Now this is a very interesting topic for me as you may remember from our fone conversations, Paul. Many people around our age I try to fire up a conversation about dreaming with their answer is usually simply: "I don't remember my dreams." As a kid I had many horrible and vivid nightmares I can still remember as well as my parents telling me about me sleepwalking down stairs and out doors, etc. I think a lot of it may have been health related, at least until I had my tonsils removed when I was almost 8. I doubt any of you own "Dreams" for PS4, but I created one of my childhood nightmares in that. However, I can link to the Twitter video for spoilers!
Anyway, shortly after that age I progressed from "vivid" dreaming to "lucid" dreaming. Not only would I remember every damn experience, I taught myself how to wake myself up once I realized it was a dream that was about to turn bad. I would dream I was blinking as fast as I could.. and then in real life I would be blinking and that would of course pull me out of it.
As I got older I found this to be very exhausting at times. I would go to sleep for like 8 hours but only feel like I'd been asleep for 3-4 because I'd been living a dream for what felt like a day and a half. I can wake up and draw you maps, illustrate areas, describe people both familiar and not, on and on for hours after waking up from certain dreams. Especially the ones where I keep going back to the same areas. Drugs just simply can't compare to this experience, which is why I never tried DMT or any of that other extreme hippy shit.
Sometimes though yeah.. I'll just have a "dumb dream". Those seem to be the best for peaceful sleep. This morning for example I recalled a dream about being at a poolside and staring at my toenails as someone else from a lawn chair glanced at them. Then the toenail transformed into a broken one, all bloodied up like I accidently did to myself years ago.
At any rate, despite all of the side effects that come with this it does help me come up with solutions to every day things and work-related things, as well as many video game ideas. Both Duck Slide Range and my new game were visions from dreams. While I've yet to make much money yet going the creative over the past year and a half or so, it does feel like satisfying work to make things you vividly see in a dream become a reality not only yourself but for others.
I like the way ancient Egypt supposedly thought of the self/soul worked. I believe when we dream some of us are becoming the "Akh" of ourselves. When the "Ka" is gone, that is all that is left. I actually consider this much the way you are consider what is "ROM" in this case. Everyone knows your RAM is wiped when you flatline ;)
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote: Tue Feb 07, 2023 11:49 pm
What is the purpose of non REM sleep then?
I dunno about you but I'd rather go to sleep with the TV on than listening to most REM songs.
pinback wrote: Wed Feb 08, 2023 12:55 am
Wrong.
<Ancient Aliens dude voice>
"But who's to sayyy?"
Now this is a very interesting topic for me as you may remember from our fone conversations, Paul. Many people around our age I try to fire up a conversation about dreaming with their answer is usually simply: "I don't remember my dreams." As a kid I had many horrible and vivid nightmares I can still remember as well as my parents telling me about me sleepwalking down stairs and out doors, etc. I think a lot of it may have been health related, at least until I had my tonsils removed when I was almost 8. I doubt any of you own "Dreams" for PS4, but I created one of my childhood nightmares in that. However, I can link to the Twitter video for spoilers!
https://twitter.com/Jizaboz/status/1262559206961549313?s=20&t=SGZQ-Ylui89-FZ-n9gLi-g
Anyway, shortly after that age I progressed from "vivid" dreaming to "lucid" dreaming. Not only would I remember every damn experience, I taught myself how to wake myself up once I realized it was a dream that was about to turn bad. I would dream I was blinking as fast as I could.. and then in real life I would be blinking and that would of course pull me out of it.
As I got older I found this to be very exhausting at times. I would go to sleep for like 8 hours but only feel like I'd been asleep for 3-4 because I'd been living a dream for what felt like a day and a half. I can wake up and draw you maps, illustrate areas, describe people both familiar and not, on and on for hours after waking up from certain dreams. Especially the ones where I keep going back to the same areas. Drugs just simply can't compare to this experience, which is why I never tried DMT or any of that other extreme hippy shit.
Sometimes though yeah.. I'll just have a "dumb dream". Those seem to be the best for peaceful sleep. This morning for example I recalled a dream about being at a poolside and staring at my toenails as someone else from a lawn chair glanced at them. Then the toenail transformed into a broken one, all bloodied up like I accidently did to myself years ago.
At any rate, despite all of the side effects that come with this it does help me come up with solutions to every day things and work-related things, as well as many video game ideas. Both Duck Slide Range and my new game were visions from dreams. While I've yet to make much money yet going the creative over the past year and a half or so, it does feel like satisfying work to make things you vividly see in a dream become a reality not only yourself but for others.
I like the way ancient Egypt supposedly thought of the self/soul worked. I believe when we dream some of us are becoming the "Akh" of ourselves. When the "Ka" is gone, that is all that is left. I actually consider this much the way you are consider what is "ROM" in this case. Everyone knows your RAM is wiped when you flatline ;)
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey" post_id=134764 time=1675838954 user_id=3]
What is the purpose of non REM sleep then?
[/quote]
I dunno about you but I'd rather go to sleep with the TV on than listening to most REM songs.
[quote=pinback post_id=134765 time=1675842930 user_id=5]
Wrong.
[/quote]
<Ancient Aliens dude voice>
"But who's to sayyy?"