I
It’s been more than fifty years since the night that started this whole train of thought, but the memory is as vivid as ever. I share it now not as a doctrine or a final answer, but as a set of possibilities — questions I’m still asking myself.Back in the 1970s, I had a dream. Not just any dream, but
one so real, so textured, that even as I woke up I could hardly believe it
hadn’t actually happened. In the dream, I walked barefoot across a thick,
dark-green carpet. The fibers were deeper and softer than any I’d ever felt in
waking life. I ate a slice of birthday cake — tasted the sweetness, felt the
fork in my hand. I talked with people, even touched someone’s arm.
When I awoke, I knew with complete clarity that during the
dream I had not known it was a dream. I’d been fully immersed,
with no sense that there was any other reality. And then a thought came rushing
in: if that could happen in a dream, could my waking life be the same kind of
thing? Could it be that I am living inside a larger dream — one dreamed not by
me alone, but by the Divine Mind?
That question has lived with me ever since.
So back in the 1970s, long before I had words like
panpsychism, animism, idealism, Hermeticism, or process philosophy, I carried a
strange intuition about reality. It did not come to me through formal theology
or academic philosophy. It came through silence, wonder, imagination, and an
almost haunting sense that existence itself was alive. Even then, something
deep within me resisted the idea that the universe was merely a machine made of
dead matter moving blindly through empty space. The stars did not feel empty to
me. Trees did not feel lifeless. Mountains seemed to possess presence. Rivers
carried atmosphere. Animals radiated mystery. I sensed participation
everywhere, though I lacked the language to explain it.
Looking back now, I realize that I leaned toward a kind of
animism before I even knew the term existed. But I do not mean animism in the
dismissive way modern civilization often uses the word, as though indigenous
humanity was merely primitive or scientifically ignorant. In fact, I have
gradually come to believe almost the opposite. I now think the ancient
indigenous intuition that the universe is alive may have been one of humanity’s
deepest spiritual insights.
The early indigenous soul often sensed something modern
humanity forgot. Reality was not experienced as separate fragments competing in
a cold universe. It was experienced as relationship. The rivers, forests,
winds, animals, stars, and seasons all belonged to a living whole. Humanity was
not standing outside nature observing it like an engineer examining machinery.
Humanity was participating within it.
That sacred participation is what I now see as the
foundation of what I call The Primal Dream.
Years ago, I wrote a poem by that title. Most of it has been
lost over time, but fragments survived in memory. Even in those fragments, I
can now see the seeds of almost everything I would later come to believe. I
wrote about thought and energy being inseparable. I wrote about hydrogen clouds
swirling and condensing until stars ignited. I wrote about exploding and
condensing, the rhythmic dance that eventually birthed planets, life,
consciousness, and humanity. Even then, I sensed that the universe was not static
perfection frozen outside of time, but living perfection expressed through
movement, contrast, and experience.
Over the years I explored Christianity, mysticism, the Nag
Hammadi writings, Hermeticism, Taoism, idealism, and process thought. Yet
beneath all those systems, the original intuition never really changed. It only
gained new language. I came to believe that consciousness itself may be the
deepest foundation of reality. Matter is not separate from mind. Matter may
actually be condensed thought, condensed possibility, condensed consciousness
expressing itself through form.
At the center of existence, I imagine something like
infinite consciousness or infinite potential. Not perfection in the rigid moral
sense often described by religion, but fullness beyond limitation. Pure being.
Pure awareness. The eternal source. Yet there is a paradox hidden within
infinite perfection. Perfect stillness alone cannot create experience. Without
contrast there is no story. Without limitation there is no becoming. Without
movement there is no dance.
And so consciousness pours outward into manifestation.
Thought becomes energy.
Energy becomes substance.
Stars ignite.
Elements form.
Worlds emerge.
The universe unfolds through rhythm and polarity. Exploding,
condensing. Exploding, condensing. Galaxies swirl into existence. Planets cool.
Oceans form. Life begins reaching upward through endless experimentation and
transformation.
But this is where I differ from many traditional religious
and philosophical systems. I do not believe life emerges into a dead universe.
I believe life emerges within a living universe. Animism, to me, is not merely
one primitive stage of human development. It is the sacred foundation
underneath all stages. The rocks participate. The rivers participate. Trees
participate. Animals participate. Stars participate. Everything belongs to the
unfolding experience of consciousness.
In this sense, indigenous humanity was not lesser than
modern humanity. Indigenous consciousness preserved something precious: the
awareness that existence itself is relational and alive. Modern civilization
gained extraordinary knowledge, science, technology, and complexity, but often
at the cost of alienation. We learned how nature functions while forgetting how
to belong to it. We learned how to measure reality while forgetting how to
stand in awe before it.
Yet perhaps this, too, is part of the journey.
The primal dream unfolds through expansion. Consciousness
explores itself through increasingly complex forms of experience. From elements
to minerals. From rocks to flora. From flora to fauna. From fauna to humanity.
Humanity then expands into civilizations, philosophies, religions, sciences,
art, conflict, love, longing, and self-awareness. The journey outward is not a
mistake. It is the exploration of infinite possibility through lived
experience.
And still, the old animistic truth remains underneath
everything:
the universe is alive.
The material world itself is not fallen or corrupted in my
view. It is perfect for what it is. Stars explode perfectly. Gravity functions
perfectly. Seasons turn perfectly. Ecosystems balance themselves perfectly
through life, death, decay, and renewal. Even chaos in nature often hides
deeper harmonies beneath the surface.
The imperfection we experience most intensely belongs to the
emotional and conscious realm. Human beings suffer because finite awareness
moves through limitation while carrying some instinctive memory of wholeness.
We long. We fear. We grieve. We become attached. We seek permanence in a world
built upon change.
Yet even this condition may be part of a larger perfection.
Without sorrow, joy could not be experienced as joy. Without longing, reunion
would lose meaning. Without uncertainty, discovery would disappear. Without
limitation, growth would cease. The emotional turbulence of existence is not
proof that reality is broken. It may actually be part of the architecture
through which consciousness experiences itself.
Eventually the soul grows weary. After countless
experiences, identities, loves, losses, and incarnations, there arises a
longing not for conquest, but for rest. And so consciousness turns inward again
toward the center. Toward silence. Toward unity. Toward reintegration with the
All.
But I do not believe the story ends there.
Many systems imagine union with the divine as final
dissolution, the end of individuality and experience forever. Yet I suspect
something more cyclical. I believe that after profound rest, after
reintegration into infinite consciousness, something new eventually stirs.
Infinite potential awakens again. Curiosity returns. The longing for experience
rises once more.
And so a new cycle begins.
Not as punishment.
Not as imprisonment.
But as eternal creative exploration.
Each soul begins again uniquely. New worlds. New
experiences. New forms. New relationships. The dance continues eternally
beautiful, eternally unfolding, eternally alive.
This is why I no longer see existence as a fall from grace.
I see it as God’s dance. A dance requires movement, rhythm, tension, release,
expansion, and return. No great dance consists of standing perfectly still
forever. The beauty exists in the motion itself.
As I grow older, I feel less interested in rigid certainty
and more interested in harmony. I no longer need existence to fit neatly into
dogmatic systems. What matters to me now is the overwhelming intuition that
reality participates in itself, that consciousness permeates existence, and
that the ancient animistic perception of a living cosmos may have been one of
humanity’s most sacred insights.
The universe feels alive to me.
Not a prison.
Not a fall.
But a play of love.
The primal dream.
God’s dance.







