Marshmallow Dream
"...and when I woke up, my pillow was gone!" |
A staple dream type found in comics and animation. It does not always require marshmallows in the dream sequence, but does require a pillow in the dreamer's bed. Upon awakening from a marshmallow dream, said dreamer will find the pillow to be missing or shredded. The dreamer's mouth is usually infested with feathers that were once stuffed in the pillow.
The lower the dreamer's intelligence, the more likely this is to happen, and the less need for there to be an actual marshmallow in the dream.
Always Played for Laughs, it exists solely due to Rule of Funny. It's likely Older Than You Think.
Not to be confused with Marshmallow Hell.
Anime and Manga
- Motto to Love Ru has a variation. When Mikan crawls into Rito's bed to catch one of the other girls in the act of crawling into his bed while he's sleeping, he grabs her in his sleep and his mumblings hint that he is acting like he's grabbed the 'marshmallow'. When she pinches his cheek to have him release her, his response is to claim that the 'marshmallow bit him'. Neither the pillow or Mikan is harmed when they wake (although Mikan is 'caught' by the one she was trying to catch).
- In an Eyecatch for Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha A's, Nanoha is shown happily eating sweet potatoes... pan down to show that it's only a dream, and she's actually gnawing on a struggling Yuuno.
Fan Works
- A somewhat NSFW fanfic which has been (almost) lost to time titled "Mr. Fuzzywumpus" gives us a variant. Through a chain of events a girl thinks that Sonic, Shadow and Silver are her pets, and she ends up "letting them" sleep in her bed. Shadow wakes up to find Sonic (with Easy Amnesia) cuddling up to him, and Silver ends up in a compromising position trying to separate them.
Sonic gave a little nudge. Silver’s left foot lost traction, as his right went sliding over Sonic’s far shoulder. His rear end landed quite squarely on Sonic’s chest, with his back towards Sonic’s feet, and his front towards his pillow. That put something important right in front of Sonic’s face. |
- And the next morning:
“I don’t know about you guys, but I had a wonderful dream last night...” He turned back to the bed. “It was like being inside a giant ball of cotton candy, only it wasn’t all sugary. And talk about soft...ummm...are you two quite all right?” |
Live-Action TV
- Subverted on The Colbert Report
Colbert: I dreamt I was eating a giant marshmallow, and when I woke up, my giant marshmallow was gone. |
- Subverted in an episode of The Golden Girls.
Carol: Last night, I dreamt I was eating a giant marshmallow, and when I woke up my boyfriend was gone. |
- Conversed (in a hoedown!) by Colin Mochrie in the UK Whose Line Is It Anyway?. When he has to sing about his worst nightmare, he tells about eating cotton candy and it ends with him waking up with the pillow gone.
Newspaper Comics
- Calvin and Hobbes had this as a minor Running Gag. Hobbes would be having a dream about being in a vicious fight with a ferocious weasel...only to awaken and discover that he had really been ripping his pillow to shreds. Or, occasionally, Calvin.
- Dilbert once refrenced this. Wally had a strange dream about getting smarter by willing it so, with his forehead expanding to match, but still woke up with his pillow missing. As Dilbert comments,
Wow, you woke up in the wrong joke! |
- Naturally, this has happened to Garfield. He dreams of being in the land of giant breakfasts, eats a pancake, and wakes up wondering where his blanket went.
- Another time, he thought he got up in the middle of the night and ate some jawbreakers, only to find that his marbles were missing [dead link]
- In The Better Half, Stanley tells Harriet that he dreamed about eating a very large piece of lasagna; when he woke up, their red comforter was gone.
Video Games
- Kingdom of Loathing references this with the description of the comfy pillow: "If you dream that you're eating a giant marshmallow, you'll probably wake up and find this gone, provided you're in a place where people steal your pillow while you're asleep." Then inverts it with the description of the giant marshmallow, from the same location: "If you have a dream that you're eating a pillow, you'll probably wake up and find that this is gone."
Web Comics
- DMFA recently gave us an excellent example followed by waking up.
- Slightly Damned gives us a textbook, same-page, same-panel, non-marshmallow example.
- Skin Horse combines this with Real Dreams Are Weirder here; Unity responds to the Abbess's description of her prophetic dream with an inversion of the trope ("...and when I woke up, all the marshmallows were gone!")
Web Original
- "Once, I had a dream I was eating a giant marshmallow. When I woke up, my wife was missing and everything was covered in blood!"
Western Animation
- Played with in Family Guy; Peter initially can't find his pillow, but he was just lying on it. We then see a half-eaten sheep in his room trying to crawl to safety.
- SpongeBob SquarePants:
- SpongeBob dreams of eating Krabby Patties and wakes up chewing on his pillow.
- Also referred to on "Sleepy Time". When SpongeBob meets Gary in the dreamworld, the now erudite Gary tries to explain to him the concept of dreams as a view to another world. When an Emily Dickinson poem goes over SB's head, Gary recites one more his speed:
There once was an old man from Peru |
- In The Fairly OddParents, Chester wakes up eating his pillow, says "You're not the giant marshmallow. Oh well!" and continues eating.
- In an Animaniacs short, that one kid comes out of his house and says "One time, OK, see, one time Randy Beaman's mom had a dream that she ate a big marshmallow and it was really good, and she, and when she woke up...her pillow was gone. 'Cause she ate it. 'K, bye."