Post by Admin on Jul 23, 2013 20:28:26 GMT
Projections
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Shade n.
11. A small amount; a trace
12. A disembodied spirit; a ghost.
13. A present reminder of a person or situation in the past
Shades are a type of projection that rarely ever occur. They are ghost-like, wisps of a past long gone, merely a memory. Often, they take shape of a person that the dreamer has many regrets about. Sometimes the person is still living, other times they are not.
These memories breech the wall that the dreamer sets up between their subconscious and the dreamworld. Some dreamers are able to lock away these shades before they can do any harm, but some are either careless or the memory is too strong to avoid. The memories then burst through the seams of their subconscious and take the form of their regret.
How strongly the dreamer feels about the memories will effect how it acts within the dream. Some shades are like normal projections—they blend in with the projections of the subject and act how projections usually act. They take little notice of what is going on in the dream world. Other shades can become dangerous, though, compromising the dreamer and going out of their way to wreck havoc on all the participants of the dream.
Anyone in the dream can interact with a shade, though anyone with sense would stay far, far away from one—if they can tell the difference, that is. Shades appear exactly like the other projections and it is only their strange behavior that will give them away, and even then, their behavior is very similar to regular projections until they are provoked by the dreamer.
insert stuff here
Shade n.
11. A small amount; a trace
12. A disembodied spirit; a ghost.
13. A present reminder of a person or situation in the past
Shades are a type of projection that rarely ever occur. They are ghost-like, wisps of a past long gone, merely a memory. Often, they take shape of a person that the dreamer has many regrets about. Sometimes the person is still living, other times they are not.
These memories breech the wall that the dreamer sets up between their subconscious and the dreamworld. Some dreamers are able to lock away these shades before they can do any harm, but some are either careless or the memory is too strong to avoid. The memories then burst through the seams of their subconscious and take the form of their regret.
How strongly the dreamer feels about the memories will effect how it acts within the dream. Some shades are like normal projections—they blend in with the projections of the subject and act how projections usually act. They take little notice of what is going on in the dream world. Other shades can become dangerous, though, compromising the dreamer and going out of their way to wreck havoc on all the participants of the dream.
Anyone in the dream can interact with a shade, though anyone with sense would stay far, far away from one—if they can tell the difference, that is. Shades appear exactly like the other projections and it is only their strange behavior that will give them away, and even then, their behavior is very similar to regular projections until they are provoked by the dreamer.