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Dahl, Roald - A Piece of Cake - The abyss
Identifier
000634
Type of Spiritual Experience
Background
A description of the experience
Roald Dahl – A Piece of Cake
[This is the true account of Dahl's experience in hospital after he had been shot down in the War, was burnt, suffered a fractured skull and severe injuries. His eyes were covered in bandages and he experienced the following 'hallucinations']
Oh everyone's silly, silly, silly, but it was a lovely day, and I did not want to run but I couldn't stop. I kept on running across the grass and I couldn't stop because my legs were carrying me and I had no control over them. It was as if they did not belong to me, although when I looked down I saw that they were mine, that the shoes on the feet were mine and that the legs were joined to my body. But they would not do what I wanted; they just went on running across the field and I had to go with them. I ran and ran and ran, and although in some places the field was rough and bumpy, I never stumbled. I ran past trees and hedges and in one field there were some sheep which stopped eating and scampered off as I ran past them. Once I saw my mother in a pale grey dress bending down picking mushrooms, and as I ran past she looked up and said 'My basket's nearly full; shall we go home soon?' but my legs wouldn't stop and I had to go on.
Then I saw the cliff ahead and I saw how dark it was beyond the cliff. There was this great cliff and beyond it there was nothing but darkness, although the sun was shining in the field where I was running. The light of the sun stopped dead at the edge of the cliff and there was only darkness beyond. 'That must be where the night begins' I thought, and once more I tried to stop but it was not any good. My legs began to go faster towards the cliff and they began to take longer strides, and I reached down with my hand and tried to stop them by clutching the cloth of my trousers, but it did not work; then I tried to fall down. But my legs were nimble and each time I threw myself I landed on my toes and I went on running.
Now the cliff and the darkness were much nearer and I could see that unless I stopped quickly I should go over the edge. Once more I tried to throw myself to the ground and once more I landed on my toes and went on running.
I was going fast as I came to the edge and I went straight on over it into the darkness and began to fall.
At first it was not quite dark. I could see little trees growing out of the face of the cliff, and I grabbed at them with my hands as I went down. Several times I managed to catch hold of a branch, but it always broke off at once because I was so heavy and because I was falling so fast, and once I caught a thick branch with both hands and the tree leaned forward and I heard the snapping of the roots one by one until it came away from the cliff and I went on falling. Then it became darker because the sun and the day were in the fields far away at the top of the cliff, and as I fell I kept my eyes open and watched the darkness turn from grey black to black, from black to jet black, and from jet black to pure liquid blackness which I could touch with my hands but which I could not see. But I went on falling, and it was so black that there was nothing anywhere and it was not any use doing anything or caring or thinking because of the blackness and because of the falling. It was not any use.
'You're better this morning. You're much better'. It was the woman's voice again.
'Hallo'
'Hallo; we thought you were never going to get conscious'
'Where am I?'
'In Alexandria, in hospital'
'How long have I been here?'
'Four days'
The source of the experience
Dahl, RoaldConcepts, symbols and science items
Science Items
Activities and commonsteps
Activities
Overloads
Third degree burnsTraumatic injury to the brain and head banging