Science says that our brain lets us dream to process reality and our day-to-day life. Apart from normal dreams, daydreams, and nightmares, we define multiple types of dreams. Some more memorable than others.
Then, there are also those types of dreams that wakes you up with a start, heart racing, chest heaving, bathed in sweat and the sheets stuck to your skin. The dream's images seared into the surface of your brain, etched into your very soul. Have you ever thought that your brain could never be responsible for such a dream?
Alice learns firsthand that those dreams can have a grave impact on the body of the dreamer. In an attempt to stop a group of people from hurting others, she learns not only how to lucid dream, but how to go a step further.
Have you ever thought that one of your dreams does not feel like your own?
I dream often. In fact, I can still recall dreams that I had back in elementary school. Though nowadays I dream mostly of the end of society as we know it, the sheer variety of my dreams invited me to start sharing them with friends and family, who told me I should write a book about it. So I put that on my bucket list! I was born in Cologne in 1993, had a pleasant childhood, went to university to study language and culture. After graduation I lived in Tokyo for four years, and have now settled into a charming life in Austria, working as a Product Manager in IT. Though the creativity in my job is somewhat limited, dreams continue to make my life more vivid. One particular night offered me the topic of dream sharing, multiple people in the same dream. And it made me wonder: would that work with lucid dreams? And how much control could one exert over someone else's dream?
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