Friday 19 February 2016

DREAMS



WHAT ARE DREAMS?

The definition of dream presents to this concept as a virtual reality that is experienced on having slept. They originate by a process in which our mind can’t be programmed neither directed.

This can include people you know, people you've never met, places you've been, and places you've never even heard of. Sometimes they're as mundane as recalling events that happened earlier in the day. They can also be your deepest and darkest fears and secrets, and most private fantasies.





Why do we dream? 

Basically, we dream because our brain does not stop. Still when we are not totally conscious, our brain continues working and producing thoughts in the shape of images and sounds that up to can demonstrate as physical sensations. The experts in cycle sof dream think that we forget near 95 % of everything what we dream, and of the remaining one 5 % we do not remember every detail either.




6 comments:

  1. Can you tell me what have been your worse dream? What type of dreams are those you don't want to have?

    ReplyDelete
  2. You can learn you to control your dreams

    The method is called "lucid dreaming," and although there are several ways to start (some say that drinking apple juice before bed), there is no fully accepted method, since even some people have been able to do all his life. Of course, the most common of a person who can control his dream is to try to fly.


    You can not read or tell the time while you dream

    If you're not sure if you're dreaming or not, try to read something. The vast majority of people are unable to read or tell the time on a clock in a dream. This usually is reported by lucid dreamers as a dream not forget constantly developed, making it difficult to know if you really have read in sleep or simply forgot what was read.


    Sleep paralysis

    Those who have experienced sleep paralysis can be described as a nightmare. It is characterized by extreme paralysis of the body and an evil or demonic presence in the room where you are sleeping. The cause of this has been observed, is a ceaseless activity in the amygdala, which is responsible for emotions to run away or fight or fear, terror and anxiety.


    what do think about it?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Does our brain activity increase or decrease while we´re sleeping?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Do you often remember your dreams? Which is the most strange dream that you have dreamed?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Could you tell me why we sometimes have dreams in which we feel that what we are living is real life? Does it depend on our psychological caracteristics, on what we have experienced during that day or something similar?

    ReplyDelete
  6. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete