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Home > Archive > Yoga > April 2006 > dream
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| NBennett 2006-04-26, 11:25 am |
| anon could be addressing me.
i dont have a non-traditional definition of dream. i think its the work my
brain does when i'm totally relaxed.
the book i was referring to defined dream as an alternative reality which is
equal in validity to the one we're currently in. to those in the "dreams",
we're the dream.
nancy
From: "Don" <lalladas@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: Reality is a dream?
Date: Tuesday, April 25, 2006 10:09 PM
On Tue, 25 Apr 2006 18:06:13 -0700, anon <me@privacy.net> wrote:
> if reality is a dream then define dream.
>
>
Are you addressing this to me? I did not say that reality was a
dream--that is not my position, as I thought I had made clear in this and
an earlier post.
--Don
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| howdydave 2006-04-26, 11:25 am |
| Howdy Nancy!
IMO: "Dream" is just one of the 4 possible (mutually
exclusive) states of mind that a person can be in.
These states are:
Awake
Dreaming (REM sleep)
Dreamless sleep
Meditative (there is some disagreement about this state.)
Dave
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NBennett wrote:
> anon could be addressing me.
> i dont have a non-traditional definition of dream. i think its the work my
> brain does when i'm totally relaxed.
> the book i was referring to defined dream as an alternative reality which is
> equal in validity to the one we're currently in. to those in the "dreams",
> we're the dream.
> nancy
Imagine if dreams had equal validity to our waking state. We could
save so much on groceries.
Stu
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