Dream modalities
May. 29th, 2007 09:16 amThe fragment of dream I remember from last night was a phone call with someone I'm no longer in touch with. The strange part was realizing this morning that it wasn't a visual dream, but an aural one. I don't remember this ever happening before; I'm more sight-oriented*, so while there has been dream sound, it's never been primary. It made me think about Touching the Rock, where he describes how memories of sight fell away, wondering whether his dreams became more aural or more tactile. Would someone who loses hearing completely (rather than born deaf) have a similar loss of even the memory of sound?
* Not mostly in the picture-making sort of way. I know some people who make vivid pictures when reading narratives, for instance, but I tend towards vague images, more for a feeling of orientation (map-like), if at all. I'm more focused on the text (and can frequently say where on the page of a book a piece of information is, even if I can't remember the thing itself), though I don't remember ever having a text-based dream.
* Not mostly in the picture-making sort of way. I know some people who make vivid pictures when reading narratives, for instance, but I tend towards vague images, more for a feeling of orientation (map-like), if at all. I'm more focused on the text (and can frequently say where on the page of a book a piece of information is, even if I can't remember the thing itself), though I don't remember ever having a text-based dream.