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In the final moments before facing the firing squad, the charismatic leader of a murderous robbery gang makes one last request: to have her confession heard by the priest who was once her lover.
You posit a dichotomy, an either/or I never intended. I'm saying employ both experience and imagination. And I consider personal experience as an aspect of research. [As Sigmund Freud noted, in dreams the logical contraries,dichotomies, either/or distinctions of waking life dissolve into both -- yeaRead more
You posit a dichotomy, an either/or I never intended. I’m saying employ both experience and imagination. And I consider personal experience as an aspect of research. [As Sigmund Freud noted, in dreams the logical contraries,dichotomies, either/or distinctions of waking life dissolve into both — yeah, Tao moments.]
But if I have to choose between trusting my own experience or the contrary judgement of some “authority” as to what my dreams mean, I always go with my experience.
>> where are all the good movies by LAPD Officers
Well, there is “The Onion Field” by Detective Joseph Wambaugh. Where are all the good movies written by non-LAPD officers? I can’t think of any I was impressed with since “L.A. Confidential” — which is set in the smoggy past.
Oh, and all the cop procedurals on TV hire cops as consultants. And I think it safe to conclude that some of the staff writers are ex-cops
See lessIn the final moments before facing the firing squad, the charismatic leader of a murderous robbery gang makes one last request: to have her confession heard by the priest who was once her lover.
kbfilmworks, I was not impressed with either of the titles you mentioned -- my dreams were so much more dramatic, more emotionally intense and paradoxical. And I can't recall any other I would commend to your attention. IMHO: if you're serious about writing a story in which lucid dreaming is a centrRead more
kbfilmworks,
I was not impressed with either of the titles you mentioned — my dreams were so much more dramatic, more emotionally intense and paradoxical. And I can’t recall any other I would commend to your attention.
IMHO: if you’re serious about writing a story in which lucid dreaming is a central plot device, then I think you would benefit more from first hand experience than any book or movie. Take the plunge into your own dream life. Trust your own experience — accept no substitutes or second hand testimony.
Don’t get me started on this topic! (But if you want to, check out the directory, contact me via Facebook.)
See lessIn the final moments before facing the firing squad, the charismatic leader of a murderous robbery gang makes one last request: to have her confession heard by the priest who was once her lover.
kbfilmworks, I was not impressed with either of the titles you mentioned -- my dreams were so much more dramatic, more emotionally intense and paradoxical. And I can't recall any other I would commend to your attention. IMHO: if you're serious about writing a story in which lucid dreaming is a centrRead more
kbfilmworks,
I was not impressed with either of the titles you mentioned — my dreams were so much more dramatic, more emotionally intense and paradoxical. And I can’t recall any other I would commend to your attention.
IMHO: if you’re serious about writing a story in which lucid dreaming is a central plot device, then I think you would benefit more from first hand experience than any book or movie. Take the plunge into your own dream life. Trust your own experience — accept no substitutes or second hand testimony.
Don’t get me started on this topic! (But if you want to, check out the directory, contact me via Facebook.)
See less