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🌟🌟 Social 🌟🌟 PD Social Thread 2022-2025 v. Year of the Phenethylamine

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Just ordered this Neo-Geo mini arcade cabinet I'm super excited about it, has fourty games installed on it. Including all the Metal Slug, the King of Fighters, Samurai Showdown and Fatal Fury series and etc. It's gonna be really fun and just a cool collector's item if your into Retro Gaming stuff. Can't wait till it gets here this week.

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Damn that's fucked. Not sure how it is in other states in the US, but in my state they passed a harm reduction bill a handful of years ago that made it illegal for you to be charged for drugs if help is called for a medical emergency.
Same here in my state. I hope you're fighting that charge, @Buzz Lightbeer. I would perhaps reach out to the State Attorney's Office / the Prosecuting Attorney to see if you can't convince them to drop charges on account of this and the effect the bad trip has had on your desire to consume psychedelics. And honestly, I hate to say it, but if you enrolled in some kind of outpatient drug rehabilitation program, that would look really good in front of a judge who might be willing to toss out the charge in light of this as well…

What were your charges? Has there been a criminal complaint or indictment or anything yet?
 
Same here in my state. I hope you're fighting that charge, @Buzz Lightbeer. I would perhaps reach out to the State Attorney's Office / the Prosecuting Attorney to see if you can't convince them to drop charges on account of this and the effect the bad trip has had on your desire to consume psychedelics. And honestly, I hate to say it, but if you enrolled in some kind of outpatient drug rehabilitation program, that would look really good in front of a judge who might be willing to toss out the charge in light of this as well…

What were your charges? Has there been a criminal complaint or indictment or anything yet?
It's fine man, I exaggerated, I'm still so pissed at how that went.
I had a couple meetings with a mediating office, as they didn't want to waste time with a court case or something (luckily). There I just explained that it was a one off and in the meantime I had actually sought help for mental health issues and was getting my life on track so I came out of there pretty good. They thought a good solution would be to follow their group/individual drug therapy, I agreed, agreeing was an admission of guilt though and it will be on my criminal record, under provision that I didn't have any other drug related issues in the next x years otherwise I would have to appear before a judge.
All the therapies are booked beyond full, but it could be starting any moment now. 20 therapy sessions should be a breeze, less so for the psychologist who will have to deal with my ADHD ass after work and after all the meds have worn off. I actually still have to sign the papers but it's radio silence on their front.

I'm in EU and they're pretty tough on anything drugs here but they're also somewhat reasonable as to not waste everyone's time with a court case for acid (I said it was acid, not AL-LAD) they didn't even find, for a guy that went through psychosis before 50 people and an ambulance that literally waited for over an hour (!!) there to take me to the hospital. Ridiculous. I later heard cops were just laughing and kidding around before finally handcuffing me and taking me away. I was literally there on my knees begging people "why don't you help me"... maybe there's even a chance I would've won the court case if I hadn't agreed... I should've just stayed inside but I thought there was a river nearby and I needed water.
 
Just ordered this Neo-Geo mini arcade cabinet I'm super excited about it, has fourty games installed on it. Including all the Metal Slug, the King of Fighters, Samurai Showdown and Fatal Fury series and etc. It's gonna be really fun and just a cool collector's item if your into Retro Gaming stuff. Can't wait till it gets here this week.
A while ago I jumped on a variety of these multi-ROM-loaded emulators on a compact linux distro. Not as much fun as I remember and I just wind up guilt tripping myself into not playing ever… In the end, I gave most of them away as Christmas gifts, for which they make excellent presents for both children and adults.
 
It's fine man, I exaggerated, I'm still so pissed at how that went.
I had a couple meetings with a mediating office, as they didn't want to waste time with a court case or something (luckily). There I just explained that it was a one off and in the meantime I had actually sought help for mental health issues and was getting my life on track so I came out of there pretty good. They thought a good solution would be to follow their group/individual drug therapy, I agreed, agreeing was an admission of guilt though and it will be on my criminal record, under provision that I didn't have any other drug related issues in the next x years otherwise I would have to appear before a judge.
All the therapies are booked beyond full, but it could be starting any moment now. 20 therapy sessions should be a breeze, less so for the psychologist who will have to deal with my ADHD ass after work and after all the meds have worn off. I actually still have to sign the papers but it's radio silence on their front.
Well I don't know the laws in Europe like I do in the U.S., but I would still think you could talk your way out of it if you try hard enough, convince the right person, and/or charm everyone as much as you possibly can. If everyone is booked solid and it's so crowded, convince them you're fine and that you don't need therapy at all.

I'm in EU and they're pretty tough on anything drugs here but they're also somewhat reasonable as to not waste everyone's time with a court case for acid (I said it was acid, not AL-LAD) they didn't even find, for a guy that went through psychosis before 50 people and an ambulance that literally waited for over an hour (!!) there to take me to the hospital. Ridiculous. I later heard cops were just laughing and kidding around before finally handcuffing me and taking me away. I was literally there on my knees begging people "why don't you help me"... maybe there's even a chance I would've won the court case if I hadn't agreed... I should've just stayed inside but I thought there was a river nearby and I needed water.
Yeah but trust me when I tell you: they're a lot tougher on drugs here, especially our Federal Government which is just goddamn ridiculous. Just search on Duck Duck Go for USSG's Mandatory Minimum Sentences. Keep in mind: the U.S. locks up the most people per capita and the most people over all at 2.2 million inmates incarcerated across the U.S. between state and federal.

Compared to that Draconian bullshit, virtually all of western Europe's statues are much more reasonable and the prisons are much more humane.

EDIT: Why am I not able to post these as hyperlinks? Is it b/c they're PDFs or something?

- ussc dot gov/ sites/ default/ files/ pdf/ research-and-publications/ research-publications/2017/20171025_Drug-Mand-Min dot pdf

- ussc dot gov/ sites/ default/ files/ pdf/ research-and-publications/ quick-facts/ Drug_Trafficking_FY21 dot pdf

EDIT2: Wow, it really wants to filterTF out of those links. You obviously have to fix the spots that say dot whatever and remove the spaces…


 
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Just ordered this Neo-Geo mini arcade cabinet I'm super excited about it, has fourty games installed on it. Including all the Metal Slug, the King of Fighters, Samurai Showdown and Fatal Fury series and etc. It's gonna be really fun and just a cool collector's item if your into Retro Gaming stuff. Can't wait till it gets here this week.

WCCFneogeo2.jpg
Reminds of early nineties. I remember far back as late eighties possibly, watching and actually playing. Kids we never met would gather around and watch, standing close to one another. Used to go in Arcades and notice some of these games Ive played on a big one. Technology is amazing! Sumurai showdown , was, is a favorite. World heroes my brother got to choose World heroes for Christmas for Super NES in like 93., in 91 and 92 , we used to play it in a bowling alley. Sumuria showdown as well. Then, came Mortal Kombat! I remember Mortal Kombat and played it the most out of all these games, in the arcade, standing on this almost tall as me or taller I forget box. Then we got it for SNES, brown blood, and my neighbor had sega with the red blood. If I could go back and know what I know now and make things different , I would, if a genie presented me that I could do this.
 
Reminds of early nineties. I remember far back as late eighties possibly, watching and actually playing. Kids we never met would gather around and watch, standing close to one another. Used to go in Arcades and notice some of these games Ive played on a big one. Technology is amazing! Sumurai showdown , was, is a favorite. World heroes my brother got to choose World heroes for Christmas for Super NES in like 93., in 91 and 92 , we used to play it in a bowling alley. Sumuria showdown as well. Then, came Mortal Kombat! I remember Mortal Kombat and played it the most out of all these games, in the arcade, standing on this almost tall as me or taller I forget box. Then we got it for SNES, brown blood, and my neighbor had sega with the red blood. If I could go back and know what I know now and make things different , I would, if a genie presented me that I could do this.
Hell yeah Samurai Showdown was the shit, the way the camera would pan out and then pan back in. For a while Street Fighter II dominated the arcade market, and my brother and our friends and I would all take turns playing that (and later, Golden Eye for N64), and then Mortal Kombat came into the fray, which was cool and all – and I too played it at the bowling alley. But then the arcades in the malls all suddenly got Mortal Kombat II. And yeah we'd stand huddled around that machine as kids, blown away by the then-cutting-edge graphics and John Tobias occasionally popping up on-screen to interject with a quick, falsetto "TOASTY!"… Good times.
 
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Hell yeah Samurai Showdown was the shit, the way the camera would pan out and then pan back in. For a while Street Fighter II dominated the arcade market market and my brother and our friends and I would all take turns playing that (and later, Golden Eye for N64), and then Mortal Kombat came into the fray, which was cool and all – and I too played it at the bowling alley. But then the arcaded in the malls all suddenly got Mortal Kombat II. And yeah we'd stand huddled around that machine as kids, blown away by the then-cutting edge graphics and Jon Tobias occasionally popping up on screen to interject with a quick, falsetto "TOASTY!"… Good times.
And to think Gen x and early millennials will only know what this is like. Yes , Mortal Kombat ll, I remember it, in the arcade, attempting to knock my opponent into the green lava , as Reptile. Then, it came out for SNES fast. My brother and I ,rented it from Economy video ,in 1994 or 95, think early 95, and played it into early Saturday morning because we didn't have to awake for school. Had a walkman, listening to Van Halen live,I borrowed from a friend, and cassate tape songs recorded when I heard them on 98 Rock.

This generation, Z And upwards has entertainment at their fingertips technology much more efficiently than younger generations.
 


@Buzz Lightbeer, I'm so sorry I missed your messages the other night, I'm having phone troubles right now and didn't have the battery to open them. I didn't see them until later when I turned my phone on to try to get some last minute info out of it and it ended up dying permanently at that point. I tried to get the messages from my laptop client but they didn't transfer over there. You can message me on there again now if you want but I'm still in between phones so I may not get it right away.

I've seen and known a lot of people who have experienced psychosis from psychedelics, and other things. It happened around me so frequently when I was new to tripping that for a long time I just assumed that it was happening to most people most of the time except for self-proclaimed hardheads. It took me a while to realize that most people weren't seeing things as crazy as I was when just hanging out with their friends on psychedelics.

I've seen multiple distinct types of reactions but some recurring themes across a large enough sample size of people tripping on various drugs. The description @Buzz Lightbeer gives of his psychedelic-induced psychotic experiences reminds me the most of what I often would call the 'word salad' type. Primarily characterized by the completely obvious inability of the psychotic person to strings words together properly and everyone else around them respond with "Uhhhhhh, what?" People in this state often seem to be kind of half delirious and half grounded and they'll respond to things that actually happen and seem to really want to communicate with you but any actual attempts will be fruitless. I had a long-time tripping partner friend who started reacting like this to psychedelics not that long into his tripping career and once it started, it became the norm for his psychedelic experiences. He ended up becoming a big fan of smoking DMT, since it's short-lived and immobilizing, and made him trip very hard. He went through a phase of extracting it for all of his friends and used a lot of it to my knowledge without issue, although I don't know how far he actually ultimately pushed it.

The 'word salad' type seems to be the most purely disorganized from my perspective, and like mentioned seems to be often associated with thought loops and maybe also other complains like temperature dysregulation. The people I've known who experience it tend to lessen their psychedelic use as a result, with possibly good reason. These kinds of trips sometimes threaten to become unexpectedly public as the tripper becomes too focused to remember common social boundaries and/or feels that they need to seek help, which can mean practically anything at the time. One friend I knew once spent a night in a public park thrashing around in a rose bush screaming about demons coming to get him which were actually his other also tripping friends trying to calm him down, and luckily the worst thing that happened to him is he got completely torn up by all the thorns (I saw him the next morning to get this story, it was bad).

In the aforementioned story, another friend of mine was there playing trip sitter, although also tripping himself. There were four people in total: himself, the friend who was eventually screaming about demons, another friend who has shattered into multiple dissociated copies of himself who were all having a conversation with each other, and a final friend who was also confused in some way though I forget how. The "trip sitting" friend said that in his own trip, he perceived himself as playing a game centered around managing the trips of the other three as efficiently as possible, figuring out how to quickly bounce back and forth between them in patterned ways and use only the specific words needed to try to curb each trip back to a better place each revolution. This is an idea that stands out in my own psychotic experiences, the idea that everything around me is part of a game I'm playing, and also that there are signs everywhere that hint at the purposeful and formulaic structure of it.

My suspicion is that psychosis is associated with the mental network for conceiving of and performing a task, that plays out in a way apparently similar to the relation to such functions seen in dreaming. Many of the different types of more psychotic reactions to psychedelics that I've noted appear relatable to it: the 'word salad' type is comparable obviously with respect to the garbled way we speak and rationalize things in dreams, although the fear and hallucinogenic themes seems more alike sleep paralysis although I would also suggest that that counts; the dissociative type mentioned above where people become several different interacting entities can be related to the idea of a single brain producing many interacting dream selves; and playing games is one of the earliest most prominent forms of training the brain in the cognitive realm of conceiving of and performing tasks, with playful behavior in early life being common throughout the animal kingdom, and simulating those situations in your mind during that kind of cognitive operation can also be superficially compared to dreaming. Another aspect common to many different varieties of psychosis which I would relate to dreaming is what I would call an increased propensity for jumping to conclusions, which is accompanied by something I earlier conceived of as something like, switching my behavior from being based on things I feel sure are real to being based on things I feel not sure are not real; it's something that feels to me sort of like an increased willingness to trust my own ideas, but at the same time, what feels like a legitimate fear of what the consequences would be of not acting on those ideas just in case they are real even if I'm less sure that they are than I would typically budget for, which can seemingly lead to me just running with stories in my head, although it feels more emotional and intense while awake than while in a regular dream.

Everyone's own brand of psychosis will probably mix and match multiple qualities from these different types as psychosis is very complex and everyone's brain is different. My own psychotic experiences are highly manic and dissociative but I generally retain the ability to speak coherently which I think frustrates the people around me during my episodes because it's hard to tell that I'm crazy enough to be able to do something about it even when I'm really, really crazy. For me there are specific stories that develop with voices conveying them to me and they are about things like how the entire universe is a game I'm playing with another cosmic entity and there are many themes like witchcraft like with @Cosmic Charlie's sister. I've had mental health issues for a long time though and I don't need to take psychedelics for this to happen, and I still often do enjoy my psychedelic trips when I do take them, with it only sometimes seemingly triggering my symptoms back out afterwards, but lasting for weeks to months when it does. My biggest episode was definitely psychedelic-related but it came at the end of a period where I was smoking DMT and 5-MeO-DMT analogues in increasingly higher dosages several times a week for two months straight, so it wasn't exactly that surprising.

So I guess the difference is, perhaps, the ability to retain the ability to doubt what you're experiencing? And to be able to control your external behavior enough to not act out disruptively?

Doubt is the solution to psychosis but it's harder to apply than normal. It's like a runaway train of connecting dots.

Hope everyone is doing well.
 
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just decided to order some DPT. I never tried it but have wanted to for a long time. It seems to be a really unique and powerful substance....
 
My suspicion is that psychosis is associated with the mental network for conceiving of an performing a task, that plays out in a way apparently similar to the relation to such functions seen in dreaming.
I went through a period of about a year where previously unknown trauma came to the surface and I experienced extreme flashbacks. most of the flashbacks were fragments of experience, it could be emotions, body sensations, body positions, fragments of motion, knowing that there was something very dangerous near me, etc. The way I've always described these was that it was a like a dream (nightmare) nearly seamlessly superimposed over the present moment. It was very difficult to separate the flashback from the rest of my experience. There were many different types of flashback nightmares and I had to learn to separate each one from the rest of experience. Once this was done it was like the nightmare dissolved and wouldn't come back anymore.
 
I went through a period of about a year where previously unknown trauma came to the surface and I experienced extreme flashbacks. most of the flashbacks were fragments of experience, it could be emotions, body sensations, body positions, fragments of motion, knowing that there was something very dangerous near me, etc. The way I've always described these was that it was a like a dream (nightmare) nearly seamlessly superimposed over the present moment. It was very difficult to separate the flashback from the rest of my experience. There were many different types of flashback nightmares and I had to learn to separate each one from the rest of experience. Once this was done it was like the nightmare dissolved and wouldn't come back anymore.

That definitely sounds relatable. One way I like to think of it is, people tend to conceive of it as we're using the same parts of our brains to create dreams as we use to perceive the waking world, but the opposite perspective is insightful too, that we're using the same parts of our brains to perceive the waking world as we use to create the dream world. We have a specific definition of dreaming that is isolated to the awake-like experiences you're having while asleep, but it doesn't mean that those systems aren't running when you're awake, we just don't call it dreaming, but in a sense, as much as a dream is like a simulation of waking life, your perception of waking life is just a "different type of dream" that is built using inputs gotten from your sensory organs rather than from whatever data is used to seed your asleep dreams. In the same way, I think it's plausible that dreaming can be thought of as a shifting series of simulated games, and in turn, waking life is conceived of as a shifting series of actual games using the same internal systems, which all have their own processed start and end points and rules which map to different tasks you have or want to complete in your life. In that way, traumatic situations can also be thought of as a sort of "game" which isn't to diminish their seriousness or anything, just a metaphorical device, but nonetheless it would be just another one among this string of games, but it would be one associated with, I suppose, a sense of having "lost" and had an extreme negative consequence associated with doing so, leaving an anxious imprint in your mind which is consciously experienced as fear of suddenly being that game again so that you feel more prepared to try to quickly escape or fight back if necessary, and since your perception of reality is just a shifting series of games whether you're awake or asleep, your brain can suddenly shift you into a different game than the one you were in an instant before when you're awake just like it can when you're asleep, and even though you may still perceive the same sensory input around you as you did the moment before, that doesn't mean the new cognitive context of being back in the traumatic "game" isn't just as real to you as the "game" you were playing in that previous moment, and this happens all the time to lesser degrees as just part of how we switch cognitive contexts throughout our days, but since our brain is especially afraid of traumatic experiences, the shifts can be more severe, and the intense nature of the experience itself also stands out about them and highlights the weirdness of how our waking mind compares to our dreaming mind in this sort of way, similar to what can be experienced during psychotic states as well.

That's my take on it, anyway.
 
It seems to be a really unique
Please forgive me for being a pedantic stickler here, but you can't modify "unique". There are not varying degrees of uniqueness, you know? It's an absolute. Unique means: "one of a kind", and a thing either is or is not unique. It's binary. Like "dead", "pregnant", 'immortal", and other words where the condition is binary.

DPT is powerful stuff but also prone to chaos. "Set and setting" are clutch here. Or, to borrow a metaphor from Dr. Albert Hofmann speaking on LSD, but relevant here perhaps more so: it's important that there is harmony between one's exterior environment and their own interior environment (as in: state of mind).
 
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Do they know why we dream?

Or is it just one of those mysterious things we may never have a grasp on. It's really such a bizarre place for me this "dream world" I have incredibly vivid ones that seem so real to me while it's taking place, and it's only near the end of one that I realize what is going on. Thankfully most of mine are just strange and not really scary, tho I do get thrown one of those curve balls from time to time.

Like last night in particular I was being hunted by this group of people with rifles and it seemed to be some kind dystopian future. I'd been trying to protect my loved ones throughout it while we were holed up in my childhood home I haven't been lived at for many years. At the last moment before they would get us each time it would flash forward to another alternate scenario and we would be safe again, still in the same house. It really kept me kinda amped up and when I awoke this morning I was like, holy crap.
 
Do they know why we dream?

Or is it just one of those mysterious things we may never have a grasp on. It's really such a bizarre place for me this "dream world" I have incredibly vivid ones that seem so real to me while it's taking place, and it's only near the end of one that I realize what is going on. Thankfully most of mine are just strange and not really scary, tho I do get thrown one of those curve balls from time to time.

Like last night in particular I was being hunted by this group of people with rifles and it seemed to be some kind dystopian future. I'd been trying to protect my loved ones throughout it while we were holed up in my childhood home I haven't been lived at for many years. At the last moment before they would get us each time it would flash forward to another alternate scenario and we would be safe again, still in the same house. It really kept me kinda amped up and when I awoke this morning I was like, holy crap.
You been dreaming more heavily since Zyprexa? Since Seroquel I'm almost always in some vivid & dystopian games where I need to escape/run from something, they're not nightmares though.
 
You been dreaming more heavily since Zyprexa? Since Seroquel I'm almost always in some vivid & dystopian games where I need to escape/run from something, they're not nightmares though.
Yeah but that shit can be fucking stressful, and I wake up not feeling very rested when this is the case. That's why I tend to seek suppression of REM, and cannabis is pretty helpful for this purpose. Also, 5-HTP suppresses REM and dreaming, but do note there's a rebound effect when you stop using it. People who like to explore lucid dreaming exploit this rebound property to produce ultra vivid dreams they can control (coupled with a few other techniques like dream journaling, and getting in the habit of periodically asking themselves while fully awake: "am I awake?" until the reflex occurs during a dream).
 
Do they know why we dream?

Or is it just one of those mysterious things we may never have a grasp on. It's really such a bizarre place for me this "dream world" I have incredibly vivid ones that seem so real to me while it's taking place, and it's only near the end of one that I realize what is going on. Thankfully most of mine are just strange and not really scary, tho I do get thrown one of those curve balls from time to time.

Like last night in particular I was being hunted by this group of people with rifles and it seemed to be some kind dystopian future. I'd been trying to protect my loved ones throughout it while we were holed up in my childhood home I haven't been lived at for many years. At the last moment before they would get us each time it would flash forward to another alternate scenario and we would be safe again, still in the same house. It really kept me kinda amped up and when I awoke this morning I was like, holy crap.

My theory is that it a relic of our brains storing our short term memories into long term ones. When we're sleeping lightly, we experience it semi-consciously. Dreams also seem to serve to reinforce worries and things of importance in from our subconscious to our conscious awareness.
 
Please forgive me for being a pedantic stickler here, but you can't modify "unique". There are not varying degrees of uniqueness, you know? It's an absolute. Unique means: "one of a kind", and a thing either is or is not unique. It's binary. Like "dead", "pregnant", 'immortal", and other words where the condition is binary.

DPT is powerful stuff but also prone to chaos. "Set and setting" are clutch here. Or, to borrow a metaphor from Dr. Albert Hofmann speaking on LSD, but relevant here perhaps more so: it's important that there is harmony between one's exterior environment and their own interior environment (as in: state of mind).
I appreciate that and also want to say you are very correct! :p

For high dose trips or situations that are intense I like to go out to the wilderness. I'm not sure what ROA is best with it, it seems that insulfation is most common. I don't have much experience with snorting things though.
 
That definitely sounds relatable. One way I like to think of it is, people tend to conceive of it as we're using the same parts of our brains to create dreams as we use to perceive the waking world, but the opposite perspective is insightful too, that we're using the same parts of our brains to perceive the waking world as we use to create the dream world. We have a specific definition of dreaming that is isolated to the awake-like experiences you're having while asleep, but it doesn't mean that those systems aren't running when you're awake, we just don't call it dreaming, but in a sense, as much as a dream is like a simulation of waking life, your perception of waking life is just a "different type of dream" that is built using inputs gotten from your sensory organs rather than from whatever data is used to seed your asleep dreams. In the same way, I think it's plausible that dreaming can be thought of as a shifting series of simulated games, and in turn, waking life is conceived of as a shifting series of actual games using the same internal systems, which all have their own processed start and end points and rules which map to different tasks you have or want to complete in your life. In that way, traumatic situations can also be thought of as a sort of "game" which isn't to diminish their seriousness or anything, just a metaphorical device, but nonetheless it would be just another one among this string of games, but it would be one associated with, I suppose, a sense of having "lost" and had an extreme negative consequence associated with doing so, leaving an anxious imprint in your mind which is consciously experienced as fear of suddenly being that game again so that you feel more prepared to try to quickly escape or fight back if necessary, and since your perception of reality is just a shifting series of games whether you're awake or asleep, your brain can suddenly shift you into a different game than the one you were in an instant before when you're awake just like it can when you're asleep, and even though you may still perceive the same sensory input around you as you did the moment before, that doesn't mean the new cognitive context of being back in the traumatic "game" isn't just as real to you as the "game" you were playing in that previous moment, and this happens all the time to lesser degrees as just part of how we switch cognitive contexts throughout our days, but since our brain is especially afraid of traumatic experiences, the shifts can be more severe, and the intense nature of the experience itself also stands out about them and highlights the weirdness of how our waking mind compares to our dreaming mind in this sort of way, similar to what can be experienced during psychotic states as well.

That's my take on it, anyway.
i think part of the waking dream is created by memories and associations overlaid on sensory data. the brain might be partly a complex harmonization machine where sense data resonates with memory data and the total resonance is somehow this
 
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