Just like realizing a dream is a dream within a dream, hence becoming 'lucider' in a dream, I have realized that in lucid-dreaming we are not really becoming 'lucid', but switching identities from that of the 'dream-body' to the memory of the 'flesh-body'. Therefore, when we wake up, we come back to this identity of the flesh-body and believe that the dream-body was fake, unreal and an illusion.
However, when we are dreaming, the dream-body does feel like the dream-body and there seems to be no other reality. In the same way, I feel that perhaps the idea is to lose the sense of self in both the dream-body or the flesh-body, and hence go into 'lucid-living' where no identity is attached to.
I have a question that I was wondering about.
The Buddha described humans as being inside the Desire realm (kama-loka).
Then he also described the Material realm (rupa-loka).
Lastly he described the Immaterial realm (arupa-loka).
I know that the jhanas correspond to the Material realm, as referenced to
this sutta. This is all the way to fourth jhana, as seen in the same sutta.
Then we have the Immaterial realm, which is supposedly corresponding to the Ayatanas. I would also assume that this overlaps with the dream-space as well.
My question is - We humans have a body. So why is it that we can have a flesh-body that is composed of
form, which is supposedly
rupa? And also we experience great psychological joy and bodily blissfulness that corresponds with
rupa.
If this is so, then why is it that humans are inside the kama-loka and not the rupa-loka? Is there a different meaning for the word
rupa other than the simplistic meaning of form?
Also, when we sleep, we can also have a 'dream-body'. We can also have an astral body when we project out of body with the manomaya. This is obviously immaterial, so why is it that humans are not in the arupa-loka either? What is the hidden meaning of these three classifications that I do not see? Or is it just confusion?