I really like what you said Sageous, but I also feel as though there are benefits to people lying about amazing things they can do in dreams. Even if Mylynes couldn't actually do half of the incredible things he talked about, it inspired me to try to do them.
Back in the day, I played this game called Gunz. There was one guy that played who called himself Monk and he caused some controversy. The vast majority hated the guy because he claimed that he could do a special move without outside programs and they simply thought that was impossible and called him a liar. There was also a minority that believed him and they formed a kind of gaming cult around this guy in which he was their dictator (I was part of that cult). I tried and tried and eventually I was able to do this special move. I found out later that Monk and his top followers never actually could do it and that they all used a macro designed by him just to trawl the community. But even though he was lying, it inspired me to try to break past the believed limitations and I became one of the very first people that could legitimately do these 'impossible moves'.
Mylynes similarly inspired me to try to break past my own limitations of what I thought was possible in dreams, even if they may seem ridiculous like splitting consciousness into 100 different points of awareness or playing more than 30 games of chess at once while remembering where each piece was. People like Mylynes help me to keep climbing this ladder of consciousness to find out for myself whether the limitations or real or imagined.
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