Understanding Dreams: What they are and how to interpret them. Nerys Dee
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Название: Understanding Dreams: What they are and how to interpret them

Автор: Nerys Dee

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Эзотерика

Серия:

isbn: 9780007388394

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ being chased

      During sleep we have dreams, but we also have other experiences which are not, in the true sense of the word, dreams. Physiological and psychological changes take place during sleep, so experiences we may call ‘dreams’ are, in fact, the manifestation of these changes in dream form. When the sleep pattern changes from NREM to REM, considerable physiological changes take place. The heart begins to pound heavily and there is a rise in blood pressure; muscle tone is also affected.

      These sensations are transformed into scenes which either incorporate or symbolise the feeling. Sounds are also used in this way by our dreaming mind. An example of this is the dreamer who dreamed she was in a room with her husband listening to an aeroplane overhead. The aeroplane stopped and she said to her husband ‘I hope it is not going to crash’. Suddenly, the engine restarted. She awoke and realised that the aeroplane engine that stopped and started in her dream was none other than the intermittent snoring of her husband.

      Smells are also integrated into dreams. When a dreamer moved into a flat over an Indian restaurant, he began to have dreams about nutmegs (the only spice he knew); this shows how the dreaming mind tries to logicise as well as symbolise.

      Traditionally, it was thought that every disease produced a characteristic dream as a warning sign. Chest complaints were said to manifest as fights. When we speak of ‘fighting for breath’, we are, perhaps, glimpsing the origin of this belief. Many illnesses do, in fact, express themselves in dream form but not consistently enough to be totally reliable as warning signs. For example, a high fever is often interpreted by the dreaming mind as a fire. Similarly, a pain which is not sufficient to wake us but is nevertheless disturbing, may be symbolised as a thorn in the flesh, the pounding of sledgehammer or a wild animal biting into our body in the region of the pain.

      Kidney complaints and problems associated with the urinary tract were, not surprisingly, said to conjure up scenes of water and over-full rivers, while seeing a canal in a dream heralded a birth. Stomach and digestive ailments give rise to dreams about disputes, while warnings of liver disease presented as green and yellow objects. These are the colours of bile, a product of the liver. Anaemia was said to cause feelings of suffocation and weakness, again a representation of the physical symptoms.

      These interpretations are unreliable indicators of ill health but, knowing that our bodies do ‘speak’ to us in ways other than through pain, it would be advisable to consult a doctor, should dreams of this nature persist.

      Dreams are memories so in retrospect it is often difficult to be certain if an event really occurred or if it was a dream. One woman was so convinced that she had left her handbag on a train that she even telephoned the lost property office to enquire if it had been found. She was most relieved six months later when she found the handbag at the bottom of her wardrobe; she was also most perplexed when she realised it had been a bad dream and not reality.

      Another example of a dream mistaken for reality is when we believe we are awake in the middle of the night, and see a person or ghost standing by the bed. Whoever it is we see is so real, and the memory so clear, that in the morning it is impossible to convince the dreamer that what occurred was actually a dream, and not a visitation. Dreams such as this are known as ‘false awakenings’ and account for many of the ghosts seen at night. But since we do not know everything there is to know about the dream state, who can say that the visitation did not take place, albeit in a way different to what we assume is normal? ‘Things that go bump in the night’ and other strange, unaccountable noises are also heard during false awakenings.

      Just as we sometimes dream we are awake, conversely we can dream we are asleep and dreaming. This produces a dream within a dream. One explanation is that in such dreams we reach deeper levels of awareness, but since these dreams are often of a mundane nature, apparently of little significance and no more revealing than other dreams, there is no evidence to support this theory. The point of them may, therefore, simply be to emphasise the necessity of looking deeply into certain problems and situations.

      Falling through space is a sensation we often experience soon after ‘falling asleep’ or ‘dropping off’ to sleep. It is thought to be the feeling of transition from the awake state to that of sleep. The feeling of unexpectedly stepping off a kerb followed by waking abruptly is a similar light, or early, sleep experience. Again, this is not a dream but is due to the sudden contraction of the muscles in our arms and, in particular, our legs. This is known as a ‘myoclonic jerk’, and a spasm of this nature is precisely what does occur should we inadvertently step off a kerb. Not surprisingly, our unconscious associates this with the real thing and so incorporates it into a dream event, so that it seems that we are, for example, falling through space or dropping down a well.

      There are also ‘falling’ dreams which occur long after we have fallen asleep. Our dreaming mind creates these for a purpose. Not surprisingly, they offer a message telling us that we fear we are ‘falling from grace’, ‘being dropped’, ‘will fall upon hard times’ or have to go through an ordeal that will ‘bring us down’. There is an old wives tale associated with this dream which says that if you reach the bottom you will die. This is not true. Many have landed safely but we do usually wake up before we get there.

      The feeling of being chased by someone or something, yet unable to run away or move, is also associated with the muscles in our limbs. During certain phases of sleep, in particular REM sleep, we are in fact paralysed. As with the myoclonic jerk, our unconscious awareness of not being able to move is often transformed into a scene in which we are rooted to the spot and cannot get away from whatever СКАЧАТЬ