Life in progress

Deconstructing a Dream

18 Comments

I must remember this next time I’m writing a dream sequence.

Just before I woke up this morning, I dreamed I was ordering breakfast. I was in a bus station, standing at a tall counter looking up at a very sparse menu. Not knowing what else to have, I asked for toast and marmalade. The curious thing was, when I asked for the marmalade I knew the person behind the counter would have a hard time with the word and I remember having the time, as I was saying the sentence I used to order the food, to change my order to make it simpler for the clerk. All those thoughts went through my mind sequentially, much like they do when I’m awake only I was hyper aware of them and they were so fast! I decided what I wanted, thought I shouldn’t say it and why, all in the space of time it took me to say “toast with jam.”

It’s amazing what the human brain is capable of. I know I have the capacity while awake to have a thought, form a sentence in my head, and think to myself I shouldn’t say it, even as I’m either saying it or changing it mid-sentence. And yet while I’m awake the process seems so sluggish… perhaps why I sometimes say things I know I shouldn’t; I don’t have the mental capacity all the time to change once I’ve started, or stop in the first place.

I wonder if a study has ever been done to see if we’re more likely to put our collective foot in our mouth if we’re tired. Food for thought… preferably not toe jam…

Unknown's avatar

Author: Linda G. Hill

There's a writer in here, clawing her way out.

18 thoughts on “Deconstructing a Dream

  1. Lee-Anne's avatar

    Hahaha! BTW I love orange marmalade. 🙂

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  2. betrayedin2012's avatar

    My dreams tend to be scarey… at least the ones I remember.. I have a lot of lucid dreams/nightmares, and sleep paralysis which is some scarey shit.. I cant breathe, yell, and I definitely cannot wake up, but theres something or someone trying to get me , take me kill me, idk, but its there and I can try and scream but nothing… If you look it up theres some that believe in sleep demons.. and after having more than my fair share of these I might say I believe. The last time hubby was looking at me crazy cause I kept saying “they were gonna get me” in the middle of the night after I woke up and made him hold me… Even before the movie Inception was made, I already had my own tell to see if im in a dream. It helps with the nightmares when I can control it… okay I officially sound crazy… 😉 good night… I gotta be up in 5 hours and cant aleep..

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  3. willowdot21's avatar

    I am capable of saying the most awful things when I am tired!

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  4. IreneDesign2011's avatar

    There aremany kind of dreams and about the language, I make mistakes both awake and in dreams.
    I didn’t join SoCS yet, because we needed to escape from fire yesterday, I will try if I’m able tonight. I wrote a post about this fire in the morning.

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  5. Private's avatar

    I so rarely remember dreams and when I do and think to myself “I need to remember that dream,” within a matter of minutes it’s pretty much forgotten. As to your question about whether we’re more likely to put our foot in our mouth when tired, I think the answer is yes. At least for me. I know when I’m tired I can’t think or function as well as when I’m well rested, so I’m sure I have said or done more things I’ve regretted when I’m tired that when I’m not.

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    • Linda G. Hill's avatar

      I’m usually like that with dreams too. They just seem to drift away.
      I suppose saying the wrong thing is just like anything else when we’re tired, as you point out. My brain turns to mush AND I get short tempered when I’m tired. Not a good combination. 😛

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  6. Jay Dee's avatar

    I love remembering dreams. I even wrote down a rather elaborate dream 14 years ago and I remember every detail of it now. Write it down, and you’ll remember it very well. I should post it on my blog one of these days.

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  7. Alice Frances's avatar

    Dreams and distant memories often act as spurs to writing

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