One will awaken naturally. Situations such as being trapped in a dream, dreaming of being a dream and being unable to wake up through successive layers of dreams only occur in science and fantasy fiction.
People always dream while they are sleeping whether the dreams are remembered or not, and it is perfectly normal to go on sleeping after a dream ends. Dreams can be remembered more easily when one awakens at the end of the dream, but one dreams at intervals through every sleep period. Even if you are not dreaming, you are still resting. The body needs rest.
It is kinda hard to control your dreams but find yourself between waking up and still dreaming and try to control it from there.
Some objections to Descartes' dream argument include the difficulty in distinguishing between dreaming and waking states, the assumption that dreams are always radically different from reality, and the possibility that even in dreams, some truths or experiences may still hold value or significance.
The scientific term for the ability to be aware that you are dreaming while still in a dream is called "lucid dreaming." It involves a state of consciousness where individuals have awareness and control over their dreams.
Dreams can be big. ... Also dreaming is big because some times when people wake up from a dream they still fell like there still in the dream.There are also dreams you have when you walk, talk and sometimes even punch or kick.
This dreams clearly symbolizes communication issues you have in your waking life because in this dream you were unable to talk. You had tried, but still were unsucessful. You feel that in your waking life it is hard for you to talk with people.
Unfortunately, If you are asking about dreams that occur while you are sleeping, the answer is that you cannot have the dream that you want. Dreams that occur during sleep are involuntary. Their content and images are produced by your subconscious mind without conscious (voluntary) control. Some individuals are able to "incubate" a dream, in the sense of focusing on a particular subject before falling asleep. But even if that person succeeds in dreaming of the chosen subject, they do not have control over how that matter appears in the dream. Another method of trying to control dreams is "lucid dreaming," meaning becoming aware of dreaming while still asleep. There is great variation in the amount of control different individuals achieve in lucid dreams.
That you have a whole lot of dreams. Dreams don't actually mean much. It's like recordings of things that you've seen or done or heard or said which your mind is then trying to categorize or evaluate.
It doesn't mean anything, dreams are random. But theres a posibility that you still have feeling for him. Wow, you answered it youself. One of the functions of dreams to help sort out our feelings. You may have these dreams in response to something someone said or something you saw. It doesn't mean you are still "dreaming about" him. The dreams are a reminder to you that you still haven't resolved your feelings for him.
it means you're very smart because if you Dream while you know your in it, it's a proven fact because the brain still works when you're asleep but the rest of the body doesn't, or you get many dreams that you're so used to it you kind of feel like you're in your imagination... The phenomenon of realizing you are in a dream while dreaming is called "lucid dreaming." It does not "mean" anything in particular, other than the conscious mind has become active during the dream without fully awakening.
It is not possible to "wake up" in a dream. When one awakens from a dream, one is no longer asleep, and no longer dreaming. Some individuals are able to become aware that one is dreaming while still in the process of dreaming, which is called "lucid dreaming."
Hallucination that occur just upon waking are a type of dream, indicating that different areas of your mind are awakening at different rates. The dreaming function of your mind essentially still asleep while other areas of your mind are becoming aware of your surroundings.