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- When they presented the blindman intro, in that old time radio show I swear I heard "Now watch your eyes!" instead of "who want your eyes", the actual words.
- @Ryan G
It is normal to be unable to move yor body during sleep. This is the body's way of keeping you from reenacting the movements you make in your dreams. When waking up, the body automatically reconnects the brain with the body. Most people get by this without ever noticing.
In rare cases this natural process is interrupted, and people experience what you described. Such cases are usually have a neurological cause. If it ever happens to You again, You should consider seeing a doctor.
Btw I tried lucid dreaming and it was completely realistic, but it never became more to me, than just a curiosity -- I simply had no use for it; in my nightmares I would often fight, fiercely, but I woke up of them quickly, and they never repeated. I think I managed to deal with my issues by thinking through them while I was awake.
- In normal dreams one simply doesn't dream about being in control of the dream. The youness of you just disappears. Except ...
Sometimes nightmares end with you dreaming about waking up. You think it is over, but then you realize -- it is not! And then you wake up again. And again, several times in a row.
- I never cry.
Except after listening to this story for the first time,
- Hi, I remember having dreams, that I half-conciously was constructing, that were ... hollywood movies! Or tv series. Episodes, that would have cost millions of dollars to produce, just stuck in my head. Most of them were original, they rarely repeated.
I never had a decent ending tho. The story would just go on and on. I could even get up, have a drink or something, and then just go back to where I stopped it.
And the pieces were fairly good. I think that my brain have somehow managed to capture the essence of a hollywood movie, and turn it into a dream.