
Overview
In a recent YouTube video titled “Rêves, réalités et SIMULATIONS!” (“Dreams, Realities, and Simulations!”), a speaker identified as Mr. Jordane presents a speculative discussion about consciousness, dreams, and the possibility that everyday life may be less fixed than it appears. Framed as a philosophical exploration rather than a scientific presentation, the video asks whether dreams are simply products of the subconscious or, as Jordane suggests, evidence of a “double life” unfolding alongside waking reality.
The core of the argument centers on the idea that dream experiences feel so vivid and emotionally convincing that they may represent another layer of existence. Jordane questions whether the certainty people feel while dreaming could imply that waking life is itself only one version of reality among many. Throughout the video, he returns to the notion that human perception is limited, and that what people call “reality” may be only one frequency among several.
Consciousness, Frequency, and Alternate Realities
A major theme in the video is the claim that consciousness shifts between “densities” or frequencies of reality. Jordane uses an analogy drawn from marine science, comparing these layers to the discovery of underwater lakes at the bottom of the ocean—distinct environments separated by unseen boundaries. In his view, human awareness may function in a similar way, moving between different states that are experienced as separate worlds.
He also advances a more provocative idea: that the self is fragmented across multiple realities, with individuals potentially existing in different forms, identities, or roles elsewhere. According to this framing, a person may be “the same” consciousness while appearing in different contexts, with memories and identities not fully accessible in ordinary waking life. The video presents this as a conceptual possibility, though it does not offer empirical evidence.
References to NDEs, Glitches, and Simulation Theory
To support his broader argument, Jordane points to a range of paranormal and cultural reference points. He cites near-death experiences (NDEs), noting that many people who report them describe the post-body state as more real than physical existence. He also refers to astral travel and lucid dreaming as possible ways consciousness can move beyond ordinary limits, suggesting these experiences may reveal hidden structure in reality.
The video further invokes the Mandela Effect and the idea of “glitches in the matrix” as signs of inconsistency or error in the world we perceive. While these phenomena are widely discussed online, they remain controversial and are generally explained by psychology, memory distortion, or coincidence rather than by proof of simulation. Jordane acknowledges the popular “Matrix” comparison but says he prefers the word “dream” because it feels less tied to science fiction and more aligned with his interpretation of experience.
Memory, Loss, and the Value of the Physical World
One of the video’s more distinctive claims is what Jordane calls “nostalgia of memory”—the idea that people may possess knowledge in other states of being but lose access to it upon returning to the body. He argues that this loss leaves humans disconnected from a fuller understanding of existence, as if they have been “amputated” from a larger awareness. The framing is spiritual and introspective, emphasizing subjective experience over measurable fact.
Jordane concludes by suggesting that physical reality is becoming more incoherent, while dream life is becoming more structured and meaningful. He urges viewers not to take the current news cycle—or the apparent weight of everyday reality—too seriously, implying that what people see as the material world may be the least stable of all possible states. While the video stops short of evidence-based conclusions, it reflects a broader online fascination with consciousness, simulation theory, and the uneasy boundary between dreams, belief, and perceived reality.


