Dreams are a series of images and sensations that occur during sleep. They account for all the imprints and repetitive issues that lurk in our subconscious.
At times, dreams can arouse ambitions, desires, and wishes that we may want to experience in our waking state.
Alternatively, they can evoke a sense of dread and fear, stirring up unpleasant occurrences from the past.
Scientists suggest that fear, hope, and regret in dreams should not be taken too seriously, as the dream state can resemble the tumbling of a washing machine. However, there are instances where dreams seem to reflect future events or mirror situations that have already occurred in a waking state.
In the waking state, unpleasant dreams can linger, with some dreamers treating these as a form of premonition.
REM, or ‘rapid eye movement,’ occurs in intervals, causing an accelerated pulse rate and more frequent dream occurrences. The most vivid dreams often occur during this period.
Forgetting one’s dreams, as someone once explained, is like putting on a grandfather’s glasses only to see a blur, despite electrical activity being present in the brain.
The stranger the dream, the greater the perturbance for some sensitive souls, with such overwhelming experiences generally fading over time.
Dreams, pleasant or otherwise, can often originate from one’s childhood, suggesting that the passage of time does not always erase past experiences.
Tales that claim a dream about one’s death to be a premonition should be taken lightly, as they may stem from an unpleasant recent event rather than a prediction.
Traumatic issues, like parental divorce, relocating, or unpleasant interactions with others, can intrude into one’s dreams.
As one person commented, it’s like the gypsy at the circus with her crystal ball, delivering bizarre messages.