…because no-one would live to be able to tell the tale, if that tale was true, so how would we/anyone know.
I used to dream that dream that I was falling -quite frequently, in fact- but either always woke up or just simply ceased dreaming, so how could I have known if I would have died if those two alternatives hadn’t happened?
One of the problems with saying it won’t kill you is we can’t ask people who died in their sleep what they were dreaming. I can however attest that I have had a dream where I fell from a cliff and survived, in the dream I fully hit the ground. It left my skin tingling, very intense, and I awoke right after from the shock
We don’t have any concrete examples of people dying in real life from hitting the ground in a dream, but we do have examples of people not dying.
Sounds like it’s just a silly speculation to me. Fun to do, but no reason to think it’s more than that
The synchronicity that blends moments … whether waking or dreaming … gives two options:
a) a being/persons not subject to (& subsuming) time, who is scarily untainted by our nihil, no matter how close — the whole timeline they concur/sustain in now is in their mind(s)
b) information communication at a distance (in space or pre-/post-present/now time) from beings who are allowed to do it for a purpose, because the blending of moments requires a being(s) like in a
c) NOT a mindless being (“the universe is trying to teach you something”)
Life is not just a literary device, and dreams are part of it.
Not all dreams come true, and not all immediately, and sometimes the interpretation is delayed until you’re living in it.
For some, the choice is: Anchor up to unchanging love or be anchored to a millstone tied around your neck.
A choice they would never dream about without prior life experience. Even if only in their mind. Even if it initially got in there traumatically.