I've found Shetland Street.
Not an actual street by that name- but a street where the buildings look so much like the ones I remember from that dream, and the surrounding streets are just as wide as in the dream, and even the light pollution overhead is just about the same as in the dream, and hell, the subway station that I took to get there comes out right next to/under a funky interesting marketplace type of thing... it's close enough to the dream that I can only assume it's the real world correspondence point even though I can't honestly remember ever traveling there while awake.
It's even in the same part of the map of Manhattan as I remember from the Shetland Street dream.
It's Essex Street, near the Delancey Street F train subway stop. Delancey is a little too chaotic and traffic-choked to be the street in my dream, but that's okay- every street in the world is. I tend not to have cars or anything in the street when I'm dreaming. Rivington Street is too narrow and bar-ridden, but Essex Street- the side with the Essex Street Market and the trees- that's it. That's where Shetland Street is, I'm sure of it.
Not an actual street by that name- but a street where the buildings look so much like the ones I remember from that dream, and the surrounding streets are just as wide as in the dream, and even the light pollution overhead is just about the same as in the dream, and hell, the subway station that I took to get there comes out right next to/under a funky interesting marketplace type of thing... it's close enough to the dream that I can only assume it's the real world correspondence point even though I can't honestly remember ever traveling there while awake.
It's even in the same part of the map of Manhattan as I remember from the Shetland Street dream.
It's Essex Street, near the Delancey Street F train subway stop. Delancey is a little too chaotic and traffic-choked to be the street in my dream, but that's okay- every street in the world is. I tend not to have cars or anything in the street when I'm dreaming. Rivington Street is too narrow and bar-ridden, but Essex Street- the side with the Essex Street Market and the trees- that's it. That's where Shetland Street is, I'm sure of it.