Carguy-
The reason I don't believe any of that stuff is because there is no REPRODUCIBLE, DEMONSTRABLE EVIDENCE that the 'alternate reality' exists.
I will answer your particular questions to the best of my knowledge:
-Dreams are collections of neural activity during sleep. I'm not a neuroscientist so I won't pretend like I'm an expert on dreaming. Some people can control some dreams because they can control a level of semi-consciousness, where they can both stay in a dream and carry out intentions. People can typically only do this in certain stages of sleep.
-Schizophrenics hallucinate because parts of the brain have abnormal activity. Our perception of the world around us is wholly representative and not a genuine event-for-event input. The semantics of a situation can affect perception, as shown in numerous psychological studies. A mental disorder could involve hallucinating when certain stimuli, such as faces, are perceived.
-When dreaming, we aren't actually "seeing" anything. Think of your favorite song in your head. You can reproduce some semblance of "sound" without actual sound waves hitting your ears. This is similar to imagining a neck massage, the taste of pepperoni pizza, the smell of rotten milk, or the sight of your own reflection. There are parts of the brain that simulate perception, and these are responsible for the "sight" in dreams.
I'm not completely closed to the possibility of these things being true. A good skeptic always allows the possibility that something is true, even if it is far fetched. However, the more sensible position is to not believe something until given acceptable evidence for its existence. For me, if someone could answer my 5 questions (or even 4 of them), that would qualify as acceptable evidence and I would believe.
Puffman1-
This upcoming Saturday will mark the 10th week after surgery. I'll try to put some pictures up over the weekend. My healing is coming along really well. The surface scars are fading a little bit every day and I can no longer feel any deeper scar tissue at all. Massage is VERY important, and I attribute my great healing to 2 things: never missing a day of massage, and being very good about wearing the compression vests.
No they did not take blood tests. I think he expects you to have some idea of the quality of your last blood work. I think I slept on my back for about the first 5 nights. I got fat flaps, which restricted my range of motion more than the typical patient who doesn't get them. So I had very little room to move my arms without pain. After about 5 days I was able to sleep on my side if I was careful to keep my arms in a certain position. His general rule during healing is "if something doesn't hurt, it's probably ok to do. If it hurts, don't do it." It took about 6 weeks for me to feel like I fully regained pain-free range of motion.
I am actually still wearing the stage 2 vest! I wore the stage 1 for the first 4 weeks nonstop, then switched to the stage 2. I wore the stage 2 nonstop until 8 weeks post op. Since 8 weeks (now is 9 and a half) I've been wearing the vest at home but taking it off if I go anywhere. I've still worn it every single night, and I plan to keep wearing it around the house for a few more weeks just to be safe. Dr. B will probably tell you not to compare your own healing to other people's because everyone heals differently. That advice helped me out a lot and I recommend you take it seriously. If you heal faster or slower than me or other patients of his, don't think it's bad...it's just the way you heal.
How was the preop? And good luck with your surgery! You said you were following my post op thread, but have you read my post about the surgery experience? Here it is
http://www.gynecomastia.org/smf/index.php?topic=20634.0Hopefully that answers any other questions you might have had about my time there. It was overall a very positive experience. You'll be happy you chose such a good surgeon once it's all said and done.