Wednesday, October 24, 2007
The reasons behind your dreams
Dreams are easily the third or fourth most interesting habit human beings possess. Science has unsuccessfully tried to uncover the reasons and meanings behind your dreams for the past 60, or maybe even 70 years. The sad truth of the matter is that dreams are wholly unexplainable. However, there is an explanation for dreams, and I am here to truthfully present the facts, in chronological order, to you. Dreams come from the activity of the brain. This is simple to understand if you can believe in this very basic fact: your body might sleep, but your brain is an insomniac. You might be permanently staining your overpaid Tempurpedic-type pillow with drool, but for the eight hours a night you do that, your brain is drinking a French Vanilla Mochacuppachinalatte with three extra packets of sugar while reading Go Ask Alice to better understand why you (the body) suddenly don’t feel like playing basketball anymore. During your brains everlasting activity, you tend to think of different things. It’s difficult for one person to break down what everything your brain comes up with means, so instead I, and I alone, will take care of explaining each unique characteristic. Everyone’s familiar with the falling down dream: where you suddenly receive the sensation that you’re falling to your untimely death, only to awake with not a second more to spare. This dream is usually the result of the natural human desire to be a bird, a cloud, or an airplane. Everyone has an insatiable desire for flight; more specifically, humans want wings, and they would do anything to have them if given the chance. You fall down in your dreams because you want to fall down in reality, without the harm of actually landing somewhere. Too bad.
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1 comment:
Interesting. But no source. No reaction or YOURS.
You might connect this to Brave New World and soma.
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