Dreams…

  • This topic has 33 replies, 12 voices, and was last updated 4 years ago by Todd.
Author
Topic
#49476

Things are getting a little intense these days. It was at times like these that I used to post the proverbial Thought Provoking Thread at MW to get people’s mind off of the intensity for a while. I kept the topics light for the most part. Not that we live with our heads in the sand oblivious to the news, just a brief respite/ break. Anyway…

It has been said that dreams are just the subconscious bringing some odd memories and situations to light. Some have recurring dreams/nightmares of being helpless/frozen as something is coming towards them or chasing them. Others have dreams of public embarrassment. Personally, I don’t look into dream interpretation as being that credible. It is as I said above, a subconscious thing.
It all reminds me of the old Twilight Zone episode of that man on the train who dreamed of a stop at a town called Willoughby.

Anyway… if you would like to post your opinion, dreams you had, etc. have at it.

Al…

Viewing 33 replies - 1 through 33 (of 33 total)
Author
Replies
  • #49610

    According to this article some of the most common dreams are:
    1. Dreams about falling
    2. Dreams about being naked in public
    3. Dreams about being chased
    4. Dreams about losing teeth
    5. Dreams about dying
    6. Dreams about taking a test
    7. Dreams about infidelity
    8. Dreams about flying
    9. Dreams about pregnancy
    10. Dreams about a narcissistic megalomaniac becoming President and totally fucking up the country

    I admit to 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6, but losing teeth? Not yet, anyway.

    I added that last one myself because, you know, we’re all living that dream…

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49652

    My dreams are like they’re written and directed by David Lynch tripping balls on a combination of ayahuasca, peyote, and mushrooms at the same time. I find them very comforting and relaxing.

    Also, it has literally been decades since I last had an actual nightmare, probably the early 1980s. On a rare occasion, a dream may have some intensity but nothing close to a nightmare.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49662

    Also, it has literally been decades since I last had an actual nightmare, probably the early 1980s. On a rare occasion, a dream may have some intensity but nothing close to a nightmare.

    Yeah, me neither. I wonder if that’s a general thing? That you leave nightmares behind you at some point in your life?

  • #49664

    Also, it has literally been decades since I last had an actual nightmare, probably the early 1980s. On a rare occasion, a dream may have some intensity but nothing close to a nightmare.

    Yeah, me neither. I wonder if that’s a general thing? That you leave nightmares behind you at some point in your life?

    More likely lifestyle and mindset. If you haven’t had anything traumatic happen to you or going through a very stressful period in your life, I would think nightmares would be uncommon.

  • #49675

    I guess it also depends on how you define a nightmare. I still have stressful dreams quite regularly, including some that are quite disturbing, but I don’t wake up feeling terrified by them in the same way I did as a child.

  • #49677

    I’ve had a recurring dream the last few years where I have either an electric scooter or a motorbike (but it works like a larger version of a kids electric bike) and take it to work and the shops.

    Maybe it’s because it’s happened so many times but when I had it the other day I woke up and  was convinced I had the bike. It took me slowly process the logic that it wasn’t in the house or my parking lot so I really didn’t have one.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49694

    I guess it also depends on how you define a nightmare. I still have stressful dreams quite regularly, including some that are quite disturbing, but I don’t wake up feeling terrified by them in the same way I did as a child.

    Yeah, that’s true. I don’t know how this is in other jobs, but I do have the typical teacher dreams (and all teachers do have them, from my experience) that you’re suddenly pushed into a class in which you’re supposed to teach a subject you have no idea about and are unprepated. That kind of thing.
    And I remember having a dream a few years ago that was set in a post-apocalyptic world with zombies and everything, but it was kind of fun.

  • #49707

    Closest thing I’ve had to a nightmare recently was a dream where I was walking around the town I grew up in, turned a corner and there was a guy laying brick paviors along the street. He suddenly got up, walked towards me and swung a hammer at my head, at which point I woke up, arms flailing and yelled “NO!” like some stupid movie cliché.

    So uhh… interpretations?

  • #49718

    So uhh… interpretations?

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49731

    Tonight I was on a vacation in prague, bought an insane amount of beer and started an impromptu party in the hostel with a bunch of complete strangers.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49736

    So uhh… interpretations?

    It’s about sex.

    Tonight I was on a vacation in prague, bought an insane amount of beer and started an impromptu party in the hostel with a bunch of complete strangers.

    It’s about sex.

    4 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49746

    I’ve had a couple dreams in the last couple years that were basically nightmares but which oddly didn’t frighten me. In one the Blair Witch (hadn’t watched the movie in ages, but there she was, lurking in my subconscious) grabbed me and I woke up convulsing. I immediately saw it was a dream and went back to sleep, unbothered. Even during the dream I didn’t feel scared and was sort of detached from it all, even though I was dreaming in POV, not watching myself from afar.

    I had another dream recently where I peed out a huge parasite and, um, bled everywhere. Really gross but in the dream I was just embarrassed, not frightened.

    My dreams are generally like what Todd described, just weird stuff that has no real logic or point. Last night I dreamed I was visiting my sister in college, we watched a pirated movie about a vengeful gun-wielding skeleton, then everything changed and suddenly I was Principal Skinner from The Simpsons and a bunch of teachers and parents were complaining about some awful cookies Ned Flanders had baked. Also, a turtle in one of the classroom fish tanks kept telling me war stories that only I/Skinner could’ve known about.

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49749

    10. Dreams about a narcissistic megalomaniac becoming President and totally fucking up the country

    I’d add: while a pandemic rages.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49755

    It’s about sex.

    Can confirm, there was a Hot Chick™ that dropped out of high stakes poker game just to dance with me.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49756

    I’ve often had dreams about being attacked either by dogs, vampires or big cats.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49758

    I’ve often had dreams about being attacked either by dogs, vampires or big cats.

    What about big vampire dogs?

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49759

    It’s about sex.

    I’ll never forget that many years ago I was in work and one guy had a newspaper that had a regular dream analyst.

    One guy writing in had a dream where he was encased in a pork pie and the analyst said it was about sexual dysfunction. This went on and basically every scenario was really about sex however innocent it seemed. I dreamt my printer had a paper jam – inability to climax.

    Then one guy wrote in that he dreamt he was playing a football match with his team and then after the game jumped into the communal bath and started washing his fellow players and then having sex with them. The conclusion was – nothing to do with sex, just a desire for successful teamwork. 😂

    4 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49769

    Glad this thread is coming alive…

    The sneaker Adidas stands for (in popular culture): All Day I Dream About Sex

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49784

    Dream interpretation is pretty simple. It’s all about what the things in the dream mean to you. The same thing may have very different meanings to different people. Dreams are very personal and we have our own unique iconography.

    I had a dream the other night about some very loving dogs that had been left alone in a house and they were leaving big shits all over the place. They were checked on infrequently. My interpretation was a concern for my wife’s nephew, who hasn’t returned phone calls and is going through a tough time in his life.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49790

    All my dreams are somehow about Star Wars. Or food. Or both.

    3 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49826

    The sneaker Adidas stands for (in popular culture): All Day I Dream About Sex

    I think you’ll find it’s After Dinner I Did A Shit.

    6 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49839

    I’ve often had dreams about being attacked either by dogs, vampires or big cats.

    What about big vampire dogs?

    You mean like this?

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49891

    It’s about sex.

    I’ll never forget that many years ago I was in work and one guy had a newspaper that had a regular dream analyst.

    One guy writing in had a dream where he was encased in a pork pie and the analyst said it was about sexual dysfunction. This went on and basically every scenario was really about sex however innocent it seemed. I dreamt my printer had a paper jam – inability to climax.

    Then one guy wrote in that he dreamt he was playing a football match with his team and then after the game jumped into the communal bath and started washing his fellow players and then having sex with them. The conclusion was – nothing to do with sex, just a desire for successful teamwork. 😂

    That’s the trouble with the Freudian approach – everything has to be a metaphor, usually for sex, unless is sex then it has to be something else. Freudian readings of dreams are fun exercises, but have very limited applicability.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49918

    Haven’t Freud’s theories been pretty much discounted by most psychoanalysts these days?

    Freud and Psychoanalysis

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49919

    Haven’t Freud’s theories been pretty much discounted by most psychoanalysts these days?

    My girlfriend is a Clinical Psychologist, and the answer is yes. Essentially human beings are a little more complicated than just “SEX, SEX, SEX!”

    Operative word there being “little.”

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49924

    Yeah, he’s mostly of historic interest these days. And though it turns out that a lot of what he believed was nonsense, hey, at least back then he offered an alternative to just locking people up and throwing away the key.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49955

    My dreams are like they’re written and directed by David Lynch tripping balls on a combination of ayahuasca, peyote, and mushrooms at the same time.

    i have a lot of these. sometimes they are influenced by a book or comic I am reading. other times I have very realistic dreams. I read somewhere that there is no time in dreams so if you look for a clock and can’t find one, you are in a dream. I also have the dreams where you think you wake up but you are actually still asleep. I think I have watched too many movies where that happens.



    @WillC
    you have impressive recall

    @alx I liked that Korn song too.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
  • #49964

    My girlfriend is a Clinical Psychologist

    Ooh; you have my sympathies, Steve. :-)

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #49966

    . I also have the dreams where you think you wake up but you are actually still asleep.

    I once had a dream where I was sleeping soundly. That was it.

    • This reply was modified 4 years ago by Todd.
  • #49986

    I have pirate-themed dreams sometimes, they are always pretty cool if also, of course, crazy.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #50044

    I’ve often had dreams about being attacked either by dogs, vampires or big cats.

    Recently, I’ve been having dreams about almost falling into human-eating-orca infested waters.

    1 user thanked author for this post.
  • #50045

    Haven’t Freud’s theories been pretty much discounted by most psychoanalysts these days?

    My girlfriend is a Clinical Psychologist, and the answer is yes. Essentially human beings are a little more complicated than just “SEX, SEX, SEX!”

    Operative word there being “little.”

    The thing is, I have a certain sexually related OCD obsession, and I had a few psychiatric professionals deny it was OCD, and insist it was a reflection of actual sexual desires.knew it was OCD, so when I saw they wouldn’t listen, I refused to see them. I had a therapist who took me at my word, and I told her I was nervous discussing it because of the previous people, and she said something to which I responded “So, while paying lip service to Freud being wrong, even some professionals haven’t completely divorced themselves from his influence?” and she agreed.

  • #50229

    Sleep evolved before brains did, study finds

    Our brains need sleep to work properly. But it turns out you don’t need a brain to sleep.

    In a new study, researchers identified a sleep-like state in a tiny, freshwater animal called a hydra, which has a simple anatomy and lacks a brain.

    “We now have strong evidence that animals must have acquired the need to sleep before acquiring a brain,” study lead author Taichi Q. Itoh, an assistant professor at Kyushu University in Japan, said in a statement.

    The study, recently published in the journal Science Advances, has implications for our understanding of the reason the need for zzzs evolved.

    Sleep is near universal in the animal kingdom, seen in humans and all mammals, as well as in insects and even roundworms. However, all these creatures have some form of central nervous system, or brain, and so scientists didn’t know whether the evolution of sleep preceded that of brains, or vice versa.

    Jellyfish, a relative of hydras that also lack a brain, have also demonstrated sleeplike behavior, Live Science previously reported. But the new study adds to these findings by showing that hydras not only sleep but also respond to the same molecules that regulate sleep in humans and other advanced animals.

    “Based on our findings and previous reports regarding jellyfish, we can say that sleep evolution is independent of brain evolution,” Itoh said.

    For the study, the researchers used a video-recording system — essentially a “hydra cam” — to monitor the hydras’ movement and determine whether they had entered a sleeplike state, or a state of reduced movement that could be disrupted with a flashlight.

    They found that hydras had cycles of active and sleep states that lasted about four hours each.

    What’s more, disrupting the hydras’ sleep state, with vibrations or temperature changes, resulted in signs of sleep deprivation — for example, the hydras needed to sleep longer afterwards, and showed reduced cell growth.

    The researchers also exposed the hydras to chemicals involved in sleep regulation in people, including melatonin and the neurotransmitter, or brain chemical called GABA. Exposure to both of these chemicals increased sleep activity in the hydras.

    However, the chemical dopamine, which has a stimulating effect on many animals, instead promoted sleep in hydras. It seems that “while some sleep mechanisms appear to have been conserved, others may have switched function during evolution of the brain,” Itoh said.

    The authors also found that when they deprived the hydras of their “shuteye,” there were changes in the expression of more than 200 genes, including some that are involved in sleep regulation in other animals.

    Overall, “these experiments provide strong evidence that animals acquired sleep-related mechanisms before the evolutional development of the central nervous system and that many of these mechanisms were conserved as brains evolved,” Itoh said.

    2 users thanked author for this post.
Viewing 33 replies - 1 through 33 (of 33 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Skip to toolbar