When the dream features you awake, you realize the dream manifests as ‘reality,’ accurately reflecting where all the dreamers in the dream are with the fact truth not only exists, it is absolute. Right now, for example, is truth (the dream) happening as what shows up as content in the dream. Every dreamer in the dream is transparent because there is nothing else to be if right now is a dream. The dream reveals who is awake in the dream (often smiling and amused), who is waking up in the dream, who is in trance in the dream, and who is firmly entrenched in the skit they occupy in the dream to do personhood believably. The dream features “The Spectrum of Delusionality.” » Read more: Charade Talk
Posts Tagged ‘Trauma’
Charade Talk
May 2nd, 2011Trauma and the Myth of Control
August 5th, 2010Waking up takes place in this dream mind is dreaming. Since no dreamer in the dream is, or can be, a person, only the dreamer ‘exists’ to wake up. It wakes up when it retrieves the fact it is in the dream mind is dreaming, featured in The Grand Parody displaying how it fills time defending the lie it is a real person in this dream. No dreamer can defend the lie it is a real person in The Grand Parody unless mind dreams it engaged in the defection parody in the dream. The defection parody is the beginning of the lie duality is real, as if something, or someone, actually exists outside the dream mind is dreaming. This parody is a comedy precisely because nothing exists outside the dream mind is dreaming if mind is the dreamer of ‘everything,’ usually referred to as “reality” by the dreamers posing as real people in the dream.
A dreamer in this dream wakes up when it shifts from defending the lie it is a real person in this dream, to the truth it is a dreamer in this mind generated dream, filling time defending the lie it is a real person outside the dream mind is dreaming. If the dream is all inclusive, then mind is dreaming the dreamer creating duality to defend the fiction the dream is divisible into what is content in the dream and what is real outside the dream. » Read more: Trauma and the Myth of Control

