You only remember the ones where the plot goes totally off the rails, dialogue makes no sense, and acting is just bizarre. Whoever is writing this trash is chronically incapable of producing anything even remotely good. It’s either forgettably mediocre or experimental chaos and pure madness.
Hard diagree, at least wrt my own dreams.
I often remember them right after I wake up, but they tend to float away pretty fast. Trick: write them down immediately. After some time, you might be surprised how good they actually are.
And from time to time I still have dreams that stay with me, for days.
I know artists that use their dreams, one singer basically just recites them. It’s amazing.
Shimitar@downonthestreet.eu 4 days ago
Good thought…
But no, dreams are forgettable because they are built that way: the stuff the brain uses to create memories is disabled during dreams.
This is because, otherwise, you would just keep hallucinating without being able to discern between reality and dreams.
underline960@sh.itjust.works 4 days ago
Does that mean that people who lose their ability to reliably form new memories (like anterograde amnesia or Alzheimer’s) experience reality like a dream?
Deconceptualist@lemm.ee 4 days ago
Probably not. When awake, your brain is processing real input from your sensory systems (sight, sound, smell, etc). When dreaming, your brain fabricates those inputs, essentially replaying the neural circuitry from the dark and quiet comfort of your bed. Even without forming long-term memories, reality will still obey the laws of physics and causality but dreams don’t have to.