I had a dream today. . .

February 10, 2026 • 9:55 am

No, I’m not Martin Luther King, Jr., but I did fall asleep at my desk an hour ago because of my raging insomnia.  I did sleep well, however, for I had a very vivid dream, and dreams occur only during deep, restful sleep. This was a weird one, and though I’m not a Freudian who interprets dreams, I have no idea why my neurons created this scenario:

I was in a restaurant with tables and partitions between them, and at the partition by the next table was George Harrison with a guitar, singing “Blackbird.” That in itself was weird because that song is solely a Paul McCartney song, written and sung by him alone. But Paul McCartney himself was also there, standing right next to me at a partition with his arm around my waist. As Harrison got to the last line, “You were only waiting for this moment to arise,” McCartney leaned over and gave me a big wet kiss on the cheek. Then I woke up.

Before I fell asleep, I was dispirited at the state of America, and of my friends, all of which depresses me. Between our crazy President doing one stupid thing or another, and my Facebook page having all my friends saying constantly how bad Trump (and ICE) is, I cannot get away from American politics and its divisiveness.

Why do I keep looking, you ask? I will give Mencken’s quote from his great 1949 collection, Chrestomathy (everyone should have this book):

Q: If you find so much that is unworthy of reverence in the United States, then why do you live here?
A: Why do men go to zoos?

Here’s Macca singing “Blackbird”; this, at least cheers me up (the last line of the song here differs from that above):

15 thoughts on “I had a dream today. . .

  1. Were you recently listening to, or thinking about those members of the Beatles? That of course can trigger what goes into a dream.

  2. There seem to be some human mental biases at play. Biased Attention – paying more attention to immediate risks/bad things, and Biased Memory where memories of past risks/bad things fade more swiftly than good things.

    As a consequence people become concerned that The End Of The World, or The End Of Democracy, are happening in their generation, right now. Therefore Trump, or Biden, Covid, China, Climate Change, or just about any -ism problems appear to be brand new problems.

    And brand new problems seem much more worrying than the old stuff we used to worry about.

  3. This sounds like a very uplifting dream to me. I might awaken with a sense of- everything is alright. A sense of reassurance? I would like to have such a feeling as I am still mired in grief and anger.

    1. Emily, that worries me. I humbly suggest reflecting that nothing President Trump or the ayatollahs do actually affects you personally. Your only lever to affect the system is the one you pull in the voting booth on Election Day, which I assume you did. You’ve done your bit. The Executive has no obligation to listen to the voters after that, and so it doesn’t. And the only foreigner that powerful foreigners listen to is the President of the United States, not you. The influence of the individual citizen on world affairs is meant to be tiny, and it is.

      The National Lampoon back in 1971 wrote (in Radio Dinner I think) a satire of “Desiderata” that started,

      Go placidly amid the noise and waste, and take what comfort there may be in owning a piece thereof.

      Please get off social media if you are mired in grief and anger. Really. Unless your family is falling apart, none of that matters.

  4. I don’t have problems with insomnia, but I too am near the end of my rope with the divisiveness, hatred, and tribalism of today. I accept the proposition that things are objectively much better today than 150 years ago, but our trajectory today is decidedly downward. irreversibly? I think so. I am increasingly glad that I will be dead soon. No loss at all, in the wider sense. Wouldn’t even make a ripple. But I’ve had enough.

  5. “As Harrison got to the last line, “You were only waiting for this moment to arise,” McCartney leaned over and gave me a big wet kiss on the cheek. Then I woke up.”

    I guess he wanted to get you into his life 😉

  6. Mencken probably thought his comment was clever, but it isn’t applicable. No one who goes to a zoo is planning on staying there and living with the zoo inhabitants.

  7. Depressing times indeed. There doesn’t seem to be an escape from the decline of our civilization (The West).
    I love the Beatles but have still to have them feature in a dream.
    My musical “pick me up”, though, is a bombastic piece by Muse. It’s aptly titled “Survival”. This is, unarguably, the best live musical performance on YouTube.

    For those interested, it’s titled: “Muse – Survival Live at Rome Olympic Stadium”.

  8. My guess is that your dream relates to yesterday’s post about the TAMI show. Reading through the list of artists, the Beatles are notable for their absence. I suspect you had some conscious or unconscious cognitions about the Beatles that formed the basis of the dream, which is itself meaningless.

    1. Good call!… VERY good call, wow!

      🎼🎶🍿

      (That’s a nod to James Brown’s Mother Popcorn – also not on the list).

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