her for listening while wiping tears from my cheeks.

When Don drove up alongside me in the dream—now that has a scary interpretation. Was it a death wish? Just hop in the car and go to the Great Unknown? Or a comforting thought that I won’t be alone when I do die? In the back of my mind, the predictions on the insurance actuarial table still weigh heavy: that my time in Independent Living will be up by October, when I’ll be moved to Assisted Living. Being a two-person lift in a place like that would be fertile inspiration for a horror movie plot. And that thought is what my mother used to call “borrowing trouble from the future.” I may not have mastered putting on compression stockings, but I am a master at borrowing trouble and trying to prevent it from happening. She may have called it borrowing trouble but I call it long-range planning. Tomato, tomatoes.

According to the online Dream Dictionary, “Dreaming of the dead can be both rewarding and terrifying depending on the context of the dream. There seems to be a fine line between actual contact or repressed memories or emotions that have come back to pay you a visit...” Are they coming for me? That was my first question. My second thought was that my dream was expressing my anxiety over running out of quality time. (Most likely the best explanation.) But my third thought—the Little Miss Mary Sunshine version—put a smile on my face: If I had hopped in Don's convertible, I would have been able to tell Mom that I finally learned to enjoy tea as much as she did. I probably wouldn’t tell her I make it the English way, with cream in the cup before pouring in the properly steeped tea. She drank it straight.

Our brains, especially during sleep, are mysterious places. They spin stories vivid enough to feel like time travel, dredge up fragmented memories we thought were long settled, and nudge us toward truths we’ve been avoiding. They can scare us or thrill us to deatha figure of speech. And maybe that’s the real purpose of a dreams like this one: they are a reminder that even in the strangest corners of the mind, something is still trying to move us forward. ©

See you next Wednesday! 

If you have fifteen minutes for something upbeat, inspiring and fun, watch this video of Kermit the Frog at the University of Maryland giving their commencement speech. Several Fox News reporters were bashing it but Facebook was showing this video along with Trump's commencement speech video at West Point where he talked about getting bored with trophy wives and owning big yachts. Kermit's speech ended with the entire audience singing the Rainbow Connection.


29 comments:

  1. Can you say more about the move from Independent to Assisted? Did you mean it's a required move after a period of time, even if not needed or was that the chart estimation? Some cc dreams I want to hold on a bit longer are usually with my husband or him and other family I've lost, my mom in particular. I choose to just think of them as comfort, not a message, more based in merged memories with recent daytime thoughts.

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    1. There is no firm rule about moving from Independent Living to Assisted Living. The Litmus Test for that is if 'you become a danger to yourself or others' and even then if you can afford to bring in outside help to assist you where you're at you don't need to move. An example is a woman living here who was falling just about once a week, never getting hurt but causing the fire department and ambulance to be called each time. Management leaned on to make the move for months before she did. I can't remember her medical diagnosis that was causing it but now she's confined to a wheelchair and she's really happy living in assisted living. She comes over to our building for some of the lectures.

      What I was writing about is a prediction from an insurance actuarial table that all CCC's secretly run on people before accepting you in, to predict how long you'll live, how healthy you'll be vs if you have enough money to last until you die to pay their fees in a CCC. A substitute sales girl showed me mine which she wasn't suppose to do. Actuarial tables have been used for decades decades when they sell you life insurance or mortgages and now continuum care and as you know, insurance companies rarely loss money. They are good at predicting....

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  2. I don't believe there is some hidden meaning to dreams. Just old memories or thoughts in your brain triggered by who knows what. Sometimes I remember my dreams and sometimes I do not. I just live each day as best I can and look for the good things in life. It's okay to feel sad some days and happy some days. People of every age do that. Worrying too much about the future only ruins the present. Hope you have many, many happy days ahead, Jean.

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    1. Thank you. Since I got my BiPAP I don't dread the nights anymore and fighting to go to sleep or get up in the mornings. Life is so much better.

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  3. I don't know much about dreams. I can't usually remember mine -- maybe a snippet here and there but not the thread of it. And I've never had one that felt predictive. But in any event, I hope you are not in assisted living anytime soon. AND that your doc can get you on the GLP drug, especially if they think that could help.

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    1. I don't know if the primary doctor and override his Nurse Practitioner or not. He was not willing to give me the drug in December but that was before I was diagnosed with severe sleep apnea. Still waiting to hear.

      I managed to get my compression socks on today and that will help keep me living in Independent Living if I start wearing them like I'm supposed to be. I broke a nail and swore a few times but I did it!

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  4. Your husband won't be ready to get you before you're ready to join him. So, I wouldn't worry about that being a prediction of imminent death. Maybe just a quick visit?

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    1. You're right, of course. But I do dream about him quite often. Or a least I did before I got the BiPAP machine. Usually, he's lost and I'm trying to find him.

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  5. I used to remember my dreams, and had some really upsetting ones, but since my stroke I don't remember them at all now. I kind of miss them, but since I never had happy ones, I'm fine with not remembering them now. I sleep well and that is so important I don't want to mess it up.

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    1. Mine are usually curious but rarely scary. That's interesting that your stroke effected your ability to remember your dreams. They say we all dream but we all don't remember them.

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  6. I don't often remember dreams but when I do it is because they are ominious. So I don't know if that is a good thing.
    I think your husband was just keeping an eye on you and checking in. I am glad you found a medical person to listen to you.

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    1. That's a nice thought about my husband. In life he really did always look out for me.

      I've had better luck getting into see Nurse Practitioners and I get more information from them. Most are women and I think that matters too.

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  7. Waking up crying is rare for me, but I remember doing it after my sister died. Once a friend in my dream told me they saw her around the corner and I rushed to find her and she wasn't there. As for fighting tears, I find myself doing that more as I age. Things just make me feel more emotional, I guess. Harder things happening in the world, with aging family and friends, etc. I'm glad you have a female NP, as I often find they are more empathetic to women's issues.

    Also, compresion socks are a bugger to get on. I need them for long drives, any airplane trips, and especially in humid summer weather. Ugh. But I have one ankle that has been swollen in hot weather since I had my son many decades ago, and it's gotten worse with age. Ah, the joys...

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    1. Age does make us feel more emotional not to mention we face more serious issues as we age.

      I got my compression socks on fairly easy today using a plastic bag the NP told me about. I may have to write about it.

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  8. I hope you can stay in your apartment for a long, long time!

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  9. Dreams can hold many hidden Meanings. I highly suspect, given what you said about yours, that they were Good Tears shed, not Bad ones. I don't like Premonition kinds, those can be unsettling, but I've had some odd yet fond ones too which I can't attach any relevant meanings to, but, were nice to Dream about.

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    1. most of my dreams are interesting and don't bother me one way or another. But this one came on the heels of a very busy day and week and I think that factored into how action packed this dream was.

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  10. My Pollyanna personality only remembers the warm and wonderful dreams. I love your phrase "Little Miss Mary Sunshine". You have had such good luck with having dreams, writing them down and analyzing. Do you do Tarot cards?

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    1. No to Tarrot cards. That is too hocus pocus for me. But it isn't luck, remembering and writing down dreams. In the '80s I read a book about how to to do it and it takes practice and precise steps over several months to recall more and more of your dreams.

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  11. I don't think I have ever woken up crying.. I have cried in doctors offices' though and a few other places I would not have before. After my son's illness I had all those pent up tears popping out here and there.. everywhere except for in front of him. It's good to finally find someone who listens to us. Hope you get the approval for the drug.

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    1. It's embarrassing to cry at doctor's offices but it's probably far more common than we think. We hold ourselves together and strong when we really need to and let go in what we perceive is a safe space.

      The doctor sent in the order for the drug but I have not heard yet from the pharmacy if insurance covers it. I have good insurance so I'm still hopeful.

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  12. I do remember waking up feeling out of breath or something but never remember the dreams.

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    1. Not remembering them is more common than remembering them.

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  13. Holy Moses! or whatever. Not only have you managed to get through to my site, I had an email notification of this post in my inbox this morning. Perhaps all the internet gremlins are being chased away!

    I've never been one for dream interpretation, but it is clear that things that have been on my mind during the day sometimes show up in dreams, with the details modified, but the connection often quite clear. My favorite dream experience is waking from one, then going back to sleep and picking up right where I left off. I often can't find a right title, a right word, or a good phrase while trying to write at night, but wake in the morning with it as clear as if I'd spent all night puzzling. I call it my mind "working the night shift."

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    1. I have the same experience with "working the night shift." in fact there is a theory that you can ask yourself to find a solution for whatever you are having an issue with just before you fall asleep and the next morning it will be clear in the morning what you need to do next.

      The notice email that I have posted in not gremins. I have the free service and they only allow so many emails to go out per mouth. I used my points up with the A to Z blogs and had to wait until my account got a new batch of points on the anniversary of my joining. It's still screwed up and won't be working right again until June. For that reason, I won't be taking part in the Challenge again.

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    2. Oh. Got it! You had mentioned this before, but it somehow didn't compute. I'll make it a point to come looking (when I remember!)

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    3. I think I figured out who to get comments through to your blog as well. If I use the Facebook sign in it works. However I don't like it as well because my real name appears. I do read all your lovely essays though.

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  14. Yay! I'm getting notifications of your posts again. I hadn't realized they had stopped (again...grrr) until I got the email notification this morning. I hope that you do get approval to try a GLP-1, Jean. I have been on one since August and I am finally losing the post-menopausal weight (20 lbs so far) and have gained some of my energy back. And I have recently joined a gym and hired a personal trainer to teach me how to build strength - who am I? 🤣 The one who said she would never go back to a gym, that's who. Never say never and it's never too late to try something new. Like you, I'd like to push off Assisted Living for as long as possible. I saw a meme the other day that said "Resistance training is cheaper than Assisted Living". And much better for our self-esteem, I'd wager.

    Deb

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    1. I love that meme. That's really a great way to look at it.

      I got a message from my doctor a week ago that she was going to send in the order for the GLP-1 but I haven't heard from the pharmacy yet. I'm assuming the holiday weekend in there is the reason, but I'm still holding my breath. She did say it works better if you do strength training with it. So I will try.

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