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Do you use your own dreams in your writing? I just had one.
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I use my dreams all the time in my stories.

ah well, good thing you decided to write a story about your dream rather than act on it. ^_-

The thing about this dream is that in the third and final draft, I turned it around. It went something like this: a man was observing another one staring at women in a bar and writing notes about them. The first man said to the second one, "I know what you are and what you intend to do." I had to place the scene somewhere and decided it would be in a London pub and the story would cover Jack the Ripper. The man taking notes was the Ripper and the observer was the main character. In the final draft, the encounter was preserved but treated quite differently. The man taking notes became the main character who would pursue the Ripper and his observer, his eventual protector.


ah, totally didn't know that!

And then, we moved to another room where we seemed to be playing an augmented reality game. My team and I opened a door into a dark room that had bright blue lighting on the walls. And we started shooting at the enemy team inside and quickly overtook. We then learned they were playing as Samurai and lost because they had no ranged weapons :)
Once inside, a lady who was a sort of museum director told us that the room's theme was medieval Japan, and we settled down to listen to her tell us about it and show us the exhibits. I also felt bad for ruining the exhibit (in spirit anyway) by opening fire (metaphorically) on the people in character.
When I woke up, I thought that these scenes would work well in a book I am planning about a generation ship moving between star systems. The entire dream seemed to take place in a massive structure, where the rooms were all themed and technology played a heavy role in setting the scene and keeping people entertained. I figured if you're inside a massive ship with generations of travel time, this is what you might want.



very exciting. i think that Rendevouz with Rama was a ghost generation ship, right? i forgot.

It was indeed. They thought that the aliens were there, just reduced to some chemical form that would be recreated once they got to where they were going.

Stephenie Meyers "Twilight" started with a vivid dream, so that's good news.

My dreams often involve characters and plots from TV shows.
Don't ask.

Which tv shows? Star Trek would be cool.

Star Trek, or The Expanse, or even Battlestar Galactica would be interesting. But noooo! I get goofy Germans and people named Norm.

That's my favourite writing experience when I am just lost typing as fast as I can - I'm dreaming then but wide awake.


Star Trek, or The Expanse, or even Battlestar Galactica would be interesting. But ..."
USS Krakowski came about as a re-imagining of the TOS episode Doomsday Machine. When it hit me the idea of a planet-eating entity wasn't exactly original to Star Trek (think Unicron from Transformers) I took the trope and wrote my own story. The Freedom Reigns series came about from the concept of Star Trek technology taken to the absurd (well beyond "extreme").
When TNG started ripping off popular movies toward the end of its run, I really don't feel bad about taking inspiration from them...

The easiest piece of problem solving I've done in my life, and the solution worked in my story and is still in place.
Books mentioned in this topic
My Ripper Hunting Days (other topics)My Ripper Hunting Days (other topics)
Two or three isolated spots of light gray mold topped the pastry, which was actually the leftover half of a pie-sized turnover. I was surprised, not by finding a turnover in place of a pastry--nor by the mold--but by finding edamame mixed in with the other fruit chunks inside of the turnover.
This dream might make it into one of my horror stories. It's at least worth recording.
Have you had dreams that you've worked into your stories?