The Lathe of Heaven
by Ursula K. Le Guin

Dr. William Haber Character Analysis

Dr. William Haber is the psychiatrist assigned to treat George Orr. Haber begins as an ambitious but underrecognized sleep researcher, but this changes when he hypnotizes Orr into dreaming of realities that improve Haber’s status until he becomes the most powerful person on the planet. Though Haber initially dismisses Orr’s effective dreams, he changes his mind after one of Orr’s dreams alters a mural on his wall during one of their sessions. Unlike Orr, who subscribes to Taoist ideals of effortless action and universal balance, Haber believes in the Utilitarian notion that people have a moral obligation to act in ways that maximize happiness and minimize suffering. Though Haber cares about the common good, his desire for power and control corrupts his altruism. As such, under the guise of administering treatment, Haber hypnotizes Orr, feeding him suggestions to make his effective dreams morph reality into Haber’s vision of a perfect world. Meanwhile, Haber records Orr’s brainwaves with the Augmentor so that he might one day induce conscious effective dreaming in himself and gain complete control of reality. Haber successfully uses Orr’s dreams to eliminate overpopulation, racism, and global war; however, these utopic accomplishments are always achieved at an unforeseen, dystopic cost. In response to Haber’s suggestion to dream away overpopulation, for example, Orr creates a plague that kills six billion people. Such setbacks never bother Haber, who uses the promise of a collectively better world to justify any suffering his hypnosuggestions create. Ultimately, Haber’s changes bring about more suffering than happiness. The novel further conveys Haber and Orr’s clashing worldviews through their opposite appearances: while Orr is fair, lean, and unassuming, Haber is “broad, hairy,” and often described with bear imagery. Toward the end of the novel, once Haber unlocks the key to effective dreaming, he “cures” Orr by hypnotizing him to dream that his dreams no longer change reality. Haber then ignores Orr’s advice to consult with the Aliens before inducing an effective dream in himself, and his effective dream becomes a nightmare that causes reality to collapse. Though Orr disconnects Haber from the Augmentor in time to restore reality to relative coherence, Haber’s new knowledge of unreality leaves him institutionalized in a broken, catatonic state. The novel suggests that Haber’s demise is the result of his unexamined adherence to Utilitarian ethics, his unwillingness to accept the unknowable and uncontrollable aspects of life, and his selfish quest for power.

Dr. William Haber Quotes in The Lathe of Heaven

The The Lathe of Heaven quotes below are all either spoken by Dr. William Haber or refer to Dr. William Haber. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Limits of Utilitarianism  Theme Icon
).

Chapter 1  Quotes

Current-borne, wave-flung, tugged hugely by the whole might of ocean, the jellyfish drifts in the tidal abyss. The light shines through it, and the dark enters it. Borne, flung, tugged from anywhere to anywhere, for in the deep sea there is no compass but nearer and farther, higher and lower, the jellyfish hangs and sways; pulses move slight and quick within it, as the vast diurnal pulses beat in the moon-driven sea. Hanging, swaying, pulsing, the most vulnerable and insubstantial creature, it has for its defense the violence and power of the whole ocean, to which it has entrusted its being, its going, and its will. But here rise the stubborn continents. The shelves of gravel and the cliffs of rock break from water baldly into air, that dry, terrible outer space of radiance and instability, where there is no support for life. And now, now the currents mislead and the waves betray, breaking their endless circle, to leap up in loud foam against rock and air, breaking… What will the creature made all of sea-drift do on the dry sand of daylight; what will the mind do, each morning, waking?

Related Characters: George Orr, Dr. William Haber
Related Symbols: Jellyfish , Water
Page Number and Citation: 1-2
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 2  Quotes

“And the events of the mind, believe me, to me are facts. When you see another man’s dream as he dreams it recorded in black and white on the electroencephalograph, as I’ve done ten thousand times, you don’t speak of dreams as ‘unreal.’ They exist; they are events; they leave a mark behind them.”

Related Characters: Dr. William Haber (speaker), George Orr
Page Number and Citation: 13-14
Explanation and Analysis:

“Who am I to meddle with the way things go? And it’s my unconscious mind that changes things, without any intelligent control. I tried autohypnosis but it didn’t do any good. Dreams are incoherent, selfish, irrational—immoral, you said a minute ago. They come from the unsocialized part of us, don’t they, at least partly?”

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), Dr. William Haber
Page Number and Citation: 14
Explanation and Analysis:

Goddamn but he wished he could afford an office with a window with a view!

Related Characters: George Orr, Dr. William Haber
Related Symbols: Mount Hood
Page Number and Citation: 25
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 3 Quotes

That geniality was not faked, but it was exaggerated. There was a warmth to the man, an outgoingness, which was real; but it had got plasticoated with professional mannerisms, distorted by the doctor’s unspontaneous use of himself. Orr felt in him a wish to be liked and a desire to be helpful; the doctor was not, he thought, really sure that anyone else existed, and wanted to prove they did by helping them.

Related Characters: George Orr, Dr. William Haber
Page Number and Citation: 28
Explanation and Analysis:

“I am sure now that your therapy lies in this direction, to use your dreams, not to evade and avoid them. To face your fear and, with my help, see it through. You’re afraid of your own mind, George.”

Related Characters: Dr. William Haber (speaker), George Orr
Related Symbols: Mount Hood
Page Number and Citation: 31
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 4 Quotes

“I know he means well. It’s just that I want to be cured, not used.”

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), Dr. William Haber, Heather Lelache
Page Number and Citation: 49
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 5 Quotes

A person is defined solely by the extent of his influence over other people, by the sphere of his interrelationships; and morality is an utterly meaningless term unless defined as the good one does to others, the fulfilling of one’s function in the sociopolitical whole.

Related Characters: Dr. William Haber
Page Number and Citation: 53
Explanation and Analysis:

“To a better world!” Dr. Haber said, raising his glass to his creation, and finished his whisky in a lingering, savoring swallow.

Related Characters: Dr. William Haber (speaker), Heather Lelache, George Orr
Page Number and Citation: 72
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

He must act, he had to act. He must refuse to let Haber use him any longer as a tool. He must take his destiny into his own hands.

Related Characters: George Orr, Dr. William Haber
Page Number and Citation: 74
Explanation and Analysis:

“You speak as if that were some kind of general moral imperative.” He looked at Orr with his genial, reflective smile, stroking his beard. “But in fact, isn’t that man’s very purpose on earth—to do things, change things, run things, make a better world?”

Related Characters: Dr. William Haber (speaker), George Orr
Page Number and Citation: 82
Explanation and Analysis:

“I don’t know. Things don’t have purposes, as if the universe were a machine, where every part has a useful function. What’s the function of a galaxy? I don’t know if our life has a purpose and I don’t see that it matters. What does matter is that we’re a part. Like a thread in a cloth or a grass-blade in a field. It is and we are. What we do is like wind blowing on the grass.”

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), Dr. William Haber
Page Number and Citation: 82
Explanation and Analysis:

The end justifies the means. But what if there never is an end? All we have is means.

Related Characters: George Orr, Dr. William Haber
Page Number and Citation: 83
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 7 Quotes

The infinite possibility, the unlimited and unqualified wholeness of being of the uncommitted, the nonacting, the uncarved: the being who, being nothing but himself, is everything. Briefly she saw him thus, and what struck her most, of that insight, was his strength. He was the strongest person she had ever known, because he could not be moved away from the center. And that was why she liked him.

Related Characters: Heather Lelache, Dr. William Haber, George Orr
Page Number and Citation: 96
Explanation and Analysis:

“Things are more complicated than he’s willing to realize. He thinks you can make things come out right. And he tries to use me to make things come out right, but he won’t admit it; he lies because he won’t look straight, he’s not interested in what’s true, in what is, he can’t see anything except his mind—his ideas of what ought to be.”

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), Dr. William Haber, Heather Lelache
Page Number and Citation: 100-101
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 8 Quotes

“I don’t choose,” Orr said. “Don’t you see that yet? I follow.”

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), Dr. William Haber, Heather Lelache
Page Number and Citation: 125
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 9 Quotes

During that terrifying day’s journey from the cabin to embattled Portland, when they were bumping over a country road in the wheezing Hertz Steamer, Heather had told him that she had tried to suggest that he dream an improved Haber, as they had agreed. And since then Haber had at least been candid with Orr about his manipulations. Though candid was not the right word; Haber was much too complex a person for candor. Layer after layer might peel off the onion and yet nothing be revealed but more onion. That peeling off of one layer was the only real change in him, and it might not be due to an effective dream, but only to changed circumstances. He was so sure of himself now that he had no need to try to hide his purposes, or deceive Orr; he could simply coerce him.

Related Characters: George Orr, Dr. William Haber, Heather Lelache
Page Number and Citation: 131
Explanation and Analysis:

“You are afraid of losing your balance. But change need not unbalance you; life’s not a static object, after all. It’s a process. There’s no holding still. Intellectually you know that, but emotionally you refuse it. Nothing remains the same from one moment to the next, you can’t step into the same river twice. Life—evolution—the whole universe of space/time, matter/energy—existence itself—is essentially change.”

“That is one aspect of it,” Orr said. “The other is stillness.”

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), Dr. William Haber (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 139
Explanation and Analysis:

“Volcanoes emit fire.”

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), Dr. William Haber
Related Symbols: Mount Hood
Page Number and Citation: 149
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 10 Quotes

“They are of the dream time. I don’t understand it, I can’t say it in words. Everything dreams. The play of form, of being, is the dreaming of substance. Rocks have their dreams, and the earth changes … But when the mind becomes conscious, when the rate of evolution speeds up, then you have to be careful. Careful of the world. You must learn the way. You must learn the skills, the art, the limits. A conscious mind must be part of the whole, intentionally and carefully—as the rock is part of the whole unconsciously. Do you see? Does it mean anything to you?”

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), Dr. William Haber, Heather Lelache, Tiua’k Ennbe Ennbe
Related Symbols: Mount Hood
Page Number and Citation: 167-168
Explanation and Analysis:

Destruction was not his line; and a machine is more blameless, more sinless even than any animal. It has no intentions whatsoever but our own.

Related Characters: George Orr, Dr. William Haber
Page Number and Citation: 174
Explanation and Analysis:

After a while the big body moved, and presently sat up. It was all slack and loose. The massive, handsome head hung between the shoulders. The mouth was loose. The eyes looked straight forward into the dark, into the void, into the unbeing at the center of William Haber; they were no longer opaque, they were empty.

Related Characters: George Orr, Dr. William Haber
Page Number and Citation: 174
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 11 Quotes

Orr slept. He dreamed. There was no rub. His dreams, like waves of the deep sea far from any shore, came and went, rose and fell, profound and harmless, breaking nowhere, changing nothing. They danced the dance among all the other waves in the sea of being. Through his sleep the great, green sea turtles dived, swimming with heavy, inexhaustible grace through the depths, in their element.

Related Characters: George Orr, E’nememen Asfah, Dr. William Haber
Related Symbols: Jellyfish , Water
Page Number and Citation: 178-179
Explanation and Analysis:

“Take evening,” the Alien said. “There is time. There are returns. To go is to return.”

“Thank you very much,” Orr said, and shook hand with his boss. The big green flipper was cool on his human hand. He went out with Heather into the warm, rainy afternoon of summer. The Alien watched them from within the glass-fronted shop, as a sea creature might watch from an aquarium, seeing them pass and disappear into the mist.

Related Characters: George Orr (speaker), E’nememen Asfah (speaker), Heather Lelache, Dr. William Haber
Related Symbols: Jellyfish , Water
Page Number and Citation: 184
Explanation and Analysis:
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Dr. William Haber Character Timeline in The Lathe of Heaven

The timeline below shows where the character Dr. William Haber appears in The Lathe of Heaven. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 2 
Power and Selfishness  Theme Icon
Dr. William Haber’s windowless office is located in the Efficiency Suite of the Willamette East Tower.  Haber doesn’t... (full context)
Power and Selfishness  Theme Icon
...short beard. He’s “slightly undernourished,” though he appears to be in relatively good health otherwise. Haber thinks Orr is “unaggressive, placid, milquetoast, repressed, conventional.” (full context)
Dreams and the Limitations of Knowledge  Theme Icon
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Sensing Orr’s anxiety, Haber assumes a welcoming demeanor as he goes over Orr’s patient history, which notes a history... (full context)
Dreams and the Limitations of Knowledge  Theme Icon
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Haber tells Orr that he’s an oneirologist—a dream specialist—and guesses, correctly, that Orr had been using... (full context)
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Orr admits that he’s afraid to dream but seems reluctant to continue. Haber suggests that Orr might be ashamed of the “lawlessness or “immorality” of his dreams. Orr... (full context)
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Orr tells Haber that his dreams have the ability to change reality. Haber thinks that Orr might be... (full context)
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Haber now realizes that Orr’s case will be more complex than he’d originally anticipated. He asks... (full context)
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Haber asks Orr if he’s had any other dreams that have changed reality. Orr explains that... (full context)
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Haber asks Orr if he also has “safe” dreams—dreams that don’t change reality. Orr nods. Haber... (full context)
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Orr worries he won’t “dream effectively” in Haber’s office, since these dreams occur only sporadically. Haber tells Orr not to worry: he can... (full context)
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Haber asks Orr if he’s willing to give it a try, handing him the HEW-required Consent... (full context)
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Haber orders Orr to lie down on the couch and breathe deeply. He moves behind Orr... (full context)
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Haber tells the hypnotized Orr that he’ll go to sleep when Haber says the word “Antwerp,”... (full context)
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 Haber detaches the electrodes from Orr’s scalp and asks him to recall his dream. Orr tells... (full context)
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Haber instructs Orr to return tomorrow and prescribes him a medicine to inhibit vivid dreams. He... (full context)
Chapter 3
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Orr arrives at Haber’s office, where he signs in with Miss Crouch. He examines the office waiting room, and... (full context)
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Haber appears and greets Orr enthusiastically. Orr thinks Haber’s energetic demeanor is genuine, though somewhat “plasticoated... (full context)
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Orr looks behind Haber and sees that Mount Hood is back on the wall. Haber doesn’t seem to notice... (full context)
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In a booming voice, Haber commends Orr’s ability to “dream to order,” follow hypnosuggestions, and respond to the Augmentor, which... (full context)
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Orr wonders if Haber’s talk of Orr “employing his mental powers” is proof that Haber is aware of Orr’s... (full context)
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Desperate for relief, Orr asks Haber if he could give him a “posthypnotic suggestion” not to have effective dreams anymore. Haber... (full context)
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Haber asks Orr if he’d like to undergo a second round of hypnosis today. Orr asks... (full context)
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When Orr comes to, he relays bits of his dream to Haber: he recalls the South Seas, coconuts, and an image of Haber walking beside President John... (full context)
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Orr leaves Haber’s office knowing his most recent dream was a particularly effective one: the absence of rain... (full context)
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It bothers Orr that he can’t recall Haber’s suggestions, since he’s technically conscious until Haber instructs him to sleep. Orr thinks back to... (full context)
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...dinner. It’s only after he cracks open a beer than he begins to wonder why Haber chose to hide his knowledge of Orr’s effective dreams. Haber’s deception unsettles Orr, but he... (full context)
Chapter 4
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Orr sits across from Lelache and fills her in on his predicament. He argues that Haber’s method of treating him, which involves coercing him to dream specific dreams, infringes on his... (full context)
The Limits of Utilitarianism  Theme Icon
Dreams and the Limitations of Knowledge  Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance  Theme Icon
Power and Selfishness  Theme Icon
...to continue. Orr tells Lelache about his ability to dream effectively, and his fear that Haber is abusing this ability “for ends of his own, without [Orr’s] consent.” He tells her... (full context)
The Limits of Utilitarianism  Theme Icon
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...while, she asks Orr to explain what it is that he finds so unacceptable about Haber using his dreams to change reality—assuming any of it is true. Orr states plainly that... (full context)
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...and moral anguish, so Orr tries harder to explain how the dreams work and why Haber should be wary of messing with them.  Orr proposes a hypothetical situation in which Haber... (full context)
The Limits of Utilitarianism  Theme Icon
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Cosmic Balance  Theme Icon
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...willing to act as his lawyer and request to attend one of his sessions with Haber. Lelache is willing to do this, though she cautions Orr that bringing in a lawyer... (full context)
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Orr reiterates that he doesn’t want to get Haber in trouble—he really does believe the doctor means well—but he stands behind his desire “to... (full context)
Chapter 5
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It’s March 24. William Haber makes his way across the cool, marble floor of the Oregon Oneirological Institute. Penny Crouch... (full context)
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Haber sits at his desk and gets started on the “hackwork” that comes with the “running... (full context)
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...wears loud, metal jewelry, including a ring that depict[s] “a horribly ugly African mask design.” Haber thinks that Lelache’s display is itself a mask, “a lot of sound and fury signifying... (full context)
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Lelache asks Haber how he decides which “stimuli” to use on patients, which is a subject Haber has... (full context)
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Lelache presses further, asking Haber what the Augmentor actually does. Lelache’s nosiness annoys Haber, but he tries not to show... (full context)
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Haber is grateful when his desk communicator buzzes, alerting him to Orr’s arrival. Orr enters Haber’s... (full context)
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Once Orr is in a trance, Haber asks him to name something that worries him. Orr responds, “overpopulation.” Haber begins the process... (full context)
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Haber instructs Orr to dream of an “uncrowded” world, motioning for Lelache to watch the EEG... (full context)
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Haber turns off the Augmentor once Orr is deep inside his dream. He and Lelache watch... (full context)
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Suddenly, it occurs to Haber that he assumed Lelache wouldn’t see Orr’s dream become reality because he himself had failed... (full context)
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 Lelache is still staring at the diminished skyline. Haber senses that she doesn’t quite believe what she’s seeing, which puts him at ease. Haber... (full context)
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Though Haber tries to act casually, he’s having a hard time wrapping his mind around the fact... (full context)
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When Haber tires of small talk, he calls Orr’s name three times. Orr wakes up, looks out... (full context)
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Though Haber sees tears in Orr’s eyes, he continues to discuss Orr’s nightmare about the Plague exclusively... (full context)
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Orr stares silently and incredulously at Haber before divulging the rest of his dream. He describes working for the Interment Corps, digging... (full context)
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After Orr leaves, Haber apologizes for the “crisis session” Lelache had to witness and rags on Orr for being... (full context)
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Alone in his office, Haber removes a bottle of bourbon from his desk. He looks out the window at the... (full context)
Chapter 6
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...doesn’t actually exist. Orr arrives home and lies down in bed. He vows to stop Haber and “take his destiny into his own hands,” though he knows he won’t be able... (full context)
The Limits of Utilitarianism  Theme Icon
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Cosmic Balance  Theme Icon
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...he comes up for air. It’s not just moral obligation that keeps him from leaving Haber. If Orr stops going to Volunteer Therapy, he’ll be sent to prison or institutionalized for... (full context)
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...to talk, and Orr accepts. Lelache grumbles about the futility of assembling a case against Haber, noting all the steps Haber has taken to ensure that his experiments on Orr appear... (full context)
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Lelache asks if all of Orr’s sessions with Haber leave him feeling so out of sorts, and he admits that although the Plague dream... (full context)
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...the psychological burden of maintaining a double memory and is suppressing whatever she saw in Haber’s office today. The thought makes Orr feel sad and alone. (full context)
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Before going to bed, Orr takes a dream-suppressing pill, though Haber warned him he’d eventually develop a tolerance to the drug. Orr sleeps deeply tonight, but... (full context)
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Orr enters Haber’s office and demands that Haber stop using his dreams. “I want to be cured,” Orr... (full context)
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Haber’s exuberant demeanor grows dark as he accuses Orr of being “peculiarly passive” for someone belonging... (full context)
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Haber prepares Orr for today’s session.  He’s started to drug Orr to make him less resistant... (full context)
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Haber hypnotizes Orr, who begins to dream. Orr’s dream begins in darkness. From darkness, fields emerge.... (full context)
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When Orr comes to, he’s trembling. Haber wonders why Orr’s dream was so disturbing to him, since Haber’s instructions were to dream... (full context)
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After reviewing the footage, Orr decides his dream has technically stayed within Haber’s guidelines, since all the dream’s violence occurred in space, not “on Earth.” Haber pauses and... (full context)
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Orr replies that while he obviously agrees with Haber that ending the war was a good thing, his subconscious can’t conceive of a completely... (full context)
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Haber breaks his silence to assure Orr that the Aliens pose no immediate danger to the... (full context)
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Orr warns Haber that he’s on the brink of mental collapse and begs him not to make him... (full context)
Chapter 7
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...Orr bails on Heather, she searches for him everywhere, including his flat. She contemplates calling Haber but remembers that Haber can’t know that she and Orr know each other. Heather calls... (full context)
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...to dream. Orr knows he can’t keep this up forever, but he needed to escape Haber. He wonders if the only way to stop his effective dreams is to kill himself,... (full context)
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Orr asks Heather what happened to her in Haber’s office on Friday. Heather admits that she has a double memory like Orr. It’s hard... (full context)
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...Aliens were his creation, and he fills her in on his subconscious’s insane response to Haber’s hypnosuggestion to “dream about peace.”  Heather tells Orr that he didn’t create the Aliens on... (full context)
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Orr talks a bit about Haber’s constant condescension and manipulation, but there’s no “bitterness” or “resentment” in his words, and Heather... (full context)
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Orr and Heather assess Orr’s options for dealing with Orr’s effective dreams and Haber’s abuse of them. Heather says Orr doesn’t have any legal case against Haber: he’s not... (full context)
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...she can hypnotize Orr and feed him a hypnosuggestion to have an effective dream about Haber that makes him more invested in curing Orr and less invested in ruling the world.... (full context)
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...Orr is in a trance, she tells him to have an effective dream in which Haber is honest and no longer power-hungry, and in which the Aliens are no longer on... (full context)
Chapter 8
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From the yet-unbroken window of his office in the Institute Building, Haber looks down at the havoc below. He fled here after many failed attempts at trying... (full context)
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Haber hears people ascending the staircase down the hall and suddenly recognizes Orr, who is limping,... (full context)
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Haber takes Orr downstairs to get something to eat before they undergo a therapy session to... (full context)
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Haber asks Orr if the Alien invasion “just happen[ed]” or if Orr created it himself, and... (full context)
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Haber and Orr return to Haber’s office just in time to see the window shatter. They... (full context)
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After Heather leaves, Haber turns on a Hypnotape he’d recorded earlier to hypnotize Orr, but the chaos unfolding outside... (full context)
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Haber wraps himself around the Augmentor to protect it while keeping a close eye on the... (full context)
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But much to Haber’s surprise, the rod emits speech. In a flat, mechanical voice, the Alien informs Haber that... (full context)
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Haber notices that the explosions have stopped, though there are still sirens wailing in the distance... (full context)
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Orr changes the subject, urging Haber to use his Government connections to call Washington and explain that the “invasion” has all... (full context)
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Before Orr can elaborate, Haber gets to work convincing the Government to call off the attack on the Aliens. Orr... (full context)
Chapter 9
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...he’s in, but this is no longer the case after last Monday’s dream, in which Haber made him drastically restructure the Federal and State Governments as part of some bigger plan. (full context)
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...could rely on the static unchangeability of things like geography and “human nature.” Ever since Haber learned how to use the Augmentor to exercise more precise control over Orr’s dreams, though,... (full context)
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...the Heather he’d known was brown, but everyone in this world is gray, ever since Haber made him dream of a world without “a racial problem.” Orr realizes that he won’t... (full context)
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Haber, in contrast, has only grown more powerful and self-assured with every new continuum, and Orr... (full context)
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Orr walks to the West Wing and enters Haber’s magnificent, half-acre office suite. Haber is in his office making adjustments to the Augmentor. Haber... (full context)
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After Haber finishes working on the Augmentor, he tells Orr they’re going to try something new today... (full context)
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Haber presents Orr with a hypothetical situation in which Orr stumbles upon a woman who’s alone... (full context)
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As Haber finishes applying electrodes to Orr’s scalp, Orr mentions the Citizen’s Arrest for euthanasia he witnessed... (full context)
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Haber tells Orr to keep his eyes open.  He switches on the Augmentor, and Orr is... (full context)
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Orr is back in Haber’s office. Haber is freaked out: apparently, Orr’s thoughts had produced odd, intense brainwaves in his... (full context)
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Haber restarts the EEG and makes Orr undergo a second session. In this session, Orr remains... (full context)
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When Orr’s final session is over and Haber detaches him from the machine, Orr finds that the “serenity” he experienced earlier is still... (full context)
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Haber tries to reason with Orr that it’s illogical to quit now, after they’ve made so... (full context)
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Orr and Haber continue to argue back and forth. Orr realizes it’s useless to try to communicate with... (full context)
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Orr tries to convince Haber that undergoing an effective dream by himself will be dangerous, but Haber is too wrapped... (full context)
Chapter 10
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Orr, on the other hand, grows more distant from Haber with each new continuum, and the aspects of the world Haber coerced him into creating... (full context)
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...Heather takes Orr in her arms, pleading with her husband not to go back to Haber, who is “destroying” him. Orr laughs, insisting that nothing can destroy him if he “ha[s]... (full context)
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...trolley, she’s filled with a feeling of intense love for him. Heather vows to destroy Haber if he hurts Orr. Heather rarely thinks of violence—she doesn’t even swear—but she feels “bolder”... (full context)
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Haber appears in a doorway as Orr is signing in with the autoreceptionist; Heather has met... (full context)
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Orr, Heather, and Haber enter Haber’s office. Haber, whom Heather describes as “huge, like a grizzly bear,” begins attaching... (full context)
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As Heather watches Orr sleep, Haber turns on the Augmentor. He fiddles with the equipment as Orr drifts between dreams. Haber... (full context)
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Haber turns to Orr, who is sleeping, and prompts him to nod if he can hear... (full context)
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Haber asks Orr to recall his dream. Orr correctly remembers the dream about the Mount Hood... (full context)
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Haber is immensely pleased with the session’s success. He laughs too long and loudly before announcing... (full context)
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Orr asks Haber if he knows what “iahklu’” means. Haber doesn’t. Orr tells Haber it would be wise... (full context)
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Haber dismisses Orr’s advice as mystical mumbo-jumbo and as the antithesis of logic. Orr makes a... (full context)
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Orr tells Heather he needs to return to Haber’s office, ordering her to wait for him in the restaurant. Heather doesn’t listen and follows... (full context)
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...noise that sounds “false, like cracked bells.” The burning smell is worse here. Orr enters Haber’s office, but nothing exists beyond the door. He cries out for help and realizes he... (full context)
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...by touch and turns it off, which propels the world back into existence. Orr and Haber are no longer in the HURAD tower, but in a junky, average office Orr doesn’t... (full context)
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Orr becomes physically scared of Haber and leaves to get help, passing through the unfamiliar office, unfamiliar waiting room, and exiting... (full context)
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Orr doesn’t help Haber. There’s nothing he can do for him. He walks through the streets and ends up... (full context)
Chapter 11
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...hardly ever moves. They reach the room, and the orderly unlocks the door to reveal Haber sitting on the bed, staring blankly ahead. (full context)
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Orr tries to speak to Haber, but his words fail him, and he feels a mixture of “excruciating pity, and fear”... (full context)
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...downtown Portland and heads back to work. He’d taken a long lunch break to visit Haber, but his employer, E’nememen Asfah, doesn’t care when he works so long as he finishes... (full context)