T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1061.1 | | CSC32::K_OBRIEN | | Thu Jun 01 1989 16:18 | 25 |
| I'm not that sure the experts can really prove we dream all night,
however, I do believe that you can control what you're dreaming. You
can go anywhere even be invisible. This takes a little practice, but
is possible.
Most of the dreams of just excess doo-dah that you get past without
much hoo-hah. In regard to your salad and chase dreams, they sound
horrible. I'd recommend that before going to sleep you give yourself
a suggestion such as, I will remember my dreams or I will have only
good dreams or I can do anything in a dream.
Sometime back in either OMNI or MIND BODY SPIRIT there was an article
on Lucid Dreams. This article would give you a lot of insight as to
how to control your dreams. In information may not directly fit your
situation but the core of the information is very helpful.
I too did not find Casey's book on dreams that great. Maybe for
someone who has no info on it, it's good.
If you happen to be caught in a bad dream try changing the dream so you
are in control such as being at the beach or by a lake, water seems to
be a real calmer.
Sweet dreams,
|
1061.2 | Dreaming all night. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Jun 01 1989 16:56 | 30 |
| The evidence for "all night" dreaming is roughly as follows:
There is a particular state of sleep known as REM sleep. During REM
sleep there is a shift in brain wave patterns, the body becomes more
still and the eyes can be seen (or detected electronically) to be
moving rapidly under the eyelids (hence the name REM -- Rapid Eye
Movement).
When people are awoken while they are in this stage of sleep or
immediately after, they almost always recall being awakened from a
dream, although if they are awakened a few minutes later they may not
remember a dream at all. The longer the elapsed time between the
end of REM sleep and being awakened the more likely that no dream will
be remembered.
Conclusion -- ordinary dreaming occurs during REM sleep which occurs
several times during the night. Dreams are rarely remembered unless
the dreamer awakens fully during or soon after the end of the dream.
This is most likely to happen in the morning, which is also when the
REM state lasts longer in a normal sleep cycle.
Dreams do occur at other times but they are of a different character --
they seem rarely to be more than a single idea, word, emotion or
image. Night-terrors, which involve a lot of thrashing around, perhaps
screaming, and sleep walking are dreams of this type. Little if
anything is usually remembered (although there are exceptions) except
a sense of terror. These are different from nightmares which are
intense, vivid dreams which occur during REM.
Topher
|
1061.3 | Don't take them literally | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Tue Jun 13 1989 09:33 | 22 |
| RE: .0 (Pat)
There are many books on dreams as well as many notes and replies in
this file on the topic. I've read several books and find that the
ones that make most sense are the ones that suggest that the dreamer
is the key to understanding a dream. Dreams that you describe as
horrible may not necessarily be so and, in fact, may be telling you
something important about yourself. For example, in the dream about
the salad and the maggots, there is an interesting contrast between
the two symbols. Possibly, the salad may have something to do with
your desire to provide nourishment to yourself or others while the
maggots may represent an ugly side of yourself that surfaces when you
engage in trying to be a nurturer or some such thing.
I can suffest a few good books.
The Dream Game by Ann Faraday
The Sun and the Shadow by Kenneth Kelzer
Creative Dreaming by Patricia Garfield
Memories, Dreams and Reflections by Carl Jung
Terry
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1061.4 | How could we ignore this one? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | I'll pick a white rose with Plantagenet. | Tue Jun 13 1989 12:08 | 8 |
| The only book I ever read about dreams is the very fundamental
_The_Interpretation_of_Dreams_ by Sigmund Freud. The English
translation is very readable, (I think he got a better translator
than Carl Jung did.) and I've read it twice.
If you loved Sherlock Holmes, you'll like Sigmund Freud.
Ann B.
|
1061.5 | confussing dreams | DNEAST::LAGASSE_KIM | | Mon Jun 19 1989 11:12 | 17 |
| I am very new to this file but I have a question that maybe someone
might be able to help me figure out..Since i was a little girl i always
remberd my dreams I would tell the kids on the way to school every
detail of my dreams sometimes they would last for a half hour or
longer.As I got older my dreams got more adventures..well this is my
question about 3 years ago my brother was killed in a motorcycle
accident..and i have these dreams about him maybe once a week sometimes
and in these dreams i tell him that he is dead or i try to explain it
to him or sometimes it is so real that I think that it was my
imagination that he is dead.And in these dreams he is most of the time
always imbrassing me and telling me hoe much he misses me.And when I
tell him that I want other people to see him such as my mother he tells
me no..,.Well maybe this dosn't mean anything at all it is just so hard
to put him to rest in my mind when he is so real to me in my dreams all
the time..
Any replys would be appreiated
kim
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1061.6 | Time to let go | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Mon Jun 19 1989 13:44 | 10 |
| re: .5
Hi Kim,
It sounds to me that your subconscious is trying to convince
you that he is dead, that it's time for you to let go. By
your last statement, I think you are still holding on to him.
Letting go isn't easy, but it is healthy for both of you.
Terry
|
1061.7 | Maybe it's real? | FOOZLE::GOODHUE | | Tue Jun 20 1989 13:37 | 12 |
| Re: 5
Kim,
Your 'dreams' may be real experiences. If you accept the idea that soul
continues after the death of the physical body, it makes sense (to me
anyway) that your brother would be able to visit your dreams.
Have you thought about asking your brother what he does when he's not
with you or why he continues to visit you each week?
Meredith
|
1061.8 | | DNEAST::LAGASSE_KIM | | Wed Jun 21 1989 10:08 | 7 |
| Thanks for the replys,It could be that i'm not letting go because I
loved him so much..But in realality I know that he is dead and won't be
comming back the way I remember him anyway.And as far as asking him
eachtime I see him he makes me feel like I imagined that he is dead so
we never talked about it..But if I can I will try the next time I dream
of him..THANKS again for your replys
KIM
|
1061.9 | I'd like to believe they visit | HICKRY::HOPKINS | Peace, Love, & Understanding | Wed Jun 21 1989 10:36 | 11 |
| Well, maybe I'm not "letting go" of my daughter either but I'd rather
believe that they are visiting us. My little girl, Tina, died almost
four years ago and she 'visits' me from time to time. I once had
a dream that I went to the cemetary and she was sitting on the side
of the road. I got all excited/puzzled/etc. Then I realized "oh
my god, I'd better call the doctors and tell them so she can start
treatment again (she had Cystic Fibrosis). She said "why mom?
I'm not sick anymore." I'd rather believe she was visiting me to
let me know she was o.k. than I can't/won't let go. It's a much
more comforting thought.
|
1061.10 | SORRY about your loss | DNEAST::LAGASSE_KIM | | Thu Jul 06 1989 13:07 | 9 |
| THANKS for sharing with me about your daughter.I'm real sorry but i'm
glad that you are getting comfort from sharing time with her in your
dreams.Since my last note i havn't dreamt of my brother i'm not sure if
it is because I shared with someone what I had been experiancing or if
I'm just not allowing him to come through...But I do miss not seeing
him in my dreams. I will keep you posted (I feel the same I would like
to think that it was him visiting me)
KIM
|