Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Creativity is an addiction, unplugged because we will always say
yes to creativity, totally uncut because we all make mistakes.
So let's turn it into a tool. This is Arrow unplugged.
I love asking questions. The fun for me begins when
you start researching for answers such as, why do people
have pornographic dreams? I mean, it happens, but why? Plus
(00:21):
how much bad news is there in the world? Is
it really there? And is there a reason for so much?
My name is Arrow. I'm a daily writer, a silent wolf.
I stand on the sidelines and do nothing but watch, listen, study,
then activate. I call it the daily Mess, a chronological
walk through an everyday world. Yep, it's my morning pages.
As a receiver of thoughts and ideas, we as people
(00:44):
tend to throw things to the side because we're gonna
deal with it later. When a subject arrives inside of me,
I know it's time to dig in. It's still keeping
that daily journal, but by doing the research, the picture
becomes clearer. This is the daily Mess. Why people have
pornographic dreams? Sigmund Freud believe that dreams are a gateway
(01:05):
to the unconscious mind, where repressed and socially unacceptable desires
find expression in symbolic form. The study goes on to
show that sexual dreams may represent unfulfilled sexual urges, unresolved experiences,
or hidden away desires. The website Catholic and Recovery isn't
shy to step forward with their research. They are clear
(01:28):
when they say that sexual dreams aren't a relapse. Medical
experts agree when they say it's a natural occurrence. It's
in the Bible. Levitigus fifteen sixteen through eighteen and verse
thirty two and Deuteronomy twenty three ten both serve as
great tools in helping someone challenge by such experiences while
they're sleeping. One mental therapist actually admits to being asked
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multiple times about why men and women are caught in
such late night dreams. They make it a point to say,
we are not in control of our dreams once awake.
It is completely natural to feel ashamed, disgusted, and worried.
This is absolutely not a sign to act upon. They
are just dreams. Hey, coming up next. The news is
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always bad, one thing after another after another. Is there
a reason why? Hey? Thanks for coming back to the
daily mess. I'm not the only one talking about this.
But if you noticed lately there's a lot of bad
news out there. Has journalism inherently gone pessimistic? Why is
there so much bad news? Okay, let's start at the
(02:33):
definition of pessimistic, tending to see the worst aspect of things.
One look at social media, the local news on TV,
and on the radio, and one might instantly levitate to
calling modern day journalism as being totally addicted to being
in the core of all things bad. The University of
Oxford recently reported when you truly break down journalism, it's
(02:56):
about locating truth, and other studies say it's about getting power.
I'm sure you've heard the phrase when there's good news,
it's not really good news. It's well, but good news
is really bad news. News is designed to challenge people
and their businesses. Journalists tend to be drawn to what's trending,
which frustrates economists because it invites a reason to disconnect
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from truth and whome journalism is Everywhere, where you receive
it will determine if you believe it. I'm Merril, and
that's the daily mess