 Originally Posted by mjr350
Hi Guys. I came across this site after looking for a few answers and it looks like the place to be.
I had a dream last night where I was handing a guy a booklet over a counter but accidentally bumped another booklet off the counter and on to the ground. Now at that exact point of hitting the ground, a piece of A4 paper fell off my bed side table onto the ground and I woke up.
The problem is, it took a few seconds to bump the booklet off the counter before it made the sound of hitting the ground. How did my mind know that the external sound was coming or did my subconscious hold onto the sound and only let me physically hear it once it had decided to set up a scenario in the dream.
I've also had gunshots and explosions in dreams that have woken both me and my missus up (so it was an external noise) that also had a lead up to in a dream.
Cheers guys
I hope you can help me understand what happened.
I've always been interested in dreaming but never knew that there were sites dedicated to dreaming.
This has happened to me! But the time delays for me have been greater. For example, in my dream i am waiting by the door for someone I'm expecting. All of the sudden i hear a loud bang and the door burst open because the person has knocked it open. The external sound was my bedroom window that sometimes slams shut in a heavy breeze. How did my brain retroactively create the dream scenario where i was waiting for someone to knock, if the actual sound came after that scenario was played out? I do think the brain hears the sound and then goes back and sets up a scenario and chain of events that leads to the sound-causing event in the dream. But rather then this being a function of the brain delaying my hearing until it has time to set up the scenario, I have wondered if this is just an example of dreams operating outside time. In other words, the dream is not really occurring real time; rather, you could have heard that window shut, and then an entire dream about all sorts of events could be created and "dreamed" right there on the spot. It feels as if it has occurred in real time, but it hasn't. It's just synaptic event that creates an timeline illusion.
Perhaps the brain-delays-the-hearing-then-retroactively-creates-a-scenario explanation is better, but just a thought.
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