Author. Rider. Explorer.



Come along as I unpack the colorful chaos of life through heartfelt stories and real talk. From gut-busting laughs to ugly cries, wild dreams to secret fears, we’ll explore the moments that make us human. Together, let’s celebrate the highs, learn from the lows, and find magic in the everyday.

The Dream Technician’s Morning Ritual

Daily writing prompt
What daily habit do you do that improves your quality of life?

Since I’ve answered this prompt before, let’s revisit the world of the Dream Technician and see how they improve their quality of life in ways both strange and mundane.


As a Dream Technician, my morning routine is… unconventional, to say the least. But it’s the one thing that keeps me sane in a world where the line between dreams and reality is as thin as gossamer.

Every day, at precisely 6:23 AM, I wake up. Not to an alarm clock. It is a malfunction that started a few years ago, but that is a story for another day. Today is about how I improve the quality of my life. 

I don’t get out of bed immediately. Instead, I close my eyes and reach my hands out in front of me. 

My fingers twitch, catching on invisible snags – nightmare residue, fine as cobwebs but stubborn as tar. I start my daily grooming ritual. Pinching each strand between fingernails, I pluck them from my skin with the precise tedium of removing lint from a sweater.

Some come off easily, dissolving like cotton candy. Others cling, their barbed hooks sunk deep. Those require a firm tug, leaving red marks that fade by breakfast.

I roll the extracted wisps into pills, like the ones that form on old blankets. Except these pills pulse faintly, warm with borrowed fear. I flick them into the empty mason jar on my nightstand. By Friday, it’ll be full enough for disposal.

It’s monotonous work, but so is flossing. Miss a spot, and you’ll pay for it later.

The whole process takes about seven minutes. At 6:30 AM, I open my eyes, stretch, and get out of bed. Time to scrub the sleep from my eyes – and maybe the faint, coppery smell of someone else’s nightmare from under my nails.

Then I head to the kitchen for my morning coffee (even Dream Technicians need caffeine)

It’s not a habit I can exactly recommend to others. But for a Dream Technician like me? It’s psychic hygiene. Without it, I’d be a walking dreamcatcher, trailing other people’s nightmares like a comet’s tail. Those fragments would tangle with my own thoughts, blurring the lines between my reality and the echoes of a thousand sleeping minds.

This daily ritual keeps me grounded, reminding me where I end and the dream world begins. It’s the psychic equivalent of washing your hands after handling raw meat – unpleasant, perhaps, but far better than the alternative.

Plus, there’s a certain satisfaction in starting each day clean, my mind a blank slate ready to dive into the next layer of the collective unconscious. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a meeting in someone’s recurring nightmare about some library that is haunted. Wish me luck.