tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8686756265513466913.post5246897454539812155..comments2023-03-24T06:45:33.372-05:00Comments on The Voice at the Other End of the Line: Dreamskatie71483http://www.blogger.com/profile/01630112624048325284noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8686756265513466913.post-61245541888921378512010-03-31T19:17:46.346-05:002010-03-31T19:17:46.346-05:00I've typed this comment out three times and Li...I've typed this comment out three times and LiveJournal is not letting me post it with my information. So let's try it via twitter and cross our fingers.<br /><br />I usually write my dreams down as soon as I can after I wake up. Even if I don't do it right away, some of the more significant dreams I can remember for weeks or even years after I've had them.<br />I've only had one recurring dream in my life, and I only had it 2 or 3 times when I was about seven years old. In it, I'm on the grounds of the church we attended at the time, it's night, and I'm being chased by a giant. I finally escape to an upstairs bathroom, and on the toilet seat I find a can of tuna fish and a note from my mom, telling me to stay put and assuring me that everything will be all right.<br />I also have a recurring theme in many of my dreams that involves me being chased by dinosaurs, usually the dangerous ones such as Velociraptor or T-Rex. This, I know, stems from seeing Jurassic Park when I was six years old, a movie that instilled in me a simultaneous fear of and fascination with dinosaurs that has lasted my entire life. I usually have these dinosaur dreams when I'm stressed or upset, so I see them as a symbol of whatever is bothering me at the time.Mary Hallberghttp://twitter.com/maryrebekahnoreply@blogger.com