Oh, wow. There's a lot going on in this story, and, like Tvorsk, I'm not sure if I can exactly put my finger on it. Let's start with an overview.
The final project! This is Dr. Wolf's true dream. Escape. Escape from paperwork, escape from people, escape from reality. That is because reality is all an illusion, and he has become one with the Tao.
Waiiiit...this is NOT my Chinese philosophy class.
My dreams can’t let me stay here, either, though I wish they would.
Is his dream really escape from the world. To put himself inside an illusion that he creates in order to escape the illusion that is the real world?
We probably need to go alllll the way back to the original discussion on Dr. Wolf's motives. He wants to make everyone's dreams come true. He feels that the world is a mess due to unfulfilled wishes. Wishes to be reversed in age, gender, and species are only the beginning.
But why escape? Why escape from everything in the real world?
I hate to bring this back into it, but I'll have to say it; Dr. Wolf is a Taoist. Big time. Taoism is defined by being anti-Confucian. That means, the Taoists believe that the muddle of the modern-day world confounds our logic, and only by removing the names of things can we reach the Tao. The Tao binds all things in the world. (Tao is...like, imagine the Nature of the Universe.)
Dr. Wolf sees this. But he sees that the only solution to this problem would be removing the modern-day world altogether. Because reaching the Tao in this universe is impossible, the only way to truly reach it would be by entering a universe of his design. This is his dream. He knows that this is the true dream of everyone, (Hence, he's a Taoist in a world of eeeeevil Confucians,) so he knows that this will hold true for everyone else.
Okay, Fen, I know that you didn't INTEND Dr. Wolf to be a Taoist, but I hope this perspective is on the right track to your true message of this piece. What do you guys think?