Dream Journal False Awakening - 2013 was released on:
USA: 6 February 2013 (limited)
Nothing, it's called a False Awakening.
False Awakening - 2008 was released on: USA: 13 December 2008 (video premiere)
The purpose of a dream journal is to record one's actual dreams. Making up false dreams would defeat the purpose of keeping a journal.
This question is not quite clear as to whether you have actually awakened and remember that dream of controlling everything, or whether you experienced a false awakening within the dream. Generally speaking, a dream of being able to control everything is wish-fulfillment, expressing your desire to have more control in your real life. If there was a false awakening, that dream is telling you to wake up and be more realistic in your expectations for yourself.
No, this is called a False Awakening and it's extremely common. Though it can be momentarily confusing there's nothing bad about it.
The question suggests a misunderstanding of dreams and their origin. The intention to experience a false awakening, or any other sort of desired dream, is a function of the conscious mind. But dreaming is a function of the unconscious mind, and the two mental states do not necessarily respond to each other. Even when a person succeeds in achieving lucid dreaming, the attempt at false awakening is most likely to simply cause actual awakening. It needs to be noted that a great deal of unsubstantiated claims are published about lucid dreaming and the possibilities of dream states. Like the movie "Inception," those articles, blogs and websites mostly belong in the category of fantasy.
Continuum can be a type of false awakening that follows a dream during sleep. In a continuum, the subject falls asleep in real life, but in the dream following, the brain simulates the subject as though they were still awake. At times the individual can perform actions unknowingly.
The cast of False Awakening - 2008 includes: Willow Hale as Dr. Wright Cheryl Texiera as Jennifer Benjamin Watts as Hank
Being more concious in a dream will let you pay more atention to the details, but no, Lucid dreams don't particulary produce false awakening. Should you? I don't know that's up to you, it's cool sometimes, but it requiers dedication. I have no clue about how to stop false awakenings either than forcing yourself to awaken, by trying to tense your body or trying to open your eyes with all you got.
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