A Convenience Writer’s meditation question:
Dark-Room Dreams
This inconvenience writer makes clear her intentions and her preferences.
Dark-Room Dreams
I write the corrugated,
the plug,
the pulled halfway,
and a host of other similar small, but select and highly valuable,
frictions.
The purpose is disruption and emergency.
I love them both.
How to Choose a Dream
Here is an advertisement for a book that promises to help the reader learn how to choose a dream.
The Dream: How to Choose One
by a Professional Dreamer, Author of “The Dream: How to Master it,” &c.
Contents
Why One Dream Excels Another
How to Get a Good Dream Very Cheap
Reveries, a Collection of Facts and Theories
Some Plain Words about Old Dreams
Word-eaten Illusions
Training the Mind’s Eye
Power Against Nightmares
Inconvenience – How to Excise a Dream
This Inconvenience writer asserts that cutting is an easy way to spoil and/or remove a dream.
Because this is an Inconvenience, it can be inferred that it is another person’s dream that is to be ruined.
The writer asks her readers to consider their own applications (which may be context-dependent) of the word cut.
She has chosen the 1892 text, The Surgical Diseases and Injuries of the Stomach and Intestines by Frederic Bowreman, as her primary source.
How to Excise a Dream:
Cut