Sunday, 22 August 2021

WHAT DO OUR DREAM MEAN??!!

 

What Are Dreams?

                                          

Dreams are images, thoughts, or feelings that occur during sleep. Visual imagery is the most common , but dreams can involve all of the senses. Some people dream in colour while others dream in black and white , and people who are blind tend to have more dream components related to sound, taste, and smell .

When Do We Dream?

                              

On average, most people dream for around two hours per night. Dreaming can happen during any stage of sleep, but dreams are the most prolific and intense during the rapid eye movement (REM) stage.

During the REM sleep stage, brain activity ramps up considerably compared to the non-REM stages, which helps explain the distinct types of dreaming  during these stages. Dreams during REM sleep are typically more vivid, fantastical, even though they may involve elements of waking life. By contrast, non-REM dreams tend to involve more coherent content that involves thoughts or memories grounded to a specific time and place.

REM sleep is not distributed evenly through the night. The majority of REM sleep happens during the second half of a normal sleep period, which means that dreaming tends to be concentrated in the hours before waking up.

What Are Nightmares?

nightmare is a bad dream that causes a person to wake up from sleep. While bad dreams are normal and usually benign, frequent nightmares may interfere with a person’s sleep and cause impaired thinking and mood during the daytime.

How we dream

1. REM is the sweet spot

Our most vivid dreams happen during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which happens in short episodes throughout the night about 90 to 120 minutes apart.

2. Morning is better

Longer dreams occur in the morning hours.

3. Weekends help you remember

You’re more likely to remember your dreams on weekends or days when you sleep in, because each episode of REM sleep is longer than the last.

4. Your muscles are paralyzed

Most of your muscles become paralyzed during REM sleep to prevent you from acting out your dreams.

5. Pictures are most common

We dream mostly in pictures, with the majority of dreams being mainly visual with little sound or movement.

6. Recurring dreams have themes

Recurring dreams in children are mostly about:

  • confrontations with animals or monsters
  • physical aggressions
  • falling
  • being chased

7. We don’t all dream in colour

Around 12 percent of people dream in black and white.

What we dream

8. Strange is normal

Many of our dreams are strange because the part of the brain responsible for making sense of things shuts down during dreaming.

9. Our day informs our dreams

Most of our dreams are linked to thoughts or events from the previous day or two.

10. Faces are familiar

You likely only dream about faces you’ve already seen in person or on TV, according to Stanford University.

11. Low stress means happy dreams

You’re more likely to have pleasant dreams if you’re experiencing low stress and feel satisfied in your real life.

Nightmares and other scary stuff

12. Kids have more nightmares

Nightmares usually begin between the ages of 3 and 6, and decrease after the age of 10.

13. Women are more prone to scary dreams

Women have more nightmares than men during their teen and adult years.

14. Nightmares occur at a similar time at night

Nightmares occur most frequently in the last third of the night.

15. Sleep paralysis is a thing

Around 8 percentTrusted Source of the general population experience sleep paralysis, which is the inability to move when you’re in a state between sleep and wake.

16. Your feelings come out in dreams

For example, you’re more likely to experience negative dreams about a lost loved one if you’re suffering from post-traumatic symptoms, guilt, or blame over their death.

17. The holidays can be rough

Grief dreams, which are dreams about deceased loved ones, are more common during the holidays.

18. Night terrors can be frightening

Night terrors are episodes of intense fear, screaming, and even running around or acting aggressive while asleep.

19. Children have them more frequently

Almost 40 percent of children have night terrors, though most outgrow them by their teens.

20. Adults can still have them

Around 3 percent of adults have night terrors.

21. Eating late isn’t helpful

Eating before bed makes nightmares more likely, because it increases your metabolism, signaling your brain to be more active.

22. Medications play a role

Certain medications, such as antidepressants and narcotics, increase the frequency of nightmares.

23. Negative emotions take a toll

Confusion, disgust, sadness, and guilt are more often the driving force behind nightmares than fear, according to research.

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