Just babbling here; but, I want to live as in my dreams - away from responsibility, deficiencies, self-labeling and so on. Dreams are amazing to me because they are the self-generated content of the mind. Nothing is more original or authentic than a dream. — Posty McPostface
Why are we all trying to escape from reality, responsibility, and other realistic goals? Is this some form of coping or what? — Posty McPostface
We live our lives immersed in Kanye and Rihanna, Trump and Putin, Big Brother and America's Next Top Model. Are these not fantasy worlds? — Pattern-chaser
And are the roles we play in those societies not more akin to that of actors on one big stage? I mean, if people would say to the slacker 'get real' or something along those lines, doesn't this mean that he needs to start working the social hierarchy, building a reputation and things like that. What is important is how people come to view us, that is the thing that has (monetary) value in the end, not the way we 'really' are. — ChatteringMonkey
'De-realisation', I would content, is actually the opposite of turning away from reality... it's the unravelling of this dream-like apollonian structure in ones mind. If you want to experience that, I'd recomment getting drunk for a couple of days straight, and just walk arround a city observing people and things. — ChatteringMonkey
So translated to millennials, the critique then maybe is not that they are escaping reality, but more that they don't buy into the collective dream of previous generations, and are creating dreams of their own. And doing so, they actually are also 'real-ising' their own dreams. Just look at how big the gaming industry, E-sports etc have become... and how much money can be earned there. And what other then money would be the ultimate fiction as a measure of realness ;-)? — ChatteringMonkey
What do you mean by that? I'm not understanding your stipulative definition of 'de-realization'. — Posty McPostface
De-realisation then would be falling out of that dream, or the unravelling of that 'fictitious' symbolic order... as opposed to how you used it in your post, as a turning away from reality towards a dream (where dream and reality are opposed). — ChatteringMonkey
Well I would say that the shifting towards another dream is maybe the result of derealisation, but not the derealisation itself. Derealisation is more the temporary absence of the dream, a kind of madness or drunkeness where one doesn't stay very long usually... but it can maybe give some insights so that the following dream has shifted yes. — ChatteringMonkey
Life is a creative act, for a human. Is that dreaming? We live our lives immersed in Kanye and Rihanna, Trump and Putin, Big Brother and America's Next Top Model. Are these not fantasy worlds? — Pattern-chaser
isn't this all so childish and mundane an activity that anyone with a competent mind can see through this whole charade? — Posty McPostface
"Charade"? I noted what people seem to do (how they actually live their lives), and (if my observation is accurate) this is what is. Your mention of "competent minds" and "charades" looks a lot like what you think ought to be. OK, drop the insulting vocabulary and tell us why you think this is wrong. Better still, tell us why you disagree with (what looks like, to me) the vast majority of humans, and how they choose to live their lives? — Pattern-chaser
You guys do what you want with this thread. It lacks direction and I'm not sure where it's headed. — Posty McPostface
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