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  2. Waking Life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waking_Life

    Waking Life is a 2001 American animated film written and directed by Richard Linklater. The film explores a wide range of philosophical issues, including the nature of reality, dreams and lucid dreams , consciousness , the meaning of life , free will , and existentialism . [ 3 ]

  3. Sedentary lifestyle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedentary_lifestyle

    Sedentary lifestyle is a lifestyle type, in which one is physically inactive and does little or no physical movement and/or exercise. [1] A person living a sedentary lifestyle is often sitting or lying down while engaged in an activity like socializing, watching TV, playing video games, reading or using a mobile phone or computer for much of ...

  4. Wakefulness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wakefulness

    v. t. e. Wakefulness is a daily recurring brain state and state of consciousness in which an individual is conscious and engages in coherent cognitive and behavioral responses to the external world. Being awake is the opposite of being asleep, in which most external inputs to the brain are excluded from neural processing.

  5. Sleep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep

    Dreams often feel like waking life, yet with added surrealism. During sleep, especially REM sleep, humans tend to experience dreams. These are elusive and mostly unpredictable first-person experiences which seem logical and realistic to the dreamer while they are in progress, despite their frequently bizarre, irrational, and/or surreal ...

  6. Hypnagogia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnagogia

    Hypnagogia is the transitional state from wakefulness to sleep, also defined as the waning state of consciousness during the onset of sleep. Its opposite state is described as hypnopompia – the transitional state from sleep into wakefulness. Mental phenomena that may occur during this "threshold consciousness" phase include hypnagogic ...

  7. Consciousness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consciousness

    waking life (as that to which one returns after sleep, trance, fever) wherein all one's mental powers have returned . . . the part of mental life or psychic content in psychoanalysis that is immediately available to the ego—compare PRECONSCIOUS, UNCONSCIOUS

  8. Wish fulfillment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wish_fulfillment

    Wish fulfillment is the satisfaction of a desire through an involuntary thought process. It can occur in dreams or in daydreams, in the symptoms of neurosis, or in the hallucinations of psychosis. This satisfaction is often indirect and requires interpretation to recognize. Sigmund Freud coined the term (Wunscherfüllung) in 1900 in an early ...

  9. False awakening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_awakening

    False awakening. A false awakening is a vivid and convincing dream about awakening from sleep, while the dreamer in reality continues to sleep. After a false awakening, subjects often dream they are performing their daily morning routine such as showering or eating breakfast. False awakenings, mainly those in which one dreams that they have ...