I. Lab Rats.
The entire dream seemed to be about us all going in these circles, these cycles, we were placed within by a higher force or intelligence, but we also somehow seemed to be physically bound to a locale as well. Most centrally among my companions was this girl I knew from childhood who used to live across the street from our suburban home. Her and I kissed at some point in the dream and began developing something as these cycles continued.
At one point as her and I were walking along a forest-lined road, I discover that she didn’t recall having ever gone to the beach with me or anything about our budding relationship, and that other events that had happened seemed lost to her as well. The rest of us came to the conclusion that “they” had taken away some of her memories, leaving her with only selected ones, and that this whole thing — the routine, being trapped in this place — was about them testing on and studying us like lab rats.
After I awoke from the dream, as my eyes were still closed and I was going over it, trying to remember all of it, it reminded me for some reason of the movie, The Forgotten, though it took some searching on the net for me to finally find the title of the movie after I got up around 9:30. As I reflected more on the dream after being awake, though, I found it reminded me more of Dark City, which I ended up finding on the net and watching.
Afterward, still feeling tired, I decided to lay back in bed sometime after one in the afternoon, do some relaxation exercises, and try and take a nap. I woke up at about twenty after two after having had a strange experience on the dreamscape.
II. “I Know This Isn’t Real.”
I’m looking everywhere, all around my parents property for two things, neither of which I can find, so I start walking around the block. Interestingly enough, I found one of the items — the wheelbarrow — alongside a dirt road maybe halfway around the block. As to how it got there, I could only assume that someone had stolen it.
I began walking with it back home, but then saw what I recognized as my parents old porch swing a few paces away on the other side of the road. After thinking back for a moment, I thought I recalled her telling one of the neighbors they could have it, so I surmised that this must be the neighbor in question. I then noticed a land line right by the swing with the phone off the hook. With some struggle, as it wouldn’t latch at first, I managed to put it back on the holder.
Finally making it back to my parent’s long driveway, I begin walking as the day descends into night. As I began to approach the house I suddenly realized I didn’t have the wheelbarrow with me. I felt confused, embarrassed, and a little frightened about what I assumed had to have been my absent-mindedness, and walked back down to the end of the driveway to discover that I had indeed left it there.
Once I finally get back to the house, it’s dark, and walk inside. My mother and sister, Eve, are there, talking amongst one another and not even acknowledging my existence. I try to tell my mother about the wheelbarrow, but whatever I do, I can’t seem to get her attention — she just keeps ignoring me and talking to Eve. After the third attempt, I scream, “Fuck it, fine,” and walk around the dining room table, which finally gets her attention.
As I then proceed to walk into the kitchen, where she stands, I scream that I’ve been trying to tell her about something but she won’t listen, and I’ve tried getting her attention three fucking times now. I’m furious. All this hassle and confusion trying to find the wheelbarrow and I can’t get her to even pay attention to me long enough to tell her.
At any rate, as I’m yelling at her in the kitchen she finally looks at me, the first time since I walked in the door, and she just looks me in the eyes and flicks me off before turning around again. In response, I hold up both my middle fingers and stick them in her line of sight.
“Two for you,” I say. “I found your fucking wheel barrow.”
Shorrly thereafter, I sit down on the floor in front of the television with Eve beside me a short distance away, I think on a chair. Then my mother comes in and sits beside me, deliberately hitting me with her knee as she does so. I don’t react. I just sit there angrily, hand on my chin, trying to ignore her, staring at the screen on the boxy television on the floor, just stewing, steaming.
Suddenly, for whatever reason, I begin to suspect that somethings incredibly off about all this. That it was all an illusion, all a dream. For a moment I called myself crazy, as my vision was so damn clear, but I soon became absolutely convinced.
That was when I turned to my “mother,” grabbed her by the shoulders, and screamed as loud as I could, with all the rage swelling in me, “I know this isn’t real,” but no voice came out. I screamed it louder, and this time I could hear it, however faint, but the dream darkens, fades, and for a moment it feels as though I’m in that otherworldly Void I often go to during my astral projections.
Then I wake up.
I’m downstairs at my parents house and the family is around me. My mother wants to say something to me, but I politely tell her to wait a second, as I have to piss. While I do need to pee, it’s also because I want to write down the dream I just had on my phone before my memory of it fades.
First, though, I have to piss, and as I race to the bathroom stuff falls out of my pocket. I decide to pick it up later. Once inside, I pull down my pants but become utterly confused when I see my boxer shorts. They have sort of a patchwork pattern, though the biggest patch is red-colored with tiny white hearts on it.
I’d never buy this. I’d never wear it.
In any case, I start to piss, but accidentally piss on my father’s shirt, which for some reason was draped over the toilet seat.
Something seems off about all this, I think to myself. I can hear my parents outside the door, talking to each other about the trailer they’re helping me move into next August, but by the time I finish up and exit the bathroom, they’re already upstairs, preparing to go to bed.
I pick up the things that fell out of my pocket — some money rolls to roll some change of mine — and then remember that I wanted to write down that dream, but I left my phone in the bathroom, so I walk back in. I’m shocked to find the toilet’s no longer there. In its place is my old computer chair, which had broke. I inspect it, however, only to discover that it’s no longer broken.
“I’m not still fucking dreaming…?”
As soon as I say it, I wake up in bed.