Yes. I had an LD last night and I remembered cuts, not natural walking transportation etc. |
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I've been recording my dreams on and off for years, and I don't think I've ever recorded a scene transition that wasn't a "cut." For example, I might be in my family room, then I'm in the dining room, then I'm in the kitchen, then I'm outside - but I have no memories of actually walking to room. As another example, last night I dreamed I was in my car, waiting at a red light to turn; then I was on the on-ramp; then I was on the Interstate in the middle of a turn; then I was beginning a merge with another road. In each case, the dream cut between each scene - no turning from the road onto the on-ramp, no merging from the on-ramp onto the Interstate, no approaching the merge. |
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[36] DILD [0] WILD [0] DEILD
Goals:[*] Fly [ ] Swim and feel wet [ ] Throw a fireball
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Yes. I had an LD last night and I remembered cuts, not natural walking transportation etc. |
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Almost all my non lucid dreams if not all my non lucid dreams are filled with cuts, but i have several cases of lucid dreams where i have walked from places to places. But yes, it seems to be a natural thing. Maybe has to do with awareness? I don't know... |
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I have had non-lucid dreams with and without cuts...but ponder this! |
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Last edited by fogelbise; 11-09-2013 at 01:45 AM.
Happens to me all the time too... Unless the next destination is within direct line of sight of where I am or maybe an intense sequence, it seems to cut over especially in non-lucids. My lucids seem to be a little more linear, a lot of times I attribute the cuts in those to lapses in my recall and not necessarily the dream itself. Maybe it's the same cause in both? Never really put that much thought into it. I don't intentionally cut scenes in my lucids just because I enjoy the linear progression (unless you count the occasional door teleport). Maybe in regular dreams our subconscious just does that to "get on with it" and cut out the boring parts. |
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This is quite common in dreaming, and are caused by dream archetypes, which The Cusp explains very well in this post: |
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They say dreaming is dead, no one does it anymore.
It's not dead it's just that it's been forgotten, removed from our language.
Nobody teaches it so nobody knows it exists.
The dreamer is banished to obscurity.
Well, I'm trying to change all that, and I hope you are too.
By dreaming, every day.
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