Unknown Facts About Dreams

Morning leisure. Woman is lying on the bed
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We can comprehend the significance of dreams when considering spending a third of our lives sleeping. Dreaming is necessary for mental wellbeing. Dreams help us solve some of our difficulties, and dreams inspire artists in their work. So, how much do we know about dreams? We’ve answered your questions about dreams in this article.

Can Visually Impaired People Dream?

Everyone dreams. So, congenitally blind individuals dream as well. As we all know, people who have lost their sight develop their other senses over time. Due to the things they perceive with these senses in daily life, visually impaired people see dreams involving smell, sound, and touch due to the things they perceive with these senses in everyday life. Visually handicapped people’s dreams, on the other hand, may not feature visual aspects.

Can Visually Impaired People Dream

Hold fast to dreams, For if dreams die Life is a broken-winged bird

Langston Hughes American poet

This situation has a lot to do with when they get blind. If people lose their sight before the age of five, their dreams are devoid of visual features. People who lost their sight while they were between the ages of 5 and 7 may or may not have a vision in their dreams. People who lose their eyesight after the age of 7 may encounter images in their dreams depending on how long and how much they see.

Why Do We Dream?

Many hypotheses have been proposed in response to the subject of why we dream. The goal of our dreams, according to one of them, is to remember. Our brain retains these memories and information as data that we should never forget by replicating positive or unpleasant events from the day in our dreams. Dreams are a tool for many therapists to confront our inner traumas. Because our brain is on a much higher emotional level during sleep, we can experience emotions that we don’t experience when we’re awake or frightened to experience during dreams.

Do We Remember Our Dreams?

There is only one thing that makes a dream impossible to achieve: the fear of failure

Paulo Coelho Brazilian lyricist

When the dreamer wakes up, access to the information contained in the dream quickly diminishes, even though the memory appears to be focused. According to dream researchers, almost 95% of all dreams are entirely forgotten when people wake up. As the hour’s pass, dreams that are remembered better within the first five minutes after waking up begin to fade. Similar dreams that occur at regular intervals or those that leave a strong emotional impression are the kind of dreams that are usually remembered.

Do Men’s and Women’s Dreams Differ?

Women recall their dreams more clearly than males. Just as they remember birthdays, anniversaries, and conflicts better. Women dream about household issues and interpersonal problems, whereas men dream about aggression and sexuality. Up to 95% of women and 80% of men can remember their dreams if they wake up while dreaming. This difference can also be explained by women being more willing to talk about their inner worlds and their dreams. Due to their social upbringing, men are used to suppressing their dreams.

Are There Any Common Dreams?

Common_Dreams

There are common dreams in the world. The main common dream themes are: falling from something, going to school or work naked, dying, dreaming about the bathroom, meeting a celebrity, being chased, being late for something, taking a plane. It is also common for women to consider themselves pregnant. Since our dreams are related to our subconscious, we should give importance to our dreams and try to understand what they want to tell us to solve some psychological problems.

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Reference and citation:

  1. A Psychological Study of Dreams in Hellenistic Poetry
    https://chs.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/fdrafts-karamitsou.pdf
  2. What does it mean to dream? Bion’s theory of dreaming
    https://icpla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Grotstein-J.S.-Chapter-25-what-does-it-mean-to-dream.pdf
  3. Dreaming and the brain: from phenomenology to neurophysiology
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2814941/
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