In my dreams

<p>bumpity doooo daaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:)</p>

<p>I have always had really violent dreams(Since I was 6 my parents tell me that I ran up to them crying about stuff), but they started occuring sporadically when I was applying. Now, all of my dreams have stopped. I think Lacrosse and applications being in have helped. I'm really happy... But I don't understand it.</p>

<p>lol weird!!</p>

<p>Man, ya'll have some strange dreams! My BS dreams are never quite that entertaining. Usually, my BS dreams (and my dreams in general) consist of normal stuff happening at a setting that doesn't make any sense, or the other way around.</p>

<p>Although once, I did have a dream that I went back to my Montessori school to visit and we were all walking around and a bunch of bees got in the building. Everyone kept running around trying to get away from the bees, but all the idiots would accidentially let them back in. Eventually, I sat on a couch with two other former classmates while everyone got the little kids out before all the adults got to leave. </p>

<p>Later, I was in the same gym for a choir thing, but I couldn't dance because the bees had stung the bottom of my feet? It was strange.</p>

<p>ANYWAY. haha.</p>

<p>
[quote]
Now, all of my dreams have stopped

[/quote]
</p>

<p>No they haven't, you just don't remember them when you wake up.</p>

<p>That is incorrect.
I believe that the electrical interactions are so minute that they are undetectable by the cognizant areas of your brain. This is explained by hypnotism. If you hypnotize somebody, they will recall details of their day that they were not aware off. In essence, THEY DID REMEMBER IT. They could not access it, but the information was stored and retained in the subconscious</p>

<p>That's still basically the same thing as not remembering. Not remembering something is not being able to get it from your memory...not being able to access it.</p>

<p>That's just an overdone way of saying "we cannot remember it". Every night we have dreams, it is a fact and it is true. Unlike philosophy, you cannot "believe" science. If you have research proving such claims, and by research/statistics I mean a LOT to make it a significant claim, you may be going somewhere.</p>

<p>In a philosophical setting you can "tell us what you believe" science does not lend itself to a system of belief. It is a system dictated by research, statistics, and quantitative/qualitative findings. </p>

<p>Plus your statement denies every aspect of Occam's razor.</p>

<p>Lol ya italian...sounds like not remembering to me.</p>

<p>Even if it isn't equivalent, it might as well be! haha.</p>