Why We Dream? What We Dream?
Not all dreaming is the same. It runs the gamut of human experience (and sometimes beyond), incorporating a dizzying range of emotions and events, often with elements of the bizarre. Dreams can be funny, frightening, sad or strange. Flying dreams can be euphoric, chasing dreams can be terrifying, and forgot-to-study-for-my-exam dreams can be stressful.
There
are several dream classifications, including nightmares, recurring dreams, and
lucid dreams. Let’s look briefly at some distinct forms:
Nightmares are broadly defined
as frightening dreams that result in some degree of awakening from sleep.
"Bad dreams" are considered a less severe form of nightmare. Most
people experience nightmares throughout life, usually very rarely and, less
commonly, with more regularity. A small percentage of the populations— studies
suggest around 5%—have nightmares as often as once a week.
Nightmares
can result from different triggers, including stress, emotional upheaval,
and traumatic experiences. They can occur as side
effects of some medications, use and abuse of drugs and alcohol, and illness. Nightmares
themselves disrupt sleep by not only by waking the sleeper, but also leading to
a fear of falling asleep and returning to a
disturbing dream.
Nightmares
can have other negative sleep-related health consequences, as well. According
to research, they may contribute to insomnia, daytime fatigue, depression, and anxiety.
Studies
indicate that people with certain conditions may be more likely to experience
nightmares, including:
- Migraine
- Obstructive sleep apnea
- Clinical
depression
(The
relationship of nightmares to depression is complex. Depression is
linked to a greater incidence of nightmares, and nightmares themselves
may contribute to worsening depression.)
Night
terrors, or
sleep terrors, create another frightening dream-like experience. While they are
frightening and disruptive to sleep, night terrors are not the same as
nightmares. Night terrors are very intense episodes of fright during dreams.
These frightening episodes are often accompanied by screaming or yelling, as well
as by physical movement such as leaping out of bed or flailing in panic.
Research suggests that sleep terrors occur during non-REM sleep dreaming, while
nightmares tend to happen during REM sleep.
Adults
do experience night terrors, but they are somewhat more common in children.
Estimates suggest that as many as 6% of children experience
night terrors, most often between the ages of 3-12. Night terrors sometimes run
in families. There may be a genetic predisposition to night
terrors (as well as to sleep walking and other parasomnias). There is also
evidence of a relationship among night terrors, sleep apnea, and enlarged
tonsils and adenoids in children.
Recurring dreams are ones that reappear with some pattern of
regularity. Studies suggest that recurring dreams may contain more threatening content
than regular dreams. Research suggests links between recurring dreams and psychological
distress in both adults and children.
Lucid dreams are an especially fascinating form of dream. In lucid
dreams, the dreamer is aware of the fact that he or she is dreaming, and often
can manipulate or control the dream as it unfolds.
Research
links lucid dreaming to unusually elevated levels of brain activity.
Studies have found that lucid dreamers displayed significantly higher brain
wave frequencies than non-lucid dreamers, as well as increased activity in
parts of the frontal lobe. This area of the brain is deeply involved with
conscious awareness, a sense of self, as well as language and memory.
Studies of lucid dreams are not only shedding light on the mechanics of
dreaming, but also on the neural underpinnings of consciousness itself.
Dreams
appear to be influenced by our waking lives in many ways. Theories about why we
dream include those that suggest dreaming is a means by which the brain
processes emotions, stimuli, memories, and information that’s been absorbed
throughout the waking day.
According to
research, a significant percentage of the people who appear in dreams are known
to the dreamer. One study found more than 48% of dream characters
were recognizable by name to dreamers. Another 35% of characters were
identifiable to dreamers by their generic social role or relationship—as a
friend, doctor, or police officer, for example. Fewer than one fifth of dream
characters—16%—were unrecognizable to dreamers.
Other
research indicates that a majority of dreams contain content related to autobiographical
memories—memories about the self—as opposed to episodic memories, which deal
with events and details, such as locations and times.
There’s a
body of study that suggests our waking lives have great influence over the
content of our dreams. Pregnant women dream more about pregnancy and
childbirth. Hospice workers who act as caregivers to others (whether patients
or family members) dream about the experiences of caregiving and the people for whom they care. Musicians dream twice
as often about music as non-musicians do.
There’s also fascinating research that shows
our capacity to dream beyond our waking experiences, in profound ways.
Dream reports of people born paralyzed reveal that they walk, swim, and run in
their dreams as often as people without paralysis. Dream reports of people born
deaf indicate they often hear in their dreams. These reports may lend credence
to the theory that dreams serve as a broad, virtual-reality model of
waking life—a proto-consciousness—that instructs and supports survival and
growth.
Daily life
experiences don’t always present themselves in dreams immediately. Sometimes an
experience from life will filter through to a dream after several days, or even
a week. This delay is what’s known as dream lag. Scientists studying the
relationship of memory to dreams have identified different types of memory that
can be incorporated into dreams. Both very short-term memories (known as
day-residue), and slightly longer-term memories (from a period of about a
week), often present themselves in dreams. Dreaming of these events—and the
timing by which memories appear in dreams—may actually be an important part of
the memory consolidation process. The incorporation of memories into dreams
isn’t seamless or even realistic. Rather, memories from waking life often
appear in dreams in incomplete pieces, like shards of glass from a broken
mirror.
- As much as dreams may contain aspects of
everyday, routine life, dreaming is also a state in which we contend with
extraordinary experiences. Another likely function of dreaming appears to
be processing and coming to terms with traumatic events. Grief, fear,
loss, abandonment, even physical pain are all emotions and experiences
that often replay themselves in dreams. Studies of people who’ve
experienced loss of loved ones indicate that most of them dream about the
deceased. Grieving people report several similar themes to tRecalling past experiences when loved ones were alive
- Seeing
loved ones happy and at peace
- Receiving
messages from loved ones
The
same study found that 60% of bereaved dreamers said their dreams exerted
influence over their grieving process. Dreams during periods of grief can be
difficult as well as helpful. One study found that dreamers during the first
year of bereavement had a significantly higher frequency
of oppressive dreams, and found a link between these dreams and
symptoms of depression and anxiety. Dreams, and especially nightmares, are
deeply associated with depression as well as other conditions such as post-traumatic
stress disorder,
which we’ll look at more closely in part three.
Examining
and interpreting the content of dreams has fascinated people since ancient
times. In ancient cultures, dream interpreters were sought-after and revered
experts. Modern science has, to some degree, shifted its focus away from the
study of dream content to investigations—both psychological and cognitive—of
the mechanics of dreaming, and its purpose. But there are scientists who have
continued to explore the content of dreams, and new technologies have given us
the ability to observe dream content as never before.
Most
data on dream content has been gathered using dream reports and questionnaires.
Dream experiences vary widely, but there are well-established themes that occur
among many dreamers. Some of the most common dream subjects include:
- School
dreams (studying, taking tests)
- Being
chased
- Sexual
dreams
- Falling
- Being
late
- Flying
- Being
attacked physically
- Dreaming
of someone dead being alive, or someone alive being dead
hese dreams, including:
A
recent study of the content of nightmares found the most
common themes included:
- Physical aggression
- Interpersonal
conflicts
- Experiences
of failure and helplessness
Researchers
found fear to be the most common emotion in nightmares and bad dreams, though
it’s often accompanied by other emotions as well.
Recently,
scientists in Japan made a breakthrough in decoding the content of dreams. They
used a technique called neural decoding—which involves brain scans and repeated
questioning of study subjects—in order to identify visual content in dreams.
The researchers were ultimately able to predict dreams' visual content based on
brain activity with 75-80% accuracy.

1 Comments
Interesting blog.
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