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Excerpts from C H A P T E R 7 Myths and Truths About Dreams Empirical research into sleep and dreaming has rapidly invalidated many old pop theories that enjoyed debate for so long among dream enthusiasts. Recently even a few of Freuds theories have taken some hard hits. Before looking at what is now known to be true of dreams, lets review some common misperceptions. Dreams Are Only in Black and White If you have never seen a black-and-white world, it would be hard to imagine onewouldnt it? The cause for this debate appears to be the widespread diffusion of black-and-white television in the United States and Europe in the 1950s! It is true that people can dream in black and white; for that matter, there is no reason to discredit anyones claim to occasionally dreams in black and whiteor purple, or Technicolor, or Day-Glo. Much as our brains effortlessly recreate our outside world with all of its vivid colors. so too can they recreate the black and white world we see in films, on television and in photographs. No one hears much about the black and white theory today. Most people have color TV sets. Now the only time we might dream in black and white is after spending long weekends watching old movies on cable.
Great Sex The fact that dream sex is widely reported to be great sexthat is, that the experience or orgasm in dreams is widely reported to be especially intenseadds an intriguing dimension to lucid dream sex. The ability for people to achieve powerful orgasms in dreams probably is due, at least in part, to the fact that our bodies during dream sleep are profoundly relaxedfar more relaxed than during any quite or resting awake time. Psychologically, one must also consider that: Is there anything in life more private than a dream? The truth of dream experience is that we can do whatever we want in our dreams, and no one excepting ourselves will ever be the wiser. This freedom from inhibition coupled with the relaxation of the body most likely explains the powerful orgasms of dream sex adventures.
Recognizing that there are unconscious processes is a large first step for most of us. People are inherently resistant to attributing processes of the mind to anything other than ordinary awareness. Lucid dream experience, however, illuminates the conscious and unconscious elements of the mind. This fabulous display liberates us from a fundamental ignorance of our own nature. It is the first psychological significance of lucid dreaming. ©1995 Charles McPhee. Excerpted from Stop Sleeping Through Your Dreams: A Guide to Awakening Consciousness During Dream Sleep published by Henry Holt and Company, Inc. | ||
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