
I like the bit about how colour television reduced black-and-white dreaming.
Well, I guess the unconscious muscular stimulation could reflect on internal unconscious processes.Mallardz wrote:I think the position is which people sleep cannot possibly determine their characteristics. Surely the position in which you are comfy will relate to how you are shaped and how you avoid to much pressure on certain parts of your body?
Indeed. I know a guy called Liam to whom it applies.Mallardz wrote:Point 16 must have some secret relation to you......
That's why you posted![]()
Mallardz wrote:I knew the blind dreamt and I believe I knew this also to be in colour I also knew I slept far too little and am also intrigued by the idea that television in colour actually changed the black and white nature of dreams for people.
I heard that, but I watch TV from my bed all the time and I've been fine recently.hadespussercats wrote:It's tough to break certain habits though-- I love to read in bed, which is a no-no, supposedly...
It means you like to accept the consequences of your actions.stripes4 wrote:It doesn't say anything about sleeping on the wet patch.
Half of that is complete, unverifiable bollocks.Even Adam wrote:
I like the bit about how colour television reduced black-and-white dreaming.
hadespussercats wrote:
It's tough to break certain habits though-- I love to read in bed, which is a no-no, supposedly...
If it is just half it is shit hot psychologyPappa wrote:Half of that is complete, unverifiable bollocks.Even Adam wrote:
I like the bit about how colour television reduced black-and-white dreaming.
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Pfft. You're such a hypnagogic jerk.Laurens wrote:What about the sensation that you're falling? What's with that?
If you don't have a problem with insomnia, there's nothing wrong with reading in bed. If you do, though, the standard advice is to reserve the bedroom for sleep and sex, and to do TV viewing, computerizing, paperwork, reading, etc., elsewhere.roter-kaiser wrote:hadespussercats wrote:
It's tough to break certain habits though-- I love to read in bed, which is a no-no, supposedly...
What's wrong with reading in bed? I do that every night and I'm an excellent sleeper. The reading helps me wind down. I read until I'm almost asleep.
I think that's the Moro reflex-- though I'm not sure. Babies have it-- a reaction to being on your back that makes you feel like you're falling.Laurens wrote:What about the sensation that you're falling? What's with that?
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