Thursday, December 30, 2010

The Dream Catchers







The Legend of the Dream Catcher


"A spider was quietly spinning his web
in his own space.  It was beside the sleeping
space of Nokomis, the grandmother.

Each day, Nokomis watched the spider
at work, quietly spinning away.  One day as
she was watching him, her grandson came
in.  "Nokomis-iya!" he shouted, glancing at
the spider. He stomped over to the spider,
 picked up a shoe and went to hit it.

"No-keegwa," the old lady whispered, "don't hurt him."

"Nokomis, why do you protect
the spider?" asked the little boy.
  The old lady smiled, but did not answer.

When the boy left, the spider went
to the old woman and thanked her
 for saving his life.  He said to her,
 "For many days you have watched
me spin and weave my web.  You have
admired my work.  In return for saving
my life, I will give you a gift."

He smiled his special spider smile and
moved away, spinning as he went.  Soon
the moon glistened on a magical silvery
web moving gently in the window.
  "See how I spin?" he said.  "See
and learn, for each web will snare
bad dreams.  Only good dreams will
go through the small hole.  This is my gift
to you.  Use it so that only good dreams
will be remembered.  The bad dreams will
become hopelessly entangled in the web."







 Beyond - A lullaby

Sleep well sweet child
Don't worry your head
Your Dream Catcher is humming
Above your bed

Listen so softly
I know you can hear
The tone of beyond
Close to your ear

Love is alive
And living in you
Beyond all your troubles
Where good dreams are true






Dreamcatchers:  are an authentic American
 Indian tradition, 

from the Ojibay(Chippewa) tribe. The people would tie 

sinew strands 

in a web around a small round or tear-shaped 

frame - in a somewhat similar pattern to how they
 tied webbing for Ojibway snowshoes--and 
hang this "dream-catcher" as a charm to protect 
sleeping children from nightmares. The legend is that 
the bad dreams will get caught in the web.
The Dreamcatcher allegedly helps us remember 

our dreams. It is regarded by some as a serious tool 
that is much more than a decorative ornament.



 The opening in the center determines the volume
that you are asking to receive and parallels the changes
 that will occur in your life.

Hang the dreamcatcher near the place where you sleep, 
on the wall, or perhaps from a lampshade or bedpost. 

During my recent trip to the US, I came across 
 the Dream Catcher, and my son told me the 
story behind the Dream Catcher, and I was really
fascinated by it, and I bought one. I also read 
about it in the internet, and  I also found some 
interesting videos about the philosophy of the
 native  American, and found, that it is no different
 from our own philosophy: it reinforces the universal belief
that we are all one.
Although we all know about the Native Americans,
still it feels good to go back
and refresh ourselves with their history, their struggles,
and their determination
to keep their identity intact. It shows us we may lose
everything, but nobody can
take our spirit.



Happy New Year !!

No comments:

Post a Comment