Man, I had this weird dream the other night, and it just stuck with me. You know how some dreams just hit different? This was one of those. I dreamt I was pumping breast milk, and it felt so real, you know? Like, I could almost feel the pump working, the whole nine yards. Woke up totally confused, like, what the heck was that about?
I rolled out of bed, still half-asleep but the dream was playing over and over in my head. My wife was still snoozing, and I just sat there on the edge of the bed, trying to figure it out. I’m not, you know, physically capable of that, so it instantly felt like something more, something deeper. It wasn’t just a random dream about something mundane. This was… specific.
For the next couple of days, it just bugged me. I kept thinking about it. Every time I had a moment to myself, I’d chew on it. I’d be making coffee, and boom, the image of that breast pump, the milk flowing, it’d just pop into my head. I even caught myself absentmindedly doing a sort of pumping motion with my hand a couple of times. It was getting a bit much, honestly.

I tried to brush it off, told myself it was just a weird brain fart. But it wouldn’t go away. It felt like my brain was trying to tell me something, and I just wasn’t getting the memo. So I started doing what I usually do when something really gnaws at me: I sat down and just let my mind wander, connecting dots.
What I Started Piecing Together
First, I thought about what breast milk is – pure nourishment, right? It’s about providing, feeding, giving life. And pumping? That’s, like, a deliberate act of extraction for provision. Not just naturally flowing, but actively drawing it out for someone else’s benefit.
- I pulled out my old journal. I’ve had it for ages, just scribbling down thoughts, random stuff, sometimes a dream if it’s vivid enough. I flipped through the last few months, looking for any patterns, anything that felt like it might connect.
- I thought about what’s been going on in my life lately. Work’s been crazy, pushing hard on a new project. I’ve been feeling this immense pressure to deliver, to “feed” the project, to get it to grow. Like I’m pouring everything into it, day and night.
- Then there’s the family stuff. My niece just started college, and my sister’s been stressed about finances. I found myself stepping up, trying to offer support, not just money, but advice, a listening ear, helping her sort through applications and whatnot. It felt like I was trying to “nourish” them, too, making sure they had what they needed to thrive.
- I also remembered a conversation I had with a buddy about how he felt drained after starting his own business. He was talking about how he had to constantly give, give, give, and sometimes it felt like he was just being “milked dry.” That phrase really stuck with me.
All these things started to coalesce. It wasn’t just about giving, it was about forceful giving, about the act of drawing out resources, energy, and time from myself to sustain something or someone else. The pump itself, that mechanical action, felt like the structured, sometimes exhausting, effort I was putting in.
My “Aha!” Moment
It hit me when I was talking to my wife about her own recent struggles with feeling overwhelmed at her job. She used the word “depleted.” And suddenly, the dream clicked. It wasn’t just about providing; it was about the process of providing, and maybe, just maybe, the feeling of being depleted by it.
I realized that the dream was a manifestation of my subconscious reflecting on how much I was giving, how much I was actively extracting from my own reserves – my time, my energy, my mental space – to nourish the various “babies” in my life: my work project, my family, even my friends’ needs. The act of “pumping” was the conscious, often draining, effort of making sure everyone else was fed, taken care of, and growing.
It made me think about boundaries, too. Like, how much can you pump before you’re just empty? It wasn’t a nightmare, but it wasn’t a warm fuzzy dream either. It was a mirror, showing me the intensity of my giving, and maybe, a gentle nudge to check my own well-being. It was about recognizing that I was in a significant period of nurturing, and that nurturing takes a deliberate, sustained effort. It was a reminder to also ensure I wasn’t running myself dry in the process of trying to fill everyone else’s cup. It just felt like my brain was putting out a notice, telling me to be mindful of my own reserves while still doing what I do.
