Dear Sadistic,
It sounds like you might have Genesis in an
isolation tank of some sort for over 1000 years. Sensory deprivation is a common form of torture, and it has different effects for different folks, much less a more "durable human." For normal folk, sensory deprivation is actually relaxing and therapeutic, almost like meditation. But extended deprivation can result in hallucinations, anxiety, bizarre thoughts/delusions, and depression. Perhaps Genesis could withstand some of these negatives
longer than an average human, but would still have aspects of these symptoms after, say, 100 years. Psychologist Donald Hebb conducted experiments in the 50s and 60s which were recreated in 2008 in the documentary "Total Isolation." You can watch the almost 50 min show in its entirety
here, which may give you additional ideas. I'd Google Hebb, as well. Good luck!
Dear Jeannie,
Kat spends her nights in the Dream World, a world where missing parents
are brought together with their children. Kat's been visiting her
father, a soldier, for almost four years now. However, the Dream World
only exists in dozing. It feels like sleep, but leaves Kat feeling as if
she only dozed through the night. Apart from difficulty concentrating
and crankiness, how would this affect Kat after four years? What would
sleep deprivation do to her, if anything? Also, at the end of my novel,
she realizes her subconscious made up the Dream World to help her cope
with the loss of her father. Is it plausible for her to invent such a
complex world?
Anonymous
Dear Anonymous,
Strange that your question follows Sadistic's! And fascinating story line. Sleep deprivation can cause multiple issues for folks, like memory problems, weakened immune systems, increase in the perception of pain, and depression. Kat might even act like she's intoxicated. Studies have shown that sleep deprived people who are tested by using a driving simulator or by
performing a hand-eye coordination task perform as badly as or worse
than those who are under the influence. So you could probably use that in your characterization of her. Your plausibility question is an interesting one for sure. The brain is capable of hallucinating loved ones after they die (you should read my grief posts), and coping with death differs for everyone and could involve elaborate dream sequences for sure. So no, I don't think its impossible. I think how you write it would indicate whether the reader believes it to be so. Thanks for writing in, best of luck.
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