In fact, about this phenomenon, I think it is true, I guess the screenwriter also discovered this phenomenon and came up with Inception and this story. I found out very early, for example, I had a story in a dream, and finally pointed to someone knocking on the door, which suddenly woke me up, and it turned out that someone really knocked on the door in reality. Another example is a story in a dream that finally points to the alarm clock ringing, and the alarm clock really just remembered that second. I initially thought these were all coincidences. Later, I thought that it was actually the tenths of a few seconds of the external stimulation that made my brain spin in the dream, and my brain made up the various plots before the real stimulation. I don't know if anyone can understand what I'm saying. Take an example. For example, when I was sleeping, my friend called my name. At this moment, the brain received the stimulation of someone calling my name, and immediately added the previous story. So in my dream, I might be traveling for a long time, having all kinds of fun, and I climbed halfway up the mountain and suddenly saw a tiger. At this time, my friend called my name to remind me of the tiger. I woke up, which happened to be connected with my friend calling my name in the real world. . I feel that this story that lasted for a few days was actually made up in the moment after my friend called my name in the real world.
The huge inconsistency between waking and dreaming time is actually a good discovery. For example, sleeping on a long and boring train, I feel like I have slept a lot, I have had countless dreams, and it has only been five minutes since I woke up and looked at my watch. I think the writer of this story has exactly the same experience as me.
View more about Nosedive reviews