|
What exactly are dreams?
Dreams are expressions of thoughts, feelings, and awarenesses—that
are represented through the creation of sensory environments in our
minds. The creation of the dreamscape is caused by stimulation of the
sensory cortex, that occurs naturally during REM sleep.
Are dreams in any way related
to every day life?
Yes! Dreams are representations of thoughts, feelings, and
awarenesses that have been occupying our mind—usually for the day or two
prior to the dream. If you want to know what a dream is about, think
about how it relates to recent events in your life—like what happened
yesterday or the day before!
Is there a certain time in
the sleep cycle when people dream?
Yes. People dream during REM sleep, which occurs about every 90
minutes throughout the night, for progressively longer periods. For
example, we may only dream 5 or 10 minutes in our first REM period, but
by morning we all dream for about 30-40 minutes—right before we wake up!
Does everyone dream?
Everyone dreams about 100 minutes per night; we just have
difficulty remembering our dreams. One hundred minutes is over an hour
and a half per night of dreams—longer than most movies we see at the
theater, or on TV!
Why do people dream?
Dreaming helps our brains grow, by exciting our neurons. Did you
know that newborn babies dream about 8 hours per day? All warm-blooded
creatures have REM sleep—cats dogs, horses—even birds and dolphins!
Can a person affect what they
dream about by food, drugs, or alcohol? Or by any other method?
Some people say pineapple pizza and chocolate gives them wild
dreams, but no one has really been able to prove this! Most
drugs—sleeping pills, marijuana, alcohol—decrease our dream recall. If
you want to influence what you dream about, write down a question or
goal for your dream in a dream journal—just before you go to bed. You
will usually dream about your question or goal within a week.
Do dreams serve a purpose in
the brain’s function? Or are they part of the brain’s nighttime
functions?
In addition to helping our brains grow when we are young,
researchers believe dreaming plays a role in memory—by strengthening
connections between certain areas of our brains, and by allowing other
connections (less useful information) to be released and forgotten. REM
sleep also plays a role in releasing certain hormones in the brain. Did
you know that all anti-depressant drugs are effective because they
dramatically reduce REM sleep? Scientists aren’t sure exactly why
reduced REM relieves depression—but it does!
How can a person remember
more of their dreams?
The trick is to learn to wake up slowly. When you first wake up,
you need to concentrate on what you were just dreaming about. Try to lie
still, and don’t move around very much or get out of bed—not yet. Just
concentrate on your dream, or the feeling that your dream caused you. It
also helps if you keep a dream diary, and if you remind yourself—before
you fall asleep—that you want to remember your dreams in the morning.
Why do some dreams cause a
physical response? Like after a bad dream—waking up with the heart
racing?
Even though our bodies are paralyzed during dreams, our
involuntary body responses—including breathing and heart rate—still
respond. When something happens in a dream, we think it’s real, and so
we can get scared and nervous—just like we do in real life.
|