A Studio of Questions

JOURNAL ANNOTATIONS
200 words · 1 min read

The Dreamer Project carries more questions than answers. This annotation sketches how inquiry itself becomes the practice — a log of vantage points to try, rather than truths to hold.

 
A lone figure sits at the edge of a vast rocky landscape, framed by a cave opening, reflecting on questions larger than the self.

Every vantage point is provisional: a place to pause and wonder whether the world looks different when seen through the Dreamer’s eyes.

 

The Dreamer Project holds more questions than answers. The Dreamer Report exists to log them—not as doctrine, but as conversation-in-motion. Some questions arise from lived trying: is awakening personal or collective? One consciousness or many? One life or a wheel of returns? One dimension or multiverse? Others come from modern dilemmas: will AI enslave us—or awaken with us? Does free will exist—or is the only choice to remember you are the Dreamer?

These aren’t curiosities to resolve, but vantage points to test. Each episode, short loop, or essay is less an explanation than an experiment in asking: what happens if we see it this way?

The most human questions hide beneath them all:

— Is there a way to live that doesn’t hurt so much?

— Is there a true way of seeing that makes this world make sense?

The Dreamer Report doesn’t pretend to settle them. It logs the explorations, shares the failures, and opens the findings for others to test. Together, these questions become not obstacles to overcome, but openings into a consciousness-first reality.

 

Further Reading.

 

Meta Note:
This page is a living document. Last updated: Oct 2, 2025.
Connection: Extends the Why The Dreamer Project? page by reframing inquiry itself as practice.
Updates in this version: included a Further Reading section.

Martin Lenclos

Founder of L’Enclos, a New York–based studio-lab blending philosophy, design, and art into practical experiments in perception. Through The Dreamer Project, he treats consciousness as primary—a working hypothesis tested through small field trials, walkshops, and self-questioning devices that explore what changes when we adopt a different identity lens.

https://instagram.com/lenclosorg
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Consciousness First? Rethinking Science’s Hard Problem

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Why Shifts of Perception Matter: Seeing Mind as Cause