WHAT A FUCKING NIGHT I HADThere’s something fascinating about dreams: while they’re happening, everything feels completely normal. You can be running away from someone inside a shopping mall that suddenly turns into your old school playground, open a door and end up inside your grandma’s house, talk to someone whose face you can’t even properly see, or try to run while your legs feel like they’re made out of wet clay… and yet your brain never stops to think: “hold on, something here feels off.”
Then you wake up. Open your eyes. Ten seconds pass. And you think:
“what the fuck did I just dream?”.
Because dreams are weird as hell. Surreal. Incoherent. Sometimes they feel like they were edited by a drunk guy randomly stitching scenes together with absolutely no narrative logic whatsoever. And yet, there’s actually a pretty interesting explanation behind all of it.
When we fall asleep and enter the
REM phase —the stage where dreams become most intense— the brain completely changes the way it works. Some areas related to emotions, images and memories become highly active, while the part responsible for logic and rational thinking slows way down. In other words: your
emotional brain goes full power mode while the guy in charge of saying
“this makes no sense” is basically on vacation.
That’s why dreams allow you to accept
completely absurd situations as if they were perfectly normal. You can be having a serious conversation with your dentist inside a submarine piloted by your old math teacher and never question it for a second.
The brain doesn’t build dreams like a coherent movie. It builds them more like an
emotional collage. It links ideas, memories, sensations and people through fast and chaotic associations. Just like a song can instantly take you back to a specific moment in your life, emotions inside dreams can completely transform everything within seconds.
That’s where those
sudden scene changes with zero transition come from. You’re in a street. Then on a mountain. Then inside an office. Then underwater. Everything connected more through feelings than actual logic.
Then there’s the whole blurry faces thing. A lot of people dream about someone they “know” without actually seeing their facial features clearly. That happens because the brain often doesn’t bother creating a full hyper-realistic image. It only needs to generate the
sensation of recognition. Kind of like when you try remembering someone’s face from memory and know exactly who they are even if you can’t reconstruct every detail.
But probably one of the most universal dream experiences is trying to run and not being able to. Or punching in slow motion. Or moving like your whole body is trapped inside
jelly.
And here comes one of the craziest parts of all this: while you’re dreaming, your body is actually
almost completely paralyzed. Literally.
During REM sleep, the brain activates a mechanism called
muscle atonia, a temporary shutdown that prevents you from physically acting out your dreams. Basically, your body disconnects your muscles so you don’t end up doing parkour across your hallway while dreaming about escaping from a dinosaur.
The problem is that your brain mixes that real physical immobility with the story it’s creating. That’s why when you try escaping inside a dream, it feels like you’re running through concrete or like someone’s holding you from behind.
And the wildest part is that, while you’re inside the dream, you’re rarely aware of how absurd everything actually is. Your mind accepts the chaos as if it were perfectly reasonable. Until you wake up.
And then yeah. That’s when your brain comes back online, looks at the absolute nonsense it created during the night and probably thinks the exact same thing you do:
“okay… what kind of insane drug trip was that?”.
But let’s be honest: no matter how weird, chaotic or surreal dreams are, we all know which ones are the best.
Yep.
Wet dreams.
Because that’s when the brain completely removes every possible limit and decides to produce something that feels like Hollywood on an unlimited drug budget. And the craziest part is how
ridiculously real everything can feel.
The touch. The excitement. The tension. That physical sensation so intense that, while dreaming, your brain convinces you that you’re actually there, inside a nightclub, surrounded by naked bodies, fucking like tomorrow and basic human dignity no longer exist.
And then suddenly it happens. You cum. Literally.
Because the body can physically react to dreams strongly enough to trigger a real orgasm while you’re still asleep. The brain gets so deep inside the fantasy, so disconnected from logic and so wired into arousal, that it turns a completely absurd mental movie into a very real physical response.
And honestly, there may not be a more surreal feeling than waking up in the middle of the night thinking:
“holy shit… did I just cum while dreaming about fucking three waitresses on top of the DJ booth?”.
As unbelievable as it sounds… yeah, sometimes the answer is absolutely yes.
# Watch videos
Slow motion of the day.
RANDOM AI-GENERATED IMAGES VOL34For decades, adult content was built around something pretty simple:
recording real people doing real things. There were cameras, actors, sets, and someone behind the scenes yelling "action." Then the internet showed up and multiplied everything. After that, social media blurred the line between intimacy and everyday life. And now
artificial intelligence arrives with a completely different proposal: you don't even need to film anything anymore.
The goal used to be
capturing a fantasy. Now we're starting to
build one from scratch.
And maybe the most interesting part isn't what's happening right now, but what comes next. Up until now, we've all basically consumed the same thing: the same actresses, the same videos, the same platforms. We picked from a limited catalog. Bigger or smaller, sure... but still limited.
The next step, though, points toward something completely different: content created exclusively for one person.
Your ideal face, your ideal voice, your ideal personality, your ideal scenario. Almost like the internet stops being a TV and starts becoming a mirror.
And the funny thing is a lot of people would probably think: "Okay, but I wouldn't even know how to explain what I want." Because most of us aren't movie directors. We don't know how to build an atmosphere, write scenes, create chemistry, or define exactly what our perfect person would look like.
But maybe the future won't be about creating at all. Maybe it'll simply be about
existing while a machine watches you.
Because the internet has already been doing a version of that for years. Algorithms already know how long you stare at a photo, which videos you replay, what catches your attention, what you ignore, what you search for, and which things make you pause for two extra seconds without even realizing it.
Now imagine that same technology a few years from now. You wouldn't need to type prompts or explain fantasies anymore. AI could detect patterns you don't even know exist. Tiny invisible details: a certain smile, a way someone looks at the camera, a specific voice, personality traits, or situations that quietly repeat themselves in your habits without you noticing.
Little by little it could build an incredibly accurate map. Not of what you
say you like... but of what
actually grabs your attention.
A lot of people might enter that world out of simple curiosity. The same way we used to jump online years ago to download songs, discover weird websites, or waste time finding random stuff. Just to try it. Just for fun.
But there'll be generations growing up with experiences built around them with a level of precision that's almost impossible to compete with.
Because human relationships come with unavoidable things: surprises, differences, awkward moments, frustration, rejection, and real people having good days and bad days. The other person exists outside your head.
But an artificial intelligence designed to please you could learn the exact opposite:
never argue, never fail, never get tired, never disappoint you, and never ask for anything in return.
And that creates a pretty strange question: if a generation grows up getting used to experiences custom-built for them with surgical precision... what happens when they run into real people?
Because maybe the biggest change in the future won't be technological. Maybe the real shift will be that, for the first time, we'll have an emotional and sexual alternative designed to directly compete with reality itself.
And that opens up an even stranger possibility: a lot of people may walk in out of curiosity... and some may simply decide to stay there. Because once something starts understanding you better than you understand yourself, it stops feeling like a tool.
And maybe, for the first time in history, a fantasy stops being a fantasy... and starts adapting itself to you better than the real world ever could.
# View images
Banana.