• Lucid Dreaming - Dream Views




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    1. #1
      Lurker Dandelion's Avatar
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      Recall and the Limits of Language

      I first began recording my dreams with pen and paper. Whenever I'd wake up with images fresh in my mind, I'd jot down a few words and phrases and roll back over to sleep. At least half of the time this was sufficient enough to help me remember the dreams later on. Rarely though did I bother to expand my notes into full coherent stories.

      I've recently begun audio recording my dreams as it's quicker than writing. I've found though that I will often lie silent for moments at a time just thinking of what exactly I mean to say, regardless of how vivid the dream felt when I first awoke. When I do eventually complete a particularly complex thought, I wonder how much it's been subconsciously reduced just so that it may be said. These statements feel so lacking.

      I try to remedy this later when I'm typing my dreams out, not half asleep. I can't help but spend an inordinate amount of time doing this, but any poet knows the satisfaction of expressing the essence of a thing. Still, the dream itself has long since passed and I'm working within the confines of a logical brain. How true is the story format to the nature of a dream? The formats of space and time? I feel like I'm cheating the experience of my dreams when I reduce them to words, but I know if I didn't they would quickly dissolve in my all-too-holistic memory.

      It's frustrating to come to terms with the limits of comprehension. Some of my dreams feel so enlightening, and within seconds of waking I can lose my grasp on what I beheld. Everything becomes reduced to concepts--unspeakable, only felt. Part of the reason I continue to recall and record is the yearning to hold these impressions closer.

      Do you ever struggle to write out your dreams?
      Last edited by Dandelion; 11-11-2011 at 08:21 AM.

    2. #2
      See, for yourself ShadowOfSelf's Avatar
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      I know exactly what you mean
      Its quite frustrating, though intruiging all the same

      I find it interesting how a dream character could say a word or sentence in a dream to me, it makes perfect sense, then when i wake up and recal what was said, its in a totally different language or entirely incomprehensible, leaving me to find a similair word or description. Its like we talk telepathicly in the dream, and the dream fills in the blanks with 'words', though its probally quite true as the whole dream is within our head, but still so cool, yet somewhat annoying.

    3. #3
      Member vbooy57's Avatar
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      I actually rarely have difficult writing out my dreams. I write a blow-by-blow description of what I remember, and I've taken half an hour writing down my dreams. With these descriptions, I can recall dreams I had two years ago and pull up images from them and even thoughts I've had during them. I guess it just depends on who you are.
      "Don't worry, nobody lives forever," - David Gilmour

      "It's only a lifetime," - David Gilmour

      "Nothing ever lasts forever." - Burton C. Bell

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