+++Why is that a very bad idea?+++attofishpi wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2024 10:36 pmWhy is that a very bad idea?
One of my best friends, a fella from Newcastle phoned me yesterday and told me he is currently blind in one eye. Apparently his retina came off or something but should be temporary.Maia wrote:It's not scary to me because I'm used to it. It's just normal. I can certainly understand why people are scared of the idea of losing their sight, though. It must be a very traumatic experience, and one, thankfully, that I'll never have to go through.
In primary school a teacher explained how one could attempt to explain colours to a blind person by suggesting they touch something hot and that is red, and touch something from the freezer and that is blue. I doubt that helps!Maia wrote:Yes, that's right. I don't have any light perception.
Have you ever had a lucid dream? A dream where you are fully aware that you are within a dream and are able to interact with the "virtual" reality of the dream world? Personally, I've had countless of them. One in particular I met my sage in a small fishing village and at one point I was in a market and had no shoes on and I started jumping up and down while looking down at my feet and stating wow, this is so real. In another I went up to a wall and attempted to scrape the paint off of the wall while my sage sat in a chair at the end of the hall and I turned to him and told him not to wake me up yet.Maia wrote:I think the post important things about dreams are there emotional content, or emotional signature, even. That's why whenever we try and describe them in words, they almost always sound trivial, because we are not describing the most important part about them. I don't remember, for example, ever having a recurring dream, by which I mean a repeating sequence of specific events, but I've definitely had dreams that have the same emotional signature, as it were, to other dreams, and seem to follow on from them, in some way, with similar settings. Also, the settings themselves are usually real places, though in the dreams they might be nothing much like the actual real places, but somehow you just know that that's where they're meant to be. And being slightly claustrophobic, some of my dreams involve odd spaces, enclosed tunnels for example, with steps leading down then suddenly ending in a void. That's one set, anyway, but another set is completely different, involving me travelling a long distance, often, though not always, by walking, searching for something and/or someone. These usually take place in real locations, though in the dreams they are often quite different to real life. I usually wake up before finding whatever it is, though not always. Another set involves school, but I suppose that's pretty standard.
Why did you join in the first place?Maia wrote:No, never. I'm still very good friends with the coven members, for example, even though I chose to leave it.
Because you wouldn't become part of the earth again.
+++One of my best friends, a fella from Newcastle phoned me yesterday and told me he is currently blind in one eye. Apparently his retina came off or something but should be temporary.+++
I hope he makes a full recovery.
+++In primary school a teacher explained how one could attempt to explain colours to a blind person by suggesting they touch something hot and that is red, and touch something from the freezer and that is blue. I doubt that helps!+++
Doesn't really help, to be honest. I know that black is hotter to the touch than white, when it's been in the sun. On a car, for example. And I know why, too.
+++Have you ever had a lucid dream? A dream where you are fully aware that you are within a dream and are able to interact with the "virtual" reality of the dream world? Personally, I've had countless of them. One in particular I met my sage in a small fishing village and at one point I was in a market and had no shoes on and I started jumping up and down while looking down at my feet and stating wow, this is so real. In another I went up to a wall and attempted to scrape the paint off of the wall while my sage sat in a chair at the end of the hall and I turned to him and told him not to wake me up yet.+++
Yes, I have. It tends to happen in the latter part of a dream, when I'm waking up a bit. I realise that I'm dreaming, and the dream still continues. Not usually for very long, though. I can also sometimes go back to the same dream if I wake up and move, for example, and then lie down again in the same position as I was when I woke up. It doesn't always work, though, and presumably depends on how much I've woken up.
+++Why did you join in the first place?+++
They were more or less the first Pagans I met, after leaving school and getting involved in the local Pagan community. It was all very exciting and new. And it would be wrong to say that I didn't get anything out of it, because I did. Not least, some enduring friendships.