This actually gives me an opportunity to expound upon a theory of mine!! I've often found that my sensitivity level while dreaming is way, way out of whack with real life. The sheer magnitudes of euphoria, sadness, fear, anger are astonishing when recalled later while awake. It is as though being embodied carries an emotional inertia in addition to the physical. Or, perhaps more probably, whatever part of the brain that is responsible for emotional inertia is among those parts of the brain turned off while sleeping/dreaming, like the part of the brain that turns my thinking "run!" into leg motion, or sadness into tears.
How would you rate your emotional experience while dreaming? Do your responses seem pretty much the same as they would be if you received the same prompts while awake?The most recent one. APPARENTLY I have two more movies to see now though.Originally Posted by Androidpk
Hasta pronto, porque la vida no termina aqui...
America, stop pushing. I know what I'm doing.
I could be wrong on this and I'm entirely too lazy to look it up, but I believe this particular part is still very much online while you sleep, but the body puts out a chemical that stops the signals from getti, or something. Consider dogs' legs twitching in their sleep, or people who talk, etc.
I'd say my emotions are roughly what they would be if I encountered an identical situation when awake. The problem is, it's physically impossible to encounter an identical situation, because the rational part of your brain takes a vacation while you sleep. You perceive things differently, because there's no part of your head going, "I know that looks like a 6' tall tarantula, but guess what? Those don't exist. It must be plastic. See, look there, next to the eye. Notice that mechanical bit when it turns just so? Yeah." Obviously a man-sized tarantula is an extreme example, but that general idea applies to perfectly ordinary things like leg shaving too.How would you rate your emotional experience while dreaming? Do your responses seem pretty much the same as they would be if you received the same prompts while awake?The most recent one.
This, pretty much. Although with one exception - I once had a dream that I was living in my old best friend's parent's house, but in the attic. Which was full of bugs (including bigass spiders), and when I tried to sleep, they'd crawl out over the walls and over my head. If I encountered a situation like that in real life, I probably would have had a fear-induced heart attack. In the dream I was afraid but also killing them without issue.
What Liagala said, rationality usually flies out the window when it comes to dreams. I had a dream the other night where I was actually in my real bedroom and I didn't realize I was dreaming. I walked over to the window, pulled down my pants, and started pissing on the AC unit. At first I was like damn, I really had to go. It wasn't until a few minutes later when I was like wait a minute, WTF am I doing??