Dreams Exit Media Dreams

Cause

Marco McClean's FAQ Google Search: "dream archive"

Finally the cause of dreaming is known.

The frame is the basic measurement of a dream, currently steady in order 9 at 1 minute, 28 seconds.
Gnarlodious has had dreams upward of 83 frames, which is a continuous 2 hr,19 minute dream.
On the other hand, the shortest dream will always be called a 1 frame dream.

Background on the nature of time is recommended. Density determines the resolution of dream frames.
Every dream frame takes place inside this span of time. When we move out of this span another frame starts (state). We exist in a Universal Sea of Vibration.

Time is a vibration that we are resonating with. All of us at once are having the same dream because the vibration of time and space is simultaneous everywhere. This means that any variation in dreams by different people is a result of experience and conditioning. Some people are locked into a single order of the Dream Sequence and they have repetitive dreams.

When people focus on the individuality of their identity and their dreams they miss totally the similarity in dreams. For some reason it appeals to our ego to imagine that we are receiving a special transmission from a diety or extraterrestrial rather than simply resonating with the universe.

Entity Marco McClean spoke thus:

A million earthquakes occur every year, so when someone dreams of an earthquake, and then hears of an earthquake, it's unreasonable for him to assume a magical connection between the dream and the event. Wars and mini wars overlap on the timeline of history, so dreaming of a war event and then hearing of a similar, real-life war event is very likely. People get sick and hurt, fall in love, get married, eat, sleep, have brushes with death on the highway; they experience triumph and failure and boredom and sex and complacency and excitement and fear.
People dream of all these things, and sometimes events and dreams seem to match up, and so what?

And so it goes with every item of everyone's reported coincidental collections of events. We pick the things we pay attention to, and so self-generate any imagined "synchronicity". And people mix up the order of events in their minds so that, in the telling of a string of coincidences, they often make it sound like, and so come to believe, the events and the dreams happened in a more wonderful order than they really did --that's particularly childish.
There's never a reason to assume that magical forces are at work. In fact, knowing how chance works, the more convinced you are that you have (or that anyone has) magical or paranormal powers, the less sane you are. That's what I think.

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http://Spectrumology.com/Cognition/Dream/