'And there are other earths and skies than these'

Dec 27, 2011 22:37

It's pleasant, waking up from dreams, for the reason Li Bai adduces up there in the subject line. For all the mindful 'be where you are' Buddhist teachings, one must admit that where one is has a certain dull sameness to it. Same house, same job, same city, same me. A dream is a trip to elsewhere, a view outside of one's narrow reality. So I ( Read more... )

rl_11, dreams, verse

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flemmings December 28 2011, 14:05:30 UTC
Fiction can do it too, and frequently does. Movies as well, though I rarely find one that shows me a reality I want to be in. But the appeal of dreams for me is that it's a personal private reality, just as 'reality' is. I created it and only I see it, but it has charming twists that 'reality' lacks and that waking me could never have thought of.

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incandescens December 28 2011, 18:25:24 UTC
Yes, part of the reason I want dreams is the input from something/somewhere else, something outside me. And fiction, too. I need to get outside my own limits.

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flemmings December 28 2011, 18:42:12 UTC
How often have I mourned that my dreaming mind is more wildly creative than my waking one. This may be true of most people, in fact-- strange juxtapositions that are in fact organic, exhilarating leaps of association, and in my case, ordinary people of a depth and emotional complexity that I can't even envision in real life, where people seem much more typecast.

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avalonjones December 28 2011, 22:21:02 UTC
The dream world is almost invariably preferable to the real one, unless it's one of those earthquake nightmares I keep having.

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flemmings December 28 2011, 22:53:08 UTC
Err well yes, nightmares aside, I mean.

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