(December 23, 2018 at 12:13 am)T0 Th3 M4X Wrote:(December 22, 2018 at 11:44 pm)Rahn127 Wrote: Sorry, no food poisoning. This was a normal dream for me. Nothing weird happened.
When I have a weird dream, it gets mighty weird.
Maybe a chemical reaction to something then. Rat poison, swallowing too much toothpaste, or something. I dunno. Lots of things can give you weird dreams. They could even be self-induced. Like when you're anxious about something, and your mind starts playing tricks on you in the form of a dream. Admittedly, I've had that happen to me before.
I feel like you're missing the point of the post.
I'm looking to discuss the mental physics that our minds use to create a dream world. And given that, how our own sense of self attempts to break those rules.
In reality, our minds do the very best to copy the environment that our senses sends it through the electrical impulses that generate in our eyes, ears, sense of touch, smell & taste.
A concrete wall in our minds is hard because it copies all the properties that we have learned about concrete walls through our senses.
We sense reality.
But in our dreams, the physics dynamic is a bit different because we aren't sensing a real concrete wall.
It's only a mental construct based upon the real one that we know of.
My question revolves around how we or more specifically, I, am able to create powers that can bypass the mental constructs within my own dreams and the dynamic that must be playing out between a mind trying to create order and a sense of self trying to circumvent it.
Insanity - Doing the same thing over and over again, expecting a different result


