Wizards

[…] I think I was a wizard trying to defeat another wizard, a nemesis. My friends and I were in a dark living room, with a low ceiling and vibrant furniture that was subdued by the candlelit darkness. I could see another wizard in the adjacent kitchen through an opening in the dividing wall. He was moving about, preparing things—he was bird-like, having a large hooked nose and wearing long layered coats. I thought of him as an apothecary, and somehow we realized that he was not our friend but was working for the nemesis.

We were trying to escape from the nemesis through the halls of a large, golden, upscale mall. We fled into a dark basement where the ceiling suddenly paved over with great crashing sounds, as if we were under a freeway as it was being made.

There was a furnace or a fireplace, and people were toiling in small groups throughout the large basement, sewing things by hand. It was a kind of hell. I picked up a porcelain doll from the floor beside the fireplace and I knew I had found the nemesis’ weakness. Several such dolls were scattered around. There were exploding heads—perhaps the dolls’—but using the dolls, we were able to trap the nemesis in the basement hell where he would toil for eternity.

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Zombie Apocalypse

I was trying to sleep at home, except my house didn’t look like my house in real life. I was in the living room, which was on the ground floor, fully furnished, but with hardly any walls. I was lying under the covers on the sofa, or perhaps it was my bed; it was daytime, and the living room was well-lit with daylight.

Through the missing walls, I could see green bushes; I was in a suburbia. A couple of neighbors, middle-aged, portly, grown men, kept walking into the living room while I was trying to sleep, asking for this and that. After they left, I got back under the covers, irritated, thinking that the problem with such an open living room was that people kept walking in.

And then another neighbor – or perhaps it was the same one, as he was middle-aged and portly – walked in and said he needed to inspect our heating vent. He was some kind of repairman. Our heating vent was covered by a large grill on the side of the wall, about head-high. The repairman stuck his head through the grill, tinkering with it, his tongue sticking out the corner of his mouth in concentration. As he fiddled with the grill, his arm turned into purple tentacles that wrapped around the grill bars and protruded from the other end of the rectangular grill.

Upon seeing this, I thought I had to call the CIA, or the MIB (Men In Black). In my dream, they were the same, and it was similar to calling 911. So I called them and the male operator told me they had an office on the 32nd floor of my building, so would respond soon.

But there was an impending sense of danger and we had to evacuate. So my parents and I quickly left our house and wandered away. I only had time to grab my stuffed animal, Jellybean – but in my dream, I had two of her. My mother and I joked that the two stuffed animals were Jellybean and Jelly-buhn, meaning Jelly-stupid in Chinese.

As my parents walked around, my dad wandered into a small farm field. At first, my mom and I were annoyed, wondering where he was straying off to on his own, as he walked to the top of a grassy bluff with a playground at the top. But we followed him. He was walking among a few rows of crops, like short green corn crops, at the bottom of a grassy hill. A tractor was plowing through the field. When we asked him what he was doing here, he said he wanted to make sure there were still farms producing food that could be made into pizzas. I replied huffily that pizzas were unhealthy and I keep telling him that but he never listens […]. Then I stomped past him through the tall grass, clutching my Jellybeans.

We eventually wandered into a closed mall, where many other refugees had gathered. We used the bathrooms and I wanted to get a backpack to carry my Jellybeans in, but we couldn’t get into the store before it closed down.

My family and I sat on a bench with a lot of other refugees. My mom had brought my laundry bag and the delicates sack that went inside it. I decided to just carry my Jellybeans in the laundry or delicates bag. But when I took them from my mom, I saw she had somehow filled the bags with random clutter. I started to sort through the bags. The two Jellybeans I had weren’t identical – one was slightly larger and much newer and she seemed to stand upright, while the other was the older and more worn Jellybean that I have in real life. As I was sorting through the laundry bag items, the worn Jellybean’s ear got caught in some laundry bag item and became slightly soaked and shredded at the tip. I sighed, inspected the damage, held her to me and thought, “My poor Jellybean.”

As we sat on the bench, I looked around at the dark, closed mall. There was a wide metal grating over the entrance to the far hallway; I remember thinking that soon, an entire horde of zombies would be stampeding against it, trying to break it down to get to us and the other refugees. But no zombies ever came. I thought perhaps we should have stayed at home and waited for the help of the MIB.

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Shattered Home

I felt as though someone was lying next to me in bed […]. I was afraid he’d broken into my room and was in bed with me, so I kept trying to wake up, but couldn’t.

Finally, I woke up, only to find that my entire room had been ransacked, all my furniture lying broken and strewn in pieces about the floor. I was alone, and I stumbled around, panicking and crying out, “What’s going on?” I couldn’t understand what was happening, or what had happened while I’d been sleeping. Everything was a mess, and I hadn’t been woken by any of the vandalism.

I went to the bathroom, as is my usual waking routine, only to look in the mirror and find my face beaten up, my left eye torn by a gash across it. And once again, I was filled with the horrible feeling of being unable to understand what was happening. I realized that I must still be dreaming, and kept trying desperately to wake, but couldn’t. It was like a heavy weight was pressing down on my consciousness, and I couldn’t rise up out of it.

Around me, the bathroom was a mess – ruined and shattered. It was much larger than my bathroom in real life – longer, with a bath tub, and a broken length of something lying on the floor beside the tub. It was dark – I hadn’t turned on the lights. I still kept trying to make sense of what was happening and to wake.

Eventually, my dream changed, and there were all these cute, blue, fuzzy creatures in an arctic environment, sitting on the ice floes. But I don’t remember much anymore – except that maybe I was at a mall and trying to buy the creatures. I’d ceased to realize that I was dreaming and slept peacefully on, until I finally woke up, feeling very refreshed – and relieved to find that my room was completely orderly, sans vandalism, everything was normal, and that it had all been a dream.

[…]

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