It is a reality check for most people because either the characters switch around when looking at them at separate times or they don't look right (the characters may make no sense or be distorted). |
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In both lucid and non-lucid dreams, I can read just fine and characters look like they should in real life. I've been able to since I was little. Apparently this is a rare, sought-after skill. |
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It is a reality check for most people because either the characters switch around when looking at them at separate times or they don't look right (the characters may make no sense or be distorted). |
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Okay... So being able to read sounds like a bad thing. Are there ever times in dreams where you want to read? |
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It isn't bad, it's just unique. Not everybody does the text RC, just so that you know. |
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cool, i can read in dreams to. and my DCs never say anything stupid or wierd. |
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Dude. Bruh
There are reasons to read in dreams, to read a good dream book is always good and entertaining! Not so much doing the librarian job, but ah well, someone has to do it. |
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Characters and words usually don't switch around or look weird for me, either. It's usually the time on a digital clock that changes, either when I look away or when I'm looking right at it. In a lucid, I've written "yo, this is rad" in a sandbox, so I know that my writing can be legible too. |
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We all live in a kind of continuous dream. When we wake, it is because something,
some event, some pinprick even, disturbs the edges of what we have taken as reality.
Vandermeer
SAT (Sporadic Awareness Technique) Guide
Have questions about lucid dreaming? DM me.
just reminded me of part of my dream last night. i was in a room that had handwritten notes all around it. i was studying them and i really felt that i could feel the emotions and the personality of whoever had written them just through the way the letters were formed |
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