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Discussion Starter · #2 ·
Pffffffffffffffffft.

Seems like Imagine doesnt even deserve post views anymore.

"Oh it will just be Imagine ranting about how he feels again."



:twisted: :roll:
 

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Discussion Starter · #5 ·
Sojourner said:
Excuse me while I pick my shaking body up from the floor (onto which I fell in delicious ripples of exquisite laughter).
lol. Its just they way you said it, you should be a pantomime narrator.
 

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Imagine,

I'm sorry you took offense, but you must admit, that's pretty funny. Dreams are by their very nature "not real."

You could get a lot of insight into the way your mind and body work if you would do a little research into nervous illness and read the book I have suggested several times but will not mention again now. The author's name is Claire Weekes. I dare you to read that little book and report back that it had nothing in it that wasn't phenomenally useful to you. I dare you. But you probably won't do it. Why? Here's a clue: it won't be because you cannot obtain the book.
 

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Peace offering...

(1)
http://asdreams.org/2005ullman/index.htm

(2) THE NIGHTMARE HOTLINE

Toll-free
1-866-DRMS911
[1-866-376-7911]
Volunteers answer 24/7

Nightmares and their associated feelings are normal reactions to
non-normal, traumatic events. The Nightmare Hotline?s experienced dreamworkers offer debriefing, not counseling. Research shows that a conscious focus on nightmares once they?ve occurred (just telling them to someone) can speed up coming to grips with the trauma and have a positive effect on an individual's well being.
Under ?nightmares,? we loosely classify all dreams with strong overtones of fear, dread, devastation, overwhelming shame, guilt, humiliation, or mutilation, as well as dreams of falling, burning, and so on. Calling the hotline, you?ll have the opportunity to tell your nightmare safely and anonymously.

Sponsored by The International Association for the Study of Dreams
(ASDreams.org)
 

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After I became DP'd my dreams changed drastically. Before, they were well-constructed stories, like plays, moving from scene to scene, and with a point. After the onset of DP they became like everyday life. I stood around in them, feeling DP'd, just watching things going on around me. The dreams would stay in one scene for a long time, with very little happening. No point to them at all, not much of a story. Are other depersonalized people's dreams like that too? Sounds like others are feeling DP in their dreams, but are the dreams themselves radically different like mine? Anybody?

Mine are a little better now (after 20 years), but still not like they used to be.
 

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I also experience DP in my dreams at times. Now if it's so extreme that I wake up because of it then yeah it's worse when I awake.

But if I just wake up in the morning and remember experiencing DP in my dream then it doesn't make it any worse.
 
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I actually feed overcome by a feeling of amazing boredomness/mundaneness when I'm dreaming sometimes - sometimes I dream about being at work! :?

Sometimes I don't dream at all but can remember...things when I wake up. Sometimes I have horrible, horrible night mares.

And occasionally, I have a lovely dream that makes up for it. :D
 

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I expereince dp in my dreams, usually but not exclusively in periods when I am not dp'ed, and they are therefore nightmares leaving me feeling terrible and terrified when I wake up. It takes me quite some time to shrug off the residual feelings.
 
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