Book Description
An idiosyncratic collection of Jack Haas metaphysical poetry, transformational drawings, and esoteric insights, metaphorically conveying the souls journey through life, and subtly expressing the dream nature of all reality. Jack Haas takes the reader on a symbolic journey through the stages of inner evolution, interweaving mystical poems with unique symbolic line-drawings and potent philosophical aphorisms, in a unique blend of poetry, art, and esoterica that has no published comparison. This is a poetic dance into the substratum of our sublime selves, and into the twilight realm of the dream of being. For anyone tired of conventional poetry and prose, this will bring a rewarding breath of stimulating air.
Publisher comments
Jack Haas is one of the world's most enjoyable and inspiring contemporary writers. His life experiences united with his profound penmanship make his books a rhythmic journey into wonder and wisdom. If you mixed the writings of Bruce Chatwin in with the likes of Jack Kerouac, Henry Miller, Joseph Campbell, and Dan Brown, then tossed in some mysticism, madness, and miracles, and sprinkled the entire work with eloquent prose, you would get an amalgamation of literature pointing in the direction of Jack Haas' writing. Thick with humour, humanity, adventure, divinity, debauchery, and song, Haas' true life experiences and passionate wordplay invite us into a living vision of our own mysterious grandeur.
About the author
In 2003 Jack Haas became the first author in history to release three five-star books in a single year. Reviews of these books were done by Jim Cox, Editor-in-Chief of the Midwest Book Review, who is considered to be one of the premier book reviewers and authorities on new writing in North America.
Excerpted from The Dream of Being: Aphorisms, Ideograms, and Aislings by Jack Haas. Copyright © 2003. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
THE DREAM OF BEING
It would be despairing if you existed only as a character in another persons dream, for the other would certainly want to be awakened. And yet to awaken them would amount to your own dissolution. So you would not awaken them; you would rather exist in a dream than not exist at all. But what if this dream is a nightmare of your self? That is: would you keep them sleeping, if the dreamer dreaming your being ...was you?
We dreamt that we were dreaming, and then that we were dreaming that we were dreaming, and then that the dreamer was not the dreamer but the dream. In the end there was no dreamer, only the dream of a dreamer; a dream dreaming a dreamer. We do not dream, we are dreamt. The Dream dreams the dreamer, then the dreamer dreams, then the dream of the dreamed dreamer dreams, and so on. The dream dreams the dreamer, the dreamer does not dream the dream.
Dream on dreamer. You are but a dream-catcher. And you are caught.
LOST BEES
There are bees in every hive with inherent imperfections: they cannot navigate from the directions given by others. They fly off everywhere. They are always getting lost. They never gather much pollen. Yet, by an incongruous twist of fate, these bees can still dance directions to others. And so they occasionally return from their misguided wanderings with delirious gospel of what they have found. Good god, what they have found! It is the lost bee who finds new flowers.