I Woke Up in the Backseat of My Own Life

I had a dream the other night that didnโ€™t feel symbolic at first.
It just feltโ€ฆ accurate.

In it, I was driving people around for money. Not to anywhere meaningfulโ€”just movement. Pick up. Drop off. Keep going.

At some point, I fell asleep.

I donโ€™t remember pulling over.
I donโ€™t remember deciding to stop.

I just remember waking up in the backseat of my own car while a family I didnโ€™t know was driving it.

I wasnโ€™t afraid.
I was confused.

We arrived at a large tan buildingโ€”brick, institutional, permanent. It looked like a school or a government office. Across the front, in block letters, was the word Columbia. Each letter a different shade of white. The โ€œOโ€ was the brightest.

I asked the family who they were and where I was.

I turned to look at the building againโ€”and when I turned back, they were gone.

No argument.
No goodbye.

Just absence.

Thatโ€™s when I noticed the rest.

The gas tank was empty.
I had no money.
No identification.
No sense of how long Iโ€™d been asleep or how far Iโ€™d traveled.

I woke up from the dream feeling lostโ€”not in a panicked way, but in the way you feel when you realize youโ€™ve been somewhere else for a long time.


I think the dream was about usefulness.

Driving strangers for money made sense in the dream. It was necessary. Productive. Functional.

But I wasnโ€™t going anywhere.

I was facilitating everyone elseโ€™s movement while slowly disappearing from my own.

At no point did I crash.
Nothing dramatic happened.

I just stopped being conscious while my life kept moving.

When I woke up, I wasnโ€™t at the wheel anymore.


The family didnโ€™t feel threatening. They felt inherited.

Like responsibility passed down quietly.
Like roles you take on because someone has to.
Like expectations you donโ€™t remember agreeing to.

They drove my car as if it belonged to them.

And when I questioned itโ€”when I asked who they wereโ€”they vanished.

Some roles canโ€™t survive being named.


The building mattered too.

Columbia felt like a system.
Authority.
Institution.

The kind of place that exists everywhere and nowhere. The kind you arrive at when identity is shaped by obligation instead of desire.

I woke up there because thatโ€™s where people end up when theyโ€™re tiredโ€”inside structures that keep moving whether they do or not.


What stayed with me most was what I didnโ€™t have.

No fuel.
No resources.
No role to point to and say, this is who I am.

It didnโ€™t feel like failure.

It felt like being unassigned.


In waking life, nothing dramatic had happened either.

I hadnโ€™t imploded my life.
I hadnโ€™t lost everything overnight.

I was just exhausted.

Exhausted from being useful without being present.
From competence doing the work of identity.
From movement without meaning.

The dream didnโ€™t tell me where to go next.

It just showed me that I had been running on emptyโ€”and that I was awake enough now to notice.


Waking up doesnโ€™t feel triumphant.

It feels quiet.
Disorienting.
A little unfinished.

Thereโ€™s no map when you realize youโ€™ve been living on autopilot.

Just a still car.
An empty tank.
And the decision not to fall asleep again.

I donโ€™t know exactly where Iโ€™m going yet.

But the engine is off on purpose.

And for now, thatโ€™s enough.


Sometimes clarity doesnโ€™t arrive as answers.
It arrives as consciousness returning to the body.

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