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- From: creubank@is.crl.sony.co.jp (Curtis Eubanks)
- Newsgroups: alt.dreams
- Subject: Re: Some Comments/Questions
- Message-ID: <CREUBANK.92Dec28130843@crls15.is.crl.sony.co.jp>
- Date: 28 Dec 92 04:08:43 GMT
- References: <42871@sdcc12.ucsd.edu>
- Sender: news@is.crl.sony.co.jp (Usenet News System)
- Reply-To: creubank@is.crl.sony.co.jp (Curtis Eubanks)
- Organization: Sony Corporation, Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan.
- Lines: 91
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- In-Reply-To: mcovingt@sdcc13.ucsd.edu's message of 26 Dec 92 07:11:02 GMT
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-
- In article <42871@sdcc12.ucsd.edu> mcovingt@sdcc13.ucsd.edu (Maiko Covington) writes:
-
- |(3) Languages in dreams.... I am bilingual (Japanese and English)
- |and I dream in both languages, often mixed together. In my dreams,
- |there will be people who I know in real life only speak English,
- |speaking Japanese (or the other way round). If there are other
- |bilingual dreamers out there... does this happen with your dreams
- |too, or do you tend to stick to one language for one dream? Do people
- |speak the 'correct' language in your dreams?
-
- I have the same experience. My girlfriend is Taiwanese and we usually
- communicate in Chinese or Japanese. She can speak some English, but
- not fluent by any stretch of the imagination. I had a dream once
- where she was speaking to me in completely fluent English. (Bikkuri
- shita! Mou!)
-
- I have also had dreams where my college Chinese teachers came back (to
- haunt me?). I was speaking to them in Chinese, but whenever I
- didn't know a word, I said the word in Japanese instead and they
- would then start conversing with me in Japanese.
-
- In other dreams I sometimes talk to Westerners in Japanese instead of
- English. Sometimes they understand, sometimes not. I'm not sure why
- I speak to them in Japanese. During normal waking hours I often
- make up long dialogues in Japanese in my head. Maybe that has
- something to do with it.
-
- |(4) Reading in dreams.... I have found that often I will be reading
- |signs, etc. in my dreams. I have noticed that I see mostly signs
- |written in Chinese characters in my dreams as opposed to things
- |written in English. I had seen somewhere that people who can read
- |Chinese characters often will dream of reading more than those who
- |don't simply because characters are a 'sight reading' sort of
- |pattern recognition as opposed to phonics. Anyone else heard of
- |this? Unfortunately I never seem to remember to look at the signs
- |twice to see if they change. ^_^
-
- I don't know--- Even before I could read Chinese characters I would
- read *a lot* in English in my dreams. Some dreams would just consist
- of a reading session. Quite enjoyable for me. If I didn't reread any
- passages, I might not even figure out I was dreaming. Rereading a
- passage or sentence nearly always resulted in different words on the
- page.
-
- About Chinese characters---sometimes in my dreams I will see some
- pretty complicated characters that don't really exist (at least I
- don't think they do) in real life. I wish I could remember them
- better---usually I can't only remember a few radicals (character
- components) of them after I wake up. Pretty interesting though.
-
- |(6) The lucid dreaming threads are quite fascinating. I have only
- |had a few lucid dreams which seemed to occur spontaneously (I can't
- |think "I want to have a lucid dream" and then have one). I do recall
- |several dreams per night, and like to write them down in a notebook.
- |I find them to be a good source of plots and characters for writing.
- |
- | Maiko Covington mcovingt@sdcc13.ucsd.edu
-
- I used to be able to lucid dream at will. Recently I have been trying
- to revive this ability with not so much luck. I went 100% lucid last
- night, but after about 5-10 seconds I woke up. I've been under a lot
- of stress at work lately, so that probably has something to do with
- it. I'll try to join everyone on the S.S.Dreamer during the New
- Years' Vacation. How successful has the experiment been so far?
-
-
- The night before last during the course of a normal dream I found I
- couldn't breathe. Some dream character was talking to me (or perhaps
- threatening me), but I had to ignore him since I was dying.
- I started getting scared and going crazy running all around. I
- hypothesized this caused a release of adrenaline (I couldn't get to
- sleep for quite a while afterwards). When I woke up, I discovered
-
- 1. my nose was completely stopped up (it was cold!)
- 2. I had not been breathing through my mouth because the
- (insert-appropriate-anatomical-term-for-the-thingie-that-
- blocks-your-throat) was down. The same thing causes snoring
- I suppose.
-
- I believe the term for this is "sleep apnea." I wonder what would
- have happened if I had not woken up...
-
- -Curtis Eubanks
- --
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Curtis Eubanks creubank@is.crl.sony.co.jp
-
- Sony Information Systems and Telecommunications Research Laboratories
- Information Systems Division
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-