[2003.10.28 2051h] [movie] battle royale some days ago, i had a dream in which i was trying to stop a runny nose by stuffing small sticks and leaves up my left nostril. i'm not sure why i did that in my dream, but my assumption is that tissues were not readily available to me in my dream, although apparently, sticks and leaves were. eventually, the sticks and leaves got relatively uncomfortable, so i tried removing them. unfortunately, some of the small sticks were really stuck up my nasal passages, so i tried hard to blow them out. suddenly, i woke up and found myself trying to blow out a tissue stuck up my left nostril. is a dream considered a lucid dream if one eventually wakes from the lucid dream, only to wake up again afterward and realize that one was still dreaming after apparently waking up from the lucid dream? it's difficult to say if the lucid dream had always been within the context of the dream world, but one had not realized it while the lucid dream was taking place, or if one was actually lucid dreaming while the lucid dream was taking place, but only when the process of waking up was internalized within the dream was the lucid dream then framed in the context of the dream world. anyway, i had such a dream recently. i can't remember if it was today or yesterday, but it hardly matters with my currently irregularly polyphasic sleep times. i can't even remember to try to eat every day anymore. sadly, it seems as if i hardly ever have lucid dreams. i believe i've only woken up and recalled just having had a lucid dream maybe once or twice. apparently, many people, upon realizing that they are in a lucid dream, would take actions within the dream that would normally lead to some form of negative social repercussions. however, it seems as if every time i have had a lucid dream, i don't seem to desire to carry out any actions within the dream different from what i would consider normal for my character. since i've noticed this some years ago, i had decided that the next time i had a lucid dream, i would try to deliberately take actions contrary to my character that i believed most people would enjoy if the actions were not associated with negative social repercussions. since i rarely have lucid dreams, the opportunity hadn't presented itself until recently. as stated above, i'm not sure if this specific dream can be correctly classified as a lucid dream, but i doubt it really matters in this dream experiment. regardless, i found that i ended up taking actions contrary to my character for only about one or two minutes within the lucid dream's time frame, since apparently, i didn't exactly find the actions enjoyable. i'm still not sure what this means, but as i've been typing up this entry, i've been trying to come up with suitable theories. so far, the only one that i consider plausible is the idea that my moral code is largely internalized. i believe that, usually, significant portions of a typical person's moral code is determined largely by external factors, such as organized religion or social ideals and pressures. so when a typical person is lucid dreaming, it seems possible for the dreamer to believe that the basis of certain portions of the moral code that the dreamer follows is now defunct, and as a result, the dreamer is then able to enjoy performing actions contrary to the now irrelevant portions of the dreamer's moral code. on the other hand, my moral code is largely based on my own ideas, with a few tweaks to accommodate whatever ideas are currently hegemonic in my immediate society. as a result, whenever i am lucid dreaming, my moral code comes along with me, largely intact, as since, within the dream, i still exist, along with my own ideas, and acting contrary to my moral code would be similar to acting contrary to myself and my own ideas, which, apparently, is not very enjoyable.