Tuesday, Oct. 2nd:
I watched (or maybe lead) a tour of some loading docks. A pair of MacRO workers tied up bales of cardboard. Someone on the tour said we should take the bales with us. The workers debated the strange requested and concluded they didn't care what we did. The tour-goer excitedly explained that the bales of cardboard must be very
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I think that actually makes them more memorable, because each scene is a distinct image that reminds me of things. When I have a dream that seems very long and happens all in one place, I usually can't remember very much of it. For example, long conversations seem profound in dreams, but on waking I can only remember sentence fragments that don't fit together, and they can't carry the weight of forgotten emotions.
There were a couple times that I had a dream earlier in the night and actually woke up (I think because they were nightmares), then went back to sleep and dreamed something else. Those are pretty hazy, usually just an image stamped on my brain with the ink of FEAR.
Are you adequately hydrated when you sleep? If so, that could be your problem.
More likely, though, you are just too good at sleeping.
Do you ever wake up with song in your head you haven't heard in months? Or wake up and try to remember something, and get a song instead of the thing you were looking for?
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