Dreams are interesting for people from the time of immemorial. A person spends one third of their life sleeping, a quarter of that time is inhabited by Dreams. So is the fact that they have always excited mankind with uniqueness and difficult to capture essences. Less than 6 hours of sleep reduces the intellectual level of 20-30%, scientists have calculated. Their conclusion is that we have to go to bed on time.

Posts mit dem Label dreams werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label dreams werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Montag, 24. Mai 2010

Several hypotheses about why we dream


Why do mankind "lose" 1 / 3 of their life sleeping? And why did people dream? At this point science has long sought an explanation, there was (and today there are) different assumptions, and opinions within the scientific community that continue to disagree.

Hypothesis:№ 1: To remember
In the past people were convinced that the night divides the soul with the body, achieved temporary freedom and made trips. Where is in a carefree childhood, worrying about yesterday's cloudless day or the future, it will be necessarily for these emotions to communicate through dreams.

Hypothesis № 2: Do you manage to wake up
Scientists have long thought that in the day people accumulate specific substances (conventionally called "sleep factors") that cause brain fatigue. According to this view during the dreams...[ More ]

More: DreamsDesiresDream explanationHypothesesFreud

Dienstag, 6. April 2010

Lack of sleep is a risk for mental and physical health

When you only sleep for 5 to 6 hours everyday, you put at risk your mental and physical health. Even when it has become a habit. Repeating a moderate deficit of sleep, like one to two hours per night, accumulates and may adversely affect the health, explains researcher Dr. Michael Grötsinger from the Deutsch Association for Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and nervous Medicine (SGPPN) in Berlin.

Particularly affected are the heart, cardiovascular system, hormonal balance, regulation of blood sugar and the ability to respond and the immune system also changes. The concerned should not participate in traffic, operate machinery or enter the operating room. Unfortunately the concerned do not feel bad and do not recognize that they are tired, warns researcher Dr. Gryotsinger.

Other symptoms of prolonged lack of sleep...[ More ]

More: Lack of sleepSleepMental HealthIrritabilityConcentrationDepressionBad mood

Who, when, how and why we have dreams?

How long have we had dreams?

Since there are people. The earliest concrete evidence is dating back before 3000 BC. Then appears the Gilgamesh Epic with the transmission of dreams.

Prior to 4000 Egypt was created a book to decipher the messages of the gods, were it considered dreams. In ancient Rome more impressive dreams were considered by the Senate. Their modes of interpretation were both priests and sorcerers. Descartes was the first to enter the dream world of science by beginning research on the dreams and trying to find an explanation which led to the emergence of numerous books that also give rise to the emergence of a deeper psychology.

Dream interpretation

Who dreams?

Everyone and every night, even several times a night. With this feature on average three out of five have no memory of sleeping.

Where do dreams originate?

According to latest research, probably in the interior of the middle of the brain, the same place, which is responsible for our emotions during the day.

When we dream?

There is a fast and slow sleep, which in turn is divided into superficial and deep sleep. On the basis of brain activity we differ in different phases of sleep. After falling asleep, when one no longer hears, sees and feels the outside world, it deepens the sleep and brain activity is characterized by increasingly slow waves. From the surface goes into a deep sleep, and when the brain begins to become active it has the same pattern in order to wake. During this phase (rapid eye movement) eyes start to move around, like the state of alertness. It is believed that the eyes follow the pictures in this sleep stage.

Dienstag, 23. Februar 2010

Flying in a dream is a sign of your strength and will

Dreams in which one can fly falls into the category of "dreams of enlightenment". These dreams occur when you realize that you are dreaming. Many people describe the ability to fly in their dreams as refreshing and a fun experience.

If you fly with ease and enjoy the scenery and landscape below you, it implies that you are on top of any situation. Flying over a building could also mean that you start looking at things differently. Dreams of flight and the ability to control the flight show your personal sense of power.

If you have difficulties to keep flying, it shows a lack of power in controlling your own situation. You can fight to stay in the air to keep the course. Things like power lines, trees, mountains, may prevent you to further your flight. These obstacles symbolize specific difficulties or peopl...[ More ]

More: Flying DreamsFlyingStrengthDreaming

Freitag, 12. Februar 2010

What impact flowers have on Dreams

Sleep with flowers in your bedroom, if you want sweet dreams, scientists recommend, cited by Air Force.

Volunteers who participated in the experiment were allowed to sleep in the room with roses, and later admitted that they experienced pleasant emotions in their dreams. The smell of rotten eggs had did exactly the opposite effect and does not sound particularly surprising.

It is possible that odors can make their dreams more pleasant, believes Prof. Boris Glass and his team from University Hospital in Mannheim.

Scientists waited until the experiment participants entered the phase of REM sleep when most dreams occur, then in 10 seconds they put forward a strong dose of sweet air and a minute later they woke up.

Then the volunteers were questioned about their dreams and how t...[ More ]

More: DreamsFlowersREM

Freitag, 22. Januar 2010

Tea agains nightmares?

One of the many benefits for our body is a regular consumption of tea. This amazing natural potion, which is prepared from leaves, buds, flowers and fruits of certain plants helps against many diseases. It has been proven that infusions of black tea leads to melting of fat and is an excellent way to maintain a good figure.

According to recent studies regular consumption of green or black tea helps us not to dream nightmares. According to medical studies of Japanese people who drink one or more cups of tea a day , 50 percent were less likely to wake up at night due to a nightmare.

The reason for the favorable effect of tea infusions on the nervous system of humans lies in teanin amino acid which is contained in the leaves. The teanin has a soothing effect on the brain by reducing levels of stress and anxiet...[ More ]

More: NightmaresTea Teanin. Stress Anxiety

Donnerstag, 14. Januar 2010

Purpose of dreams

Dreams are so compelling, and they often seem so weird and strange -- surely they must have a "purpose"; that is, an "adaptive role" in the maintenance of our bodily or psychological health. Furthermore, all the famous theorists who talk about dreams claim that dreams do have one or another purpose (although the famous theorists disagree on just what those functions are), but the best current evidence suggests otherwise. Dreams probably have no purpose!

So let's review the arguments and the evidence. We'll start with the claims made by psychoanalysts and clinical psychologists in the first 50 years of the century based on their work with patients, then turn to more recent claims, some of which are based on work in sleep and dream laboratories that flourished in the 1950's and 1960's. The views presented here are those of research psychologists who have studied dreams inside and outside the laboratory, especially David Foulkes and Calvin Hall.

The first and most famous dream theorist of the modern era, Sigmund Freud, said that the function of dreams was to preserve sleep, but that theory from the year 1900 is contradicted by the fact that dreams happen very regularly at least five or six times per night in an active stage of sleep called REM sleep (after the rapid eye movements that are part of it, along with many other neurological and physiological changes). In other words, dreams don't just happen as we are about to wake up due to hunger pangs, sexual urges, or the need to go to the bathroom, as Freud thought way back when, before REM sleep was discovered in 1953.

The other famous dream theorist of the modern era, Carl Jung, an early follower of Freud who broke away to develop a very different theory, claimed that the function of dreams is to compensate for those parts of the psyche (total personality) that are underdeveloped in waking life, but Calvin Hall's studies of two-week dream series from students and longer dream journals from adults of all ages strongly suggest that dream content is continuous with waking thought and behavior. That is, if we are outgoing and active in our waking life, and not very introspective and reflective, then so too in our dream life, which contradicts Jung's view.

Still other dream theorists say that dreams have a problem-solving function. Dreams supposedly deal with problems we can't solve in waking life and offer solutions. But a variety of systematic studies find precious little support for this view. However, this is one of those places where we have developed "uses" for our dreams as part of our cultural lore. Looking at them in the light of waking day, and believing that they may be full of insight, we may sometimes come up with new ideas or insights while studying them. That is, we have invented a "use" for dreams, but that doesn't mean that problem solving is a psychological function of dreams built into us over evolutionary time.

So much for the claims by clinical theorists. Now we look at claims that have emerged in recent years, but are tied to no particular theory or famous theorist. They are the new "common sense" of our day, based on a reverence for physiological findings and the awesome capabilities of computers.

When REM sleep was first discovered, it was thought that dreams only occurred during that stage of sleep. This led to many functional theories about dreaming that were based on alleged functions for REM sleep. But we now have reason to believe that plenty of dreams happen in non-REM (NREM) sleep, especially late in the sleep period.

Furthermore, awakenings of children under age 5 in the sleep laboratory reveal that they only report dreams from REM sleep awakenings 20-25% of the time, so REM sleep does not automatically equate to dreaming. In addition, REM sleep can be found in all mammals, and it is unlikely that they are dreaming, i.e., imagining a world or story in which they are taking part and interacting with others. Dreams, as the pre-eminent American psychologist on dreams, David Foulkes, likes to say, are a "cognitive achievement." We only gradually develop the ability to dream. What all this adds up to is that REM sleep and dreaming are not the same thing, so whatever functions REM sleep may have cannot be taken as functions for dreaming and dreams.