Have Fun Falling Posts

My First Trip to Mongolia


In this short story about intuition, synchronicity, and dreaming—excerpted from my current work-in-progress—I share two entirely unexpected and equally unforgettable experiences of “dreaming while awake” that left me stunned, inspired, and full of questions, as well as curious about shamanism and shamanic journeying.

The story won Gold in the Travel and Transformation category of the 2020 Solas Awards.

Author Matthew Felix's story "My First Trip to Mongolia" about his experiences dreaming and with shamanism

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For many years I had wanted to attend a workshop at Esalen, a personal-development retreat center overlooking the Pacific Ocean from high atop Big Sur’s stunning cliffs. Also known for its natural hot springs, the center is surrounded by spectacular unspoilt coastline. Otters play in the kelp forests in the ocean below. Condors circle on thermals overhead. People come from all over the world to explore, question, and grow. I’d spent a weekend there on my own, but I’d never attended a workshop. When there were ones that interested me, I wasn’t free. When I was free, there weren’t ones that interested me.

Having just returned from six months overseas, it occurred to me to give Esalen another shot. I was glad I did. Not only was there a course I wanted to take, it worked with my schedule. I snagged a spot without giving it a second thought.

After registering for the first workshop, I noticed another. It started the evening of the day mine ended. I had no trouble justifying the expense of the first course, since it tackled major life questions with which I was already grappling. The second seemed like more of an indulgence. It was about dreams. And, rather than a weekend, it lasted an entire week.

Should I really spend that much time and money on my dreams?

I’ve always had a very active dream life. There was a period where I frequently needed an hour or more to write down dreams from the night before. I once woke up and recorded fourteen of them. I even went through a beguiling period during which, while meditating, I regularly had—for lack of a better way of putting it—visions. I came to think of the experiences as “dreaming while awake.” After six months, maybe a year, finding the visions curious but unsure what purpose they served, I returned to my traditional meditation practice.

Presently, my dreams weren’t something I was giving much thought to exploring further, beyond mustering the discipline to write them down each morning. And yet I couldn’t pull myself away from the dream workshop description. It went well beyond dreaming as I knew it. So much so, in fact, that parts of what I read seemed far-fetched. Spirit guides. Power animals. Revisiting the past and peering into the future. Adventures in the multiverse.

I was intrigued. I was skeptical.

I clicked on an interview with the workshop leader.

I’m not sure what I expected; but, it wasn’t the man in the video. Where was the calm, enlightened demeanor of a guru? The flowing robe? The crystals, candles, and feathers? Had I clicked on the wrong link?

In his 60s, the man was conservatively dressed, with silver hair and a peculiar accent. He was a shaman, someone indigenous cultures believe communicate with the spirit world to facilitate healing and practice divination; but he looked like a proper British gentleman. His manner of speaking, on the other hand, sounded more—but not exactly—Australian. He talked fast, with a confident smile and self-assured authority. He seemed surprisingly rational, his answers making perfect sense—even when asserting claims that, coming from most anyone else, might have sounded nonsensical.

My rational mind resisted. My gut insisted.

The gut has all the answers.

I signed up for the workshop.

 

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The course at Esalen had barely gotten underway. About forty of us, men and women from their twenties to seventies, were gathered in a big white tent. We sat in a circle on the floor, the gentleman shaman seated in a chair. At his feet was a drum.

He wasn’t going to waste time on explanations or theories. He wasn’t going to satisfy our intellectual curiosity by providing some sort of rationale for what we were about to experience. We were just going to do it. Right then and there.

He began describing a scenario that we would soon be asked to visualize. A trail. A cliff. An animal. He was setting the scene, like in a guided meditation—except he was giving us the guidance beforehand, as opposed to during the exercise. There was another key difference: once we got to the end of what he described, we’d be on our own. From that point on, we would each have our own individual experiences. What we were about to do, it turned out, was essentially a shamanic journey. No matter than none of us were shamans.

We got comfortable, most of us lying on the floor. The shaman began beating the drum. Our journeys got underway.

No sooner had I gotten beyond the initial guided imagery and ventured off on my own, than I was blindsided. I had done this before. Many times, in fact.

I was dreaming while awake.

The journey wasn’t merely reminiscent of what I’d done years earlier on my own; it was the exact same thing. I was astonished. I was excited.

Once the exercise was over, the shaman instructed us to share what we had experienced with whomever was seated on either side of us.

I turned to my right to face an attractive, olive-complected woman in her 40s, attending the workshop with her boyfriend. After quick introductions, I invited her to share her experience first.

I was in for yet another surprise.

It was almost as if she were recounting my own journey; we had gone on essentially the same one. We had both been subjected to violent rituals where our hearts were ripped from our chests, undergone a renewal ceremony, and put back into our bodies. A woman performed her ritual, a man mine. We had different animal guides. But the central narrative, the essence of each waking dream, was the same.

It was inconceivable. Nothing in the shaman’s set-up for the journey had alluded to the heart, never mind a heart-renewal ceremony—whatever that was exactly.

I was stunned. We both were.

Similarly, the discovery that, unbeknownst to me, I had signed up for a workshop about my waking-dream meditations was nothing less than a revelation. It wasn’t the only one. Not only the heart-renewal journey, but others that followed left little doubt: what I was experiencing was not “just in my imagination.”

One journey illustrated that better than any other.

 

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I have only a vague recollection of the exercise the shaman asked us to do; something about perusing a room full of objects until coming across one that resonated. That object would then serve as the starting point for a journey.

When it happened, I had already completed my own journey. I no longer remember it. It was what came next that mattered.

As the shaman continued beating the drum, I remained on my back with my eyes closed. I felt relaxed, despite there being nothing between me and the hard floor. I was happy to wait patiently for the exercise to come to a close.

At first my mind wandered freely. I listened to the sound of the Pacific crashing at the foot of the cliffs a short distance away. I looked forward to hearing about the other participants’ journeys and sharing my own.

Out of nowhere, something flew into my mind’s eye.

A globe.

Where had it come from, I wondered. And why?

The globe spun quickly round and round. It stopped somewhere in Central Asia. It took me a second, but then I recognized it: Mongolia.

Before I knew it, I found myself in a large tent. I was sitting at a simple wooden table, facing an old woman seated on the other side. She looked the part of a stereotypical developing-country villager: dark skin riddled with deep lines betrayed hardship, tenacity, and wisdom. Her intense eyes were dark, too, but only in color. Her silver-streaked hair was pulled back.

It occurred to me that the tent was likely a yurt. I didn’t get any additional impressions. Perhaps that was because I was so bewildered.

When the vision struck, far from letting my imagination run wild, I had been engaged in random thoughts of seemingly little consequence. What I was experiencing now had come at me out of the blue. All the same, was I just imagining things? Was I making it up? I gave it some thought.

If, for whatever reason, I were to visualize myself somewhere, Mongolia was an unlikely choice. Spain. France. Turkey. Other more far-flung places I’ve traveled or with which I at least have some sort of connection or interest. Those might have made sense. But not only did I know almost nothing about Mongolia, it wasn’t somewhere I felt particularly drawn.

Then there was the woman sitting across from me. The shaman.

Were there shamans in Mongolia? Not unlikely. Again, though, I knew very little about Mongolia. The same was true for shamanism. Apart from the Native Americans, I couldn’t say which cultures elsewhere in the world had shamanic traditions.

As for this particular shaman, she was a woman. Were there women shamans? It wouldn’t have surprised me, but I didn’t know that for sure either. Asked to imagine a shaman, I was sure to visualize a man.

If the old woman sensed my doubt and confusion, she showed no signs of it. Instead, she took out a small cup that reminded me of ones used to play Yahtzee. She then threw some dice out of the cup and onto the table. They were made of bone.

Still at a loss to explain what I was witnessing, I again looked for a logical explanation. I was vaguely familiar with Celtic runes. Was I somehow projecting what little I knew of them into the vision unfolding before me? Unlikely. My rational mind was grasping at straws.

The journey continued, the imagery that followed making less of an impression. What I had experienced up until then, on the other hand, could hardly have made more of one.

When the workshop ended for the day, I ran to a computer. Given how improbable it was that I would have unwittingly concocted what happened in the journey, I had to see if I could corroborate any of it online. I entered “woman,” “shaman,” “Mongolia,” and “dice” into a search engine.

The first article I opened was about a Mongolian shaman woman who used bone dice to diagnosis illness.

I struggled to believe my eyes.

How was it possible?

I knew in no uncertain terms that I had no prior knowledge of what I’d seen during the journey—one I hadn’t even intended to undertake, no less. Yet I had seen it all the same.

Apparently I also had just taken my first trip to Mongolia.


Have you had powerful experiences with your dreams? Share below! 👇

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Rumi's Gift: A Short Story about Intuition

Author writer Matthew Felix's "Rumi's Gift: A Short Story about Intuition""

I was an hour into my walk when I realized that I had forgotten to get Jacqueline a present.

A warm, sunny, blue-sky afternoon, I was making my normal loop. From my apartment in the Mission, I had zigzagged across bustling Market street, through the colorful Lower Haight, and up a tree-lined hill I could have avoided but intentionally tackled for the exercise. Cars zoomed by on the busy road and bicycles swerved around me on the bike path, as I followed the towering eucalyptuses and other lush greenery of the Panhandle and continued into Golden Gate Park. Along with joggers and more bikers, people lying in the grass, I passed the Conservatory and turned into the Music Concourse—the futuristic DeYoung Museum on one side, the grass-roofed Academy of Arts and Sciences on the other—my halfway point. I then headed back toward home.

The park now behind me, my legs aching slightly and my sweaty feet eager to break free from the suffocating confines of my shoes, I pondered my quandary.

I didn’t have to take Jacqueline a present—she certainly wasn’t expecting it. I could just do what I always did when she had me over for dinner, which she did once, if not twice a month: I could take flowers or dessert. For other hosts, a bottle of wine might have been another easy option, but anything I showed up with was bound to pale in comparison to the vintages already on Jacqueline’s shelves.

So, yes, I would take flowers or dessert; but that didn’t solve my conundrum.

Today was the tenth anniversary of Jacqueline’s brother’s death. She sounded in OK spirits when we exchanged texts earlier in the day, but it only seemed right to make some sort of gesture to formally acknowledge the solemn occasion.

Unfortunately, by the time I got home from my power walk, I would only have an hour before I had to leave for Jacqueline’s. I chastised myself for not remembering the gift before I set off on my stroll.

Putting aside the question of time, I wondered where I might be able to find the right present. No sooner had I asked the question, than I had my answer: there was a shop in the Mission that was sure to have something both appropriate for the occasion and suitable to Jacqueline’s tastes.

If only going to the shop didn’t entail another forty minutes of walking.

True, I could have jumped into a ride share, but I only do that when absolutely necessary—I fear coming to rely on them anytime I need to go anywhere, like so many of my friends. Besides, although I would be cutting it close, I nevertheless could get to the shop and back to my apartment in time to leave for Jacqueline’s as planned. Apologizing to my fatigued legs and suffering feet, I picked up my pace.

Fifteen minutes later, I glanced down my block toward my apartment—but kept walking.

Turning onto Valencia, I found myself face-to-face with crowded sidewalks, reminded why I avoid not only my neighborhood’s retail corridor but its famous park on weekends. Undeterred, I threaded my way through the people window shopping and congregating and coming and going on their own errands. Momentarily subsumed in the inviting aroma of a favorite taquería, I questioned what I was doing. What if I got all the way to the store and couldn’t find anything? I didn’t have time to waste.

No, my intuition countered, the shop was exactly where I needed to go. I had nothing specific in mind, but in my gut there was no doubt: I would find what I needed at the shop. I felt it with absolute certainty.

I kept walking.

My heart beating a little faster for my effort, my lungs pumping a little harder, I wiped sweat from my brow and stepped into the store. Books, cards, and candles. Ceramics, jewelry, and imported handmade goods. Even beauty products, essential oils, and loose-leaf teas. I had come to the right place.

I perused the books, immediately drawn to a miniature collection of poetry by the renowned Persian mystic Rumi. The little book was small enough to fit into the palm of my hand. It would have been perfect, except Jacqueline already had at least one Rumi collection—I remembered seeing it on her end table. Wresting my attention away from the book, I ventured deeper into the shop.

I considered the knickknacks. I breathed in the invigorating scent of sage. I laughed at the live bee clinging to a beeswax candle as though trying to reclaim what was rightfully his.

I didn’t see anything that struck a chord.

I looked around some more, reminded of the clarity with which my intuition had guided me.

Returning to the books, again my attention was drawn to the Rumi collection, like the bee to the candle. I picked up the little book and flipped through its tiny pages. In the entire shop the book was the only thing calling to me—and its call was loud and clear. It didn’t make sense. Nor did it matter. I could not justify purchasing something Jacqueline already had. I put the book back on the shelf.

Out of time, I bought a card and rushed out the door. 

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Again threading my way through densely packed sidewalks, I was perplexed.

My intuition had been so strong—stronger than usual. I had gone all the way to the shop—despite my fatigue, despite running low on time, despite the fact that I could have shown up at Jacqueline’s without a gift—because I had no doubt that the shop had exactly what I needed. Never mind that it was full of so many options. How was it possible that I had come up empty-handed? I could have bought a card at plenty of places that didn’t require a lengthy, time-consuming detour.

My confusion notwithstanding, every time I went over it again—what I had felt, why I had no doubt the store was where I needed to go—I remained steadfast in my conviction: I wasn’t mistaken. What I had felt was my intuition.

But my intuition comes from a place of truth.

And I had been wrong.

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I handed Jaqueline a dozen irises and the card. Hugs were exchanged, a tear or two shed, and we settled in the living room, its wall of windows opening onto verdant treetops and the subdued blue of the early evening sky. Juncos chirped and hopped around the gurgling fountain on the deck, as though wishing they could come inside and join us.

Over cheese and crackers, sipping glasses of champagne, Jacqueline and I got caught up. It wasn’t long before the conversation made its inevitable turn to our respective literary endeavors. Jacqueline had just finished something she was looking forward to sharing, and she had asked me to bring an excerpt from my own current work-in-progress. We would do readings and exchange critiques.

“Well,” she began, stopping herself. She looked down at the papers she had just retrieved from her office, red ink in white margins. Pushing her long blonde hair out of her eyes, her manicured nails flashes of crimson, she explained, “I have two quotes, and I’m still really struggling with which one to use. I have one by Rumi and—”

“I almost got you a book by Rumi today!” I blurted out. “Just a little while ago—right before I came!”

“You did?” Jacqueline laughed, “No way!”

“Yeah, but I didn’t because I knew you already had one.”

“Well, then, that’s it—that’s my answer. You just gave it to me.” She beamed, possessed of a calm knowing. “I know it shouldn’t be that hard of a decision, but I have been agonizing over it. What a relief!”

I, too, felt relief—and vindication. At the store I had found exactly what I needed after all—and what Jacqueline needed, too.

I regretted having doubted my intuition, reminded that so often we can’t possibly imagine how, when, or even if we’ll be shown that we were right to trust it.

But we always are.

Doubt is the Devil

Five years ago, shortly after my editor gave me exhaustive, critical feedback on my novel, A Voice Beyond Reason, I was overcome with self-doubt.

One morning I woke from a dream to a quote that led me to look more closely at that self-doubt, including its perils and how gratitude can counteract it. The following post, originally published on June 23, 2015, recounts that experience.

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“Doubt is the Devil! Show doubt, and he’ll be back!”

I woke up with the quote resounding in my mind. It was as though an old woman were standing over me waving her finger, scolding me to make sure I got the point.

A couple of weeks earlier, I had received the comments on my novel from my editor. Like a tsunami coming out of nowhere (or, in this case, raging up the coast from Santa Barbara), twelve pages of feedback wiped out half the world I’d spent so many years building. I expected it. I wanted it. Nevertheless, in the days and weeks that followed I was overcome by wave after wave of self-doubt, at times nearly drowning in it.

Was I up for the challenge? Did I have the energy to make the changes? And, by the way, what changes? My editor pointed out the problems, she didn’t provide the solutions. It was my book. Addressing the issues was my job. Could I figure it out? Did I still even want to try?

Should I have… What if I had… Maybe I didn’t, couldn’t, wouldn’t…

Some days, as I considered what needed to be done and how to do it, the path forward seemed to open effortlessly before me. I felt good. I felt motivated and inspired. On others, I slammed up against a wall, struggling in vain to address confounding roadblocks. I stared listlessly at the computer, accomplishing nothing, my eyes bloodshot, a trickle of saliva dangling from my mouth, the floor under my chair like at a barber shop, covered with hair I’d pulled out in frustration.

Then I woke up to the quote.

I thought about how much support I’d received, especially recently. Things had fallen into place in ways I never could have imagined, ways that exceeded my expectations. I had been presented with perfect places to write over the coming months. I suddenly didn’t have to worry about major expenses I had been anticipating. Countless words, gestures, and signs had encouraged me to keep going.

Self-doubt suddenly seemed self-indulgent.

After all, what purpose did it serve? What purpose does it ever serve? Other than giving us excuses to let ourselves off the hook, if we choose to buy into it? Other than granting us license to avoid the challenges and obstacles from which we have the most to learn?

“Show doubt, and he’ll be back!”

Not only was doubt subversive, it was self-perpetuating. The more I indulged it, the more it got under my skin, like the poison-oak infection I scratched until it spread to my eye and sealed it shut. Giving doubt my attention only made it stronger, blinding me to reality.

It was time to open my eyes.

It was time to show my gratitude for all the support, guidance, and inspiration that continued to come my way. It was time to renounce doubt and embrace faith, in myself, in my novel, in something greater that had gotten me this far and would get me through to the end.

The dream was a wake-up call.

Enough self-indulgent, counterproductive doubt.

Time to send the Devil packing.


 

Distinguishing your Inner Voice


In this excerpt from my novel A Voice Beyond Reason, the protagonist, a young Spaniard named Pablo, has begun awakening to his intuition.

In the process, he finds that paying attention to his inner voice is not always as straightforward as he might have hoped. His mentor, an old man named Victor, offers some insight.

Quote from author writer Matthew Felix's novel about intuition, A Voice Beyond Reason
 

“Instead of allowing yourself to slowly become more attuned to your inner voice, you’ve turned it into some sort of intellectual challenge, something to get a hold on by working hard enough at it, a puzzle to figure out. But that’s not how it works. It’s experiencing the mystery, opening yourself to how it feels. It’s immersing yourself in the subtleties and nuances as it rattles your bones or whispers in your ear. It’s not thinking, but feeling.”

“But that’s what I’ve been trying to do,” Pablo protested, disheartened by Victor’s assessment he’d been going about it all wrong. “It’s just that sometimes I don’t get what I hear.”

“Ah, yes,” said Victor, as though they’d stumbled upon a familiar problem. “By trying so hard to hear the voice of your intuition, you discovered other voices competing for your attention as well.”

“Other voices?” wondered Pablo. “What other voices?” If the idea of one inner voice seemed odd enough, the revelation there might somehow be many—ones that were in competition, no less—almost seemed cause for concern.

“Of your desires, your hopes, your fears . . . any number of them, I would guess, although those are certainly the most obvious ones.”

“Then how am I supposed to figure out which one to listen to? I don’t understand—it’s so confusing. It’s like there are all these people talking to me, but I can’t see their faces and I don’t recognize their voices. So, I don’t know who to trust.”

“All those voices can indeed make you crazy. It’s like listening to a noisy radio playing several stations at once. Especially when you’re overwhelmed, the other voices can cloud out your intuition. Fortunately, there are ways to distinguish its voice from the others—to tune into just that one station, so to speak.”

“How?”

“First of all, you take a deep breath. You have to calm yourself, so you can calm them as well. When you do, just like when those insects in the flowers pause from their work and, instead of whirling blurs on the air, we’re able to see their true forms and colors, you’ll be better able to recognize each of the voices for what they really are.”

“OK, but once all those voices are calm or whatever, I still don’t get how I’m supposed to figure out which one’s my intuition.”

“You can start by asking whether your own doubts or desires are at the root of what you’re hearing. In other words, are you somehow invested in what those voices have to say?”

“How can I tell?”

“You consider each of them as honestly and objectively as you can.”

“And which one is my intuition?” Pablo asked, still not sure he followed.

“The one that is not a manifestation of your own desires, doubts, or fears. The one that, rather than speaking on behalf of yourself, almost seems to come from someplace independent of or beyond your self.”

“I kind of get it,” said Pablo after a moment, sensing something familiar in what Victor was describing. “But I don’t think I understand completely.”

“Of course not, and that’s OK,” Victor reassured him. “You have to experience what I’m talking about in order to genuinely internalize it. … (But) it’s a choice. No one is going to force you to open your eyes, listen to what you hear, or, most of all, be attuned to what you feel, including your intuition. You have to make the effort.”


What challenges have you faced trying to tune into your intuition? How have you been successful? Share below! 👇

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Have Fun Falling

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One night I had a dream.

I was standing on a limestone cliff in the Mediterranean. Looking far below at sparkling blue waters crashing against a rocky shore, I debated whether to jump.

It was a perfect summer day. Golden sunshine, blue skies. The sea was beckoning—but the drop was a long one. Two people had jumped shortly before and were beginning the arduous, switchbacked climb back up the cliff. Knowing they had made the jump was reassuring, but still I hesitated. I wanted to do it. I knew I should do it. But I was afraid.

Then came a voice; or, perhaps, a knowing.

“Jump.”

That wasn’t all.

“And have fun falling.”

My entire perspective shifted. In my resistance, fixated on the risk, I had failed to see the bigger picture.

Yes, I was supposed to jump; that I already knew. But there was more to it. The challenge wasn’t merely about facing my fears. It was about throwing myself completely into the experience once I had. I was supposed to jump with my eyes open, to savor the feel of being airborne, to relish the adrenaline rush, to take delight as the water buffered my fall. I was supposed to do a flip in midair, maybe even plunge into the water headfirst, turning my haphazard free fall into a brazen dive. Jumping was merely the first step. I was supposed to wholeheartedly open myself to what followed, to engage with it completely. Otherwise, there was little point in making the jump at all.

There was more still.

From the base of my spine, a red ribbon of energy extended up into the sky. I thought of an umbilical cord; it didn’t matter that it was coming out of my back. To the contrary, that was the point: someone or something had my back. I could have fun falling, because I would be taken care of. There was nothing to fear.

As I lay in bed replaying the dream, increasingly it felt imperative that I not lose sight of its messages.

I dragged myself out of bed and into the kitchen. Taking a brown paper bag out of the cupboard, I cut out the bag’s front panel. I then rummaged through my drawers until I found a long-neglected box of crayons. Everything I needed now at my disposal, I drew an illustration of my dream: an image of myself standing on the cliff, a red ribbon extending into the sky and, far below, the Mediterranean crashing against a rocky shore.

When my clumsy rendering was complete, I hung it on the refrigerator. I would see it there again and again throughout the day. Although I was actually sort of happy with—if not secretly proud of—my creation, anyone who didn’t know better was sure to take it for the cumbersome work of a school child.

I knew better. What I didn’t know was how important the drawing would prove to be over the coming weeks and months.

— Excerpted from my forthcoming book


Have you ever had a dream that made a big difference in your waking life? I would love to hear about it below!

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