Guest guest Posted August 8, 2003 Report Share Posted August 8, 2003 Louise Gainor danced around singing: >I levitate in my dreams, too. I usually cross my arms and point my elbows >out, and I'm up! I think I cross my arms because that's how I hold my pillow >at night. I wonder if you pull your legs up in your sleep.... Interesting point. I don't levitate in my dreams, but I do almost always have the ability to fly with arms outstretched -- and I often have my arms out, though not all the way as in the dream. Hmmm. I was told a while back that extremely detailed/vivid dreams, or remembering dreams, is fairly rare... I wonder if the fact that I barely doze when I sleep unless I'm on Neurontin contributes to my almost always having highly detailed/realistic dreams that I can remember. DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 8, 2003 Report Share Posted August 8, 2003 I’ve heard a lot of people say that they dream that they have to take a test, and have anxiety because they didn’t study. In my dreams I studied and know the material, but I just don’t feel like doing it all again. My mom says that means I’m not challenged in my life. Yeah, right! Louis From: jypsy [ janet norman-bain ] >Louise Gainor wrote: > > > I have that dream (nightmare?) too. I always feel like someone made a > > clerical mistake and I didn't really graduate, so I have to go back > > and finish. > >I am always wondering why I am back in high school; in the dream, I can >clearly remember graduating and going to college... I can never remember the combination to my locker..... -jypsy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 8, 2003 Report Share Posted August 8, 2003 They had this thing in Omni magazine (anyone else remember that mag?) about “Lucid Dreaming”. You’re supposed to think about what you want to do in your dream, then when you go to bed you imagine that you are spinning around (like a board game spinner). Then when you fall asleep you’re supposed to be able to direct your dreams. I tried it a couple of times, and it actually does work (if you don’t make yourself sick with the spinning). I had to stop though; it got really weird on me. The last time I did it I woke up from my dream and was lying in bed, with my eyes open, looking out into the hallway of my house, and I was completely paralyzed. I could not move one single muscle, couldn’t roll over, nothing. My heart was pumping really hard, but I wasn’t breathing any faster and I couldn’t even blink. I decided then that I wasn’t messing around with my sleep anymore. I must have eventually fallen back to sleep, because I woke up in the morning and was fine. The whole thing could have been a dream, but I wasn’t going there again! Louis From: DeGraf Sent: Friday, August 08, 2003 11:45 PM To: AutisticSpectrumTreeHouse Subject: RE: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) Louise Gainor danced around singing: >I levitate in my dreams, too. I usually cross my arms and point my elbows >out, and I'm up! I think I cross my arms because that's how I hold my pillow >at night. I wonder if you pull your legs up in your sleep.... Interesting point. I don't levitate in my dreams, but I do almost always have the ability to fly with arms outstretched -- and I often have my arms out, though not all the way as in the dream. Hmmm. I was told a while back that extremely detailed/vivid dreams, or remembering dreams, is fairly rare... I wonder if the fact that I barely doze when I sleep unless I'm on Neurontin contributes to my almost always having highly detailed/realistic dreams that I can remember. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 , I don't know; I'm not on any medication and I have dreams like that quite often. It's the " lucid dreams " --the ones in which I realize I'm dreaming and know what's going on--that are rare for me. RE: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) Louise Gainor danced around singing: >I levitate in my dreams, too. I usually cross my arms and point my elbows >out, and I'm up! I think I cross my arms because that's how I hold my pillow >at night. I wonder if you pull your legs up in your sleep.... Interesting point. I don't levitate in my dreams, but I do almost always have the ability to fly with arms outstretched -- and I often have my arms out, though not all the way as in the dream. Hmmm. I was told a while back that extremely detailed/vivid dreams, or remembering dreams, is fairly rare... I wonder if the fact that I barely doze when I sleep unless I'm on Neurontin contributes to my almost always having highly detailed/realistic dreams that I can remember. DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Newstead danced around singing: >I don't know; I'm not on any medication and I have dreams like that quite >often. Oops, I think I worded my original sentence correctly. I meant that I have the detailed dreams *off* medication. If I am *on* meds, then I barely dream at all, and have far more nightmares. >It's the " lucid dreams " --the ones in which I realize I'm dreaming and know >what's going on--that are rare for me. I used to be able to control things all the time when I was younger. I'm not sure why I can't do it as well now, or why I keep having so many unpleasant dreams. DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Louise wrote: >The last time I did it I woke up from my dream and was lying in >bed, with my eyes open, looking out into the hallway of my house, >and I was completely paralyzed. I could not move one single >muscle, couldn’t roll over, nothing. My heart was pumping really >hard, but I wasn’t breathing any faster and I couldn’t even >blink. I go through spates of those dreams occasionally, and I hate it intensely. I wake up and am paralyzed - totally. Then, I wake up and realize it was just a dream -- but I am still paralyzed. Sometimes I wake up three or four times. By the end, I am wrenching on myself with all my (mental/emotional/psychic) strength, trying to force my eye to blink or my nostril to twitch or ANYTHING to bring me out of it. Exhausting. Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 , The lucid dreams are a fairly recent phenomenon for me. The first one I actually remember being able to control took place about two years ago. Why, I can only guess. Perhaps as we gain more control and confidence over our waking lives, we exhibit those same qualities in our dreams? Perhaps you feel you've *lost* some control in your life these past few years? Someone mentioned deliberately causing oneself to spin in a dream. I had the opposite happen--I was spinning wildly in my dream, so much I actually felt motion-sick, and was able to immediately slow down and stop once I realized I was dreaming. I used to be able to control things all the time when I was younger. I'm not sure why I can't do it as well now, or why I keep having so many unpleasant dreams. DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 wrote: > That sounds like sleep paralysis, yes. I had sleep paralysis almost nightly for a few years (late 80s to early 90s). I never got used to it; it was always frightening, although I was able to ride it into a lucid dream state on occasion. I like lucid dreams; I stick with them (ie stay asleep on purpose) whenever I can. I do not have full control in a lucid dream; I often give myself the ability to fly, but I cannot control how high or fast I will fly (I fly slowly and no more than ten feet off the ground). Once I was lucid dreaming and I decided to conjure up a female... I did, and she turned out to be a prostitute. Doh!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Jane wrote: >A few years ago, I spent a few days in the hospital with >pneimonia. {snip story about hallucinating} I had a similar experience once as a child when I was *very* sick (flu, iirc). I wasn't hospitalized or put on any drugs, but I was so sick that i was hallucinating anyway. I remember one particularly spectacular one, where I was a small boy in some kind of large Viking warriors' hall like they used to have so long ago. It was filled with warriors who were feasting and drinking and generally making merry, and one of them passed me a large stein and told me that beer hadn't been invented yet, but that when it was, it would taste like that. I took a drink from the stein and spit it out, disgusted at the taste, and all the warriors in the hall laughed at me. It was a very, very weird experience. --Parrish Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Can anyone send me the link for the article in Omni? BTW, I have a colleague on the spectrum, who not only can control his dreams, but dreams in colour. Colin. RE: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) Louise Gainor danced around singing: >I levitate in my dreams, too. I usually cross my arms and point my elbows >out, and I'm up! I think I cross my arms because that's how I hold my pillow >at night. I wonder if you pull your legs up in your sleep.... Interesting point. I don't levitate in my dreams, but I do almost always have the ability to fly with arms outstretched -- and I often have my arms out, though not all the way as in the dream. Hmmm. I was told a while back that extremely detailed/vivid dreams, or remembering dreams, is fairly rare... I wonder if the fact that I barely doze when I sleep unless I'm on Neurontin contributes to my almost always having highly detailed/realistic dreams that I can remember. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Anyone else have PTSD? I have suffered with it for a while. Colin. ----- Original Message ----- > These days, while I quite often recognize I'm dreaming, I rarely do > anything about it. The only exception is that I know *very* well how to > wake myself up from nightmares, and will not hesitate to do so. (Which > is a very handy talent if you happen to have PTSD and near-nightly > nightmares.) > > > > -- > " An inability to read body language or intonation or even auditory > comprehension is not necessary to 'sensing' when a 'brick wall' is > approaching you. " -Donna That's called the proprioceptive sense! Most of are heightened in that modality. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Colin Wessels wrote: > BTW, I have a colleague on the spectrum, who not only can control his > dreams, but dreams in colour. Of course he dreams in color. Dreams are in color. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Not really. I had a recurring dream when I was a kid where I was falling down into a valley. I always woke in a sweat just before hitting the bottom. If I recall, it happened at stressful times, but I still have stress, but the recurrence is down to ~1/decade. Colin. RE: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) > > > > I levitate in my dreams, too. I usually cross my arms and point my elbows > > out, and I'm up! I think I cross my arms because that's how I hold my > pillow > > at night. I wonder if you pull your legs up in your sleep.... > > > > Louis > > > > From: Klein > > > > Louise Gainor wrote: > > > > > I have that dream (nightmare?) too. I always feel like someone made a > > > clerical mistake and I didn't really graduate, so I have to go back > > > and finish. > > > > At one point, I realized that I could still levitate. I can levitate in > > a lot of my dreams. I just floated straight forward from the chair and > > pulled my legs up with my hands (I levitate cross-legged) and floated > > around the waiting room/shop > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 At 05:35 PM 8/9/2003 -0700, you wrote: >Colin Wessels wrote: > > > BTW, I have a colleague on the spectrum, who not only can control his > > dreams, but dreams in colour. > >Of course he dreams in color. Dreams are in color. > > I dream in colour can anyone *eat* in their dreams? even when I have had food in my mouth I have never been able to eat it - I woke up my mom said (based on her own dream experiences) she figures it's impossible to eat in your dreams ???? -jypsy ________________________________ Ooops....Wrong Planet! Syndrome Autism Spectrum Resources www.PlanetAutism.com jypsy@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Hi, Your mother is wrong. I not only eat in my dreams, but taste what I'm eating... I dream in colour can anyone *eat* in their dreams? even when I have had food in my mouth I have never been able to eat it - I woke up my mom said (based on her own dream experiences) she figures it's impossible to eat in your dreams ???? -jypsy ________________________________ Ooops....Wrong Planet! Syndrome Autism Spectrum Resources www.PlanetAutism.com jypsy@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 jypsy [ janet norman-bain ] wrote: > I dream in colour Of course... anyone that sees in color would dream in color. Why would dreams not be in color? If my brain can comprehend color from my eyes, why would that same brain not be able to dream up color when I am asleep? I think black and white is an invention of photography and television... someone that had only rods in the eyes may not see color, and may only dream with visual imagery that matches what he can see, but other than that, I cannot imagine where this idea came from. I remember in the movie " Oh God, " the guy said to Burns (as God) that he must be dreaming, so God asked what color his eyes were... he said blue, and God asked " Do you dream in color? " and he said no. Funny the things that people don't realize. A lot of people think that drains only go counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere, but that is false. The Coriolis force is not enough to affect a drain in the way that people think it will. In my shower, it is 50/50 which way it will go, and I can reverse it at will by spinning it around the other way with my finger, and it will keep going that way until something disrupts it. Toilets only go one way because the jets at the edge of the rim are angled. > can anyone *eat* in their dreams? even when I have > had food in my mouth I have never been able to eat it - I woke up my > mom said (based on her own dream experiences) she figures it's > impossible to eat in your dreams ???? I can't imagine that being so. I cannot recall eating in dreams, successfully or otherwise. I do not know why it would be impossible to eat in dreams. I have been shot and felt the burning pain in my dreams many times. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 maybe now that we know that we'll be able to I'll go for thick sliced French bread with well aged cheddar (my gc/cf diet show?) night..... -jypsy At 07:59 PM 8/9/2003 -0500, you wrote: >Hi, > >Your mother is wrong. I not only eat in my dreams, but taste what I'm >eating... > > > I dream in colour > can anyone *eat* in their dreams? > even when I have had food in my mouth I have never been able to eat it - I > woke up > my mom said (based on her own dream experiences) she figures it's > impossible to eat in your dreams > ???? > > -jypsy > > > ________________________________ > Ooops....Wrong Planet! Syndrome > Autism Spectrum Resources > www.PlanetAutism.com > jypsy@... > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Whether or not *everyone* dreams in colour is still unproven. What most people remember about their dreams is the *absence* or colour - at least what they remember. That is why I asked the question - who dreams in colour? What I should have asked was - who remembers that they dream in colour? I do not recall any colour content in my dreams. It is like a dimension is missing. the other detail is fairly clear. Colin. BTW dogs are reported to see in monochrome. Perhaps dreams for some do not use all levels of " consciousness " ? Re: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) > jypsy [ janet norman-bain ] wrote: > > > I dream in colour > > Of course... anyone that sees in color would dream in color. Why would > dreams not be in color? If my brain can comprehend color from my eyes, > why would that same brain not be able to dream up color when I am > asleep? I think black and white is an invention of photography and > television... someone that had only rods in the eyes may not see color, > and may only dream with visual imagery that matches what he can see, but > other than that, I cannot imagine where this idea came from. > > I remember in the movie " Oh God, " the guy said to Burns (as God) > that he must be dreaming, so God asked what color his eyes were... he > said blue, and God asked " Do you dream in color? " and he said no. > > Funny the things that people don't realize. A lot of people think that > drains only go counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere, but that is > false. The Coriolis force is not enough to affect a drain in the way > that people think it will. In my shower, it is 50/50 which way it will > go, and I can reverse it at will by spinning it around the other way > with my finger, and it will keep going that way until something disrupts > it. Toilets only go one way because the jets at the edge of the rim are > angled. > > > can anyone *eat* in their dreams? even when I have > > had food in my mouth I have never been able to eat it - I woke up my > > mom said (based on her own dream experiences) she figures it's > > impossible to eat in your dreams ???? > > I can't imagine that being so. I cannot recall eating in dreams, > successfully or otherwise. I do not know why it would be impossible to > eat in dreams. > > I have been shot and felt the burning pain in my dreams many times. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Me too. I am miffed when I wake to find that my favourite food is gone. Colin. Re: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) > Hi, > > Your mother is wrong. I not only eat in my dreams, but taste what I'm eating... > > > I dream in colour > can anyone *eat* in their dreams? > even when I have had food in my mouth I have never been able to eat it - I > woke up > my mom said (based on her own dream experiences) she figures it's > impossible to eat in your dreams > ???? > > -jypsy > > > ________________________________ > Ooops....Wrong Planet! Syndrome > Autism Spectrum Resources > www.PlanetAutism.com > jypsy@... > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 I do. And I have some of the most intense flashbacks that the local pros have ever heard of. Ah the joys of kinesthetic thinking... Kassiane < Re: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) Anyone else have PTSD? I have suffered with it for a while. Colin. ----- Original Message ----- > These days, while I quite often recognize I'm dreaming, I rarely do > anything about it. The only exception is that I know *very* well how to > wake myself up from nightmares, and will not hesitate to do so. (Which > is a very handy talent if you happen to have PTSD and near-nightly > nightmares.) > > > > -- > " An inability to read body language or intonation or even auditory > comprehension is not necessary to 'sensing' when a 'brick wall' is > approaching you. " -Donna That's called the proprioceptive sense! Most of are heightened in that modality. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 I can eat in my dreams. I have really intense dreams, though....intense, lifelike, fully sensate, and for a long period of time 3/4 of them would occur within a week (and some of the other 1/4 still happen years later) Kassiane < Re: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) At 05:35 PM 8/9/2003 -0700, you wrote: >Colin Wessels wrote: > > > BTW, I have a colleague on the spectrum, who not only can control his > > dreams, but dreams in colour. > >Of course he dreams in color. Dreams are in color. > > I dream in colour can anyone *eat* in their dreams? even when I have had food in my mouth I have never been able to eat it - I woke up my mom said (based on her own dream experiences) she figures it's impossible to eat in your dreams ???? -jypsy ________________________________ Ooops....Wrong Planet! Syndrome Autism Spectrum Resources www.PlanetAutism.com jypsy@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Kassiane Yelbis danced around singing: >I can eat in my dreams. I have really intense dreams, though....intense, >lifelike, fully sensate, and for a long period of time 3/4 of them would >occur within a week (and some of the other 1/4 still happen years later) I also tend to have intense dreams that are often precognitive as well -- not in the " this is vaguely similar " sense, but extreme details about places I haven't been and people I haven't met yet. Those typically take place 1 - 5 years later in clumps (that is, three in a month or something similar). I used to write them down every morning upon waking up so I could verify them later (hence my being able to do more than say " gee, feels like deja vu " ) and really should get into that habit again, because I started noticing things coming true again today... DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 <-----Original Message-----> Kassiane Yelbis danced around singing: >I can eat in my dreams. I have really intense dreams, though....intense, >lifelike, fully sensate, and for a long period of time 3/4 of them would >occur within a week (and some of the other 1/4 still happen years later) I also tend to have intense dreams that are often precognitive as well -- not in the " this is vaguely similar " sense, but extreme details about places I haven't been and people I haven't met yet. Those typically take place 1 - 5 years later in clumps (that is, three in a month or something similar). I used to write them down every morning upon waking up so I could verify them later (hence my being able to do more than say " gee, feels like deja vu " ) and really should get into that habit again, because I started noticing things coming true again today...>> Thats how mine are. REALLY detailed. WHen I was 8 I dreamed my first dance class, 10 years later. Creepy, in a way... Kassiane _______________________________________________________________ Get the FREE email that has everyone talking at http://www.mail2world.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2003 Report Share Posted August 9, 2003 Hi , I have dreams like that. I don't know if I could classify them as " precognitive " , as they haven't come true--yet. A few years back I had a recurring dream in which I was in a library and saw books I had that presumably had been written by me, even though I've not written anything yet (or a book on cartoonists that had an entry about me). I could never get a handle on a time frame--anywhere from ten to twenty years in the future. I never get to actually read the darn things, since I wake up before that. Honestly, though, that's probably more wishful thinking than precognition... Re: Dreams (was Re: child/adult...) I also tend to have intense dreams that are often precognitive as well -- not in the " this is vaguely similar " sense, but extreme details about places I haven't been and people I haven't met yet. Those typically take place 1 - 5 years later in clumps (that is, three in a month or something similar). I used to write them down every morning upon waking up so I could verify them later (hence my being able to do more than say " gee, feels like deja vu " ) and really should get into that habit again, because I started noticing things coming true again today... DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2003 Report Share Posted August 10, 2003 In a message dated 8/10/2003 11:00:31 AM Eastern Daylight Time, jane@... writes: > The dream of unknown cities comes again > in cratered darkness full of ruined souls > and ancient fountains playing dust to dust. > The busses are the life-stream, bright as chandeliers, > the ballrooms of a dying celebration. > Crystal faces, flinting light, > are clicking in the midnight wind > of dead and never-sainted desperation. > > Jane > > this was beautiful, Jane, yes. Juli ASD mother to Nicollette Rett Syndrome w/autism Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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