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- Newsgroups: sci.bio
- Path: sparky!uunet!tcsi.com!iat.holonet.net!ken
- From: ken@iat.holonet.net (Ken Easlon)
- Subject: Re: "Falling" Asleep
- Message-ID: <C0Io7F.BrH@iat.holonet.net>
- Organization: HoloNet National Internet Access BBS: 510-704-1058/modem
- References: <1993Jan6.182906.23437@spruce.pfc.forestry.ca>
- Date: Fri, 8 Jan 1993 03:54:49 GMT
- Lines: 56
-
- In article <1993Jan6.182906.23437@spruce.pfc.forestry.ca> ,
- rwinder@PFC.Forestry.CA (Richard Winder) writes quoting Easlon:
-
-
- >>Nonetheless, whenever I awake I can almost always remember the most
- >> recent flash or two of the mental activity that I call dreams. Over the
- >> years I've developed a pretty good idea of some of the properties common
- >> to these dreams, and some of the more interesting include:
- >>
- >> A sense of "down" in the direction of my feet rather than in the
- >> direction of the center of the earth.
- >>
- >> A pronounced absence of gravitational sensation, such as:
- >> . the sense of effort in maintaining the kind of posture the
- >> dream depicted or
- >> . the pressure of the real bed or dream ground pressing itself
- >> against my body
-
- > This is not common to all dreams. I've experienced many with a
- >pronounced sense of gravity, and many without. I seems to depend on the
- >symbolism your mind is working with at the moment, and your physical
- >condition. By gravity, I mean that while I am dreaming, I am occasionally
- >aware that I am really lying prone, and aware of which direction `down'
- >really is. It just doesn't affect the dream that much. At other times,
- >I have indeed `imagined' gravity in a direction other than my true
- >orientation.
- >Particularly when flying... :-)
-
- I think we're in total agreement here, it's just a matter of clarifying the
- terminology. I distinguish the sense of "down" from the perception of
- gravity (pressure, effort) because I believe the sense of "down" in dreams
- is imagined, coming from the direction of my feet when I dream I am
- standing, where gravity perception when I drift back to wakefulness is
- coming from another angle.
-
- I also have dreamed of lying down. I even dream of lying in bed awake
- sometimes, and it's really hard to tell in the morning just how much of my
- wakefulness was real and how much was dreamed.
-
- The sense of "down" for me is best exemplified by flying dreams
- particularly when I am exceptionally tired. I picture myself trying to
- clear those damned electric high lines, and as likely as not failing to get
- that high. The imagined gravity is rather like being under water, or
- perhaps on the moon, a gentle tug that keeps me from flying away, but
- nothing like the perception of real gravity.
-
- Incidentally, when flying dreams occur toward morning when I'm well rested,
- I can generally make it to a respectable altitude.
-
-
- --
- Ken Easlon | "...somebody spoke and I went into a dream..."
- ken@holonet.net | -Paul McCartney
- Pleasantly Unaffiliated |
-
-
-