Every year scientific groups and national organizations conduct studies and experiments examining human dreams. The study of dreams is known as oneirology. Progress is being made in this area of work, but as a population we know very little about the content and purpose of our dreams. One thing is for sure, the images, thoughts, and emotions that pass through our bodies during sleep can greatly influence our outlook on life. Keep in mind that the word dream stems from the Middle English word dreme, meaning joy and music. Following our first list about dreams, here are ten more amazing facts about dreams.
Studies have provided evidence suggesting tremendous variation in brain activity during sleep. This has been demonstrated using EEG technology. Scientists have identified five distinct stages of sleep, characterized by differences in brain activity. Stages 1-4 and a final stage labeled rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. When awakened during REM sleep, subjects report dreaming. With the development of new brain imaging technology in the early 1990’s we learned even more about brain activity during REM sleep. Researchers found that certain areas of the brain are extremely active during the REM sleep state, even more active than being awake. Studies have shown that certain visual areas of the human cortex, which decode complex visual scenes, are significantly more active during REM sleep. Intense activity is also observed in the limbic system, which is a set of structures heavily involved in human emotion.
We can’t be 100% sure that animals dream in a similar way as humans, but they do enter into a state of REM sleep. REM sleep occurs in all mammals, although it excludes the egg-laying monotremes of Australia. The sentinel hypothesis of REM sleep, which was put forward by Frederic Snyder in 1966, proposes that many mammals wake-up immediately after entering into REM sleep, leading him to infer that the process was being used as a defense mechanism. Many birds also show signs of REM sleep, but reptiles and other cold-blooded animals do not. The echidna does enter into REM sleep, but only if its environment is around 25°C. Dogs and cats also experience this stage of sleep.
Many people who smoke marijuana report having no dreams, yet after they quit, the same people report extremely vivid and intense dreams. Most vivid dreams take place during REM sleep, so the logical scientific question is “Does marijuana (THC) affect REM sleep?” A study conducted in 1975 compared the sleep patterns of experienced marijuana users with non-smokers. The results showed reduced eye movement activity and less REM sleep in the THC condition. They also reported a REM rebound effect, which is more REM activity upon withdrawal from THC. Scientific evidence exists that correlates marijuana use with a loss of REM sleep and dreams, so the next time you smoke marijuana and don’t remember your dreams you will know why.
Epic dreams are extremely vivid and can be life changing. These dreams are so compelling that they will often generate a greater awareness of your natural surroundings. Epic dreams will give you a fresh and new perspective on an aspect of life. When you wake up from an epic dream you will feel as if you have discovered something profound or amazing. The epic dream will remain with you for years. People who experience these types of dreams often report a continuous storyline that constitutes an entirely different and ongoing life. Many people sleep during their epic dreams, having a dream within itself.
Many studies have been conducted to examine differences in the dreams of men and women. It has been shown that women dream of both genders equally, yet 67% of the time the characters in men’s dreams are predominantly male. Women’s dreams tend to last longer and include more emotional content whereas men’s dreams are reported to include more violence, cars, and roads. On average, 8% of people’s dreams include sexual activity. The primary gender difference in sexual dreams is that men tend to dream about unknown or public places and their dreams often feature strangers, while the opposite is true for the majority of women. Women more often dream of enclosed bodies of water, such as pools, lakes, ponds. Of course this data is based on general percentages and is not true for everyone.
Sleep Paralysis is a condition that affects many people in the world. It is directly related to the REM sleep stage and dreaming. Sleep paralysis corresponds with REM atonia, which is the state of paralysis that occurs during REM sleep. A person experiences sleep paralysis when the brain awakes from the REM sleep cycle, but the paralysis state remains. The person is conscious, but unable to move. They continue to dream and in many cases can visually experience their dreams in their room. A person experiencing sleep paralysis is not fully conscious, but well aware of what is happening. The experience has been described as distorted tunnel vision. The paralysis state may be accompanied by extreme hallucinations and a sense of danger. Many historical claims of alien abduction have been explained by extreme cases of sleep paralysis.
Ernest Hartmann has published many books and papers on the topic of nightmares. His work has indicated that the most common theme of a nightmare is being chased. Adults are commonly chased by a male figure, while children face animals or fantasy creatures. Nightmares are less common in adults and children experience them most often between the ages of three or four and seven or eight. About 5-lO% of people have nightmares once a month or more frequently. Hartmann’s work suggests that nightmares directly correlate with daily activities and are an indicator of fear or anxiety that needs to be confronted. Some common triggers can be drug abuse, traumatic events, or the loss of a loved one. Night terrors are quite different from nightmares. They occur during the first hour or two of sleep and during the non-rapid eye cycle. Loud screaming and thrashing is common. The sleeper is hard to awake and usually remembers no more than an overwhelming feeling or a single scene. Night terrors are much less common than nightmares. Children from the ages of two to six are most prone to night terrors, and they affect about 15% of all children.
Dreams have often been credited with influencing world changing events. Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein after having a dream about the monster. “I saw the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy, half-vital motion.” Elias Howe was a sewing machine pioneer who greatly influenced the product in the middle of the 19th century. He is recorded as saying that he had a vivid dream about a group of cannibals that were preparing to cook him. They were dancing around a fire waving their spears up and down. Howe noticed that in the head of each spear there was a small hole, which ultimately gave him the idea of passing the thread through the needle close to the point, not at the other end. It was a major innovation in making mechanical sewing possible. The scientist Friedrich August Kekulé discovered the seemingly impossible chemical structure of benzene (C6H6) after having a dream about a group of snakes swallowing their tails. In 1953, James Watson and Francis Crick discovered the structure of DNA. Watson later reported that the idea came to him after dreaming of a series of spiral staircases. A few days prior to his death Abraham Lincoln discussed a dream with his wife in which he previewed a dead body wrapped in funeral vestments surrounded by hundreds of mourners. He claims to have been told by a soldier that the president had been assassinated.
Snoring is a major problem for millions of people. Many individuals who experience chronic snoring are suffering from a REM sleep disorder. During REM sleep individuals will experience irregular breathing, a rise in blood pressure, vivid dreams, and paralysis. People who snore regularly do dream, but will not remember them as often as normal sleeping individuals. They often will develop a REM sleep disorder. This disorder is a condition in which the individual does not experience any kind of paralysis when they sleep. The absence of this paralysis causes many people to physically act out their dreams. Such physical behaviors often include talking, yelling, punching, kicking, jumping out of bed, arm flailing, and even grabbing. The person will remain sleeping while acting out their dreams and will not remember the activity or dream the following day.
REM sleep begins when signals are broadcasted from the base of the brain, an area called the pons. The pons distributes signals to the thalamus, which directs them towards the cerebral cortex. The cerebral cortex is the area of the brain responsible for learning, thinking, and organizing information. The pons also sends signals that shut off the neurons in the spinal cord, causing temporary paralysis during REM sleep. REM sleep activates the area of the brain that we use for learning. This may be an extremely important factor in normal brain development during infancy. It may explain why small children spend much more time in REM sleep then adults. In addition, REM sleep is associated with increased protein in the brain. Studies have been conducted that correlate REM sleep and learning mental skills. Separate groups of people were taught the same skill and a larger percentage of individuals who fell into REM sleep during the night were able to recall the skill the next day. This theory is called the Ontogenetic Hypothesis of REM sleep.






























interesting list…
Sleep paralysis is said to be the explanation of “hag” attacks. In the picture (#5), the thing sitting on the woman could be a representation of the hag or something similar which is said to sit atop sleeping victims and taunt and torture them while they sleep. I have recently seen a documentary of a woman saying she was tortured by a hag on a near nightly basis. She’s convinced of it being a supernatural being that renders her inable to move even though she was diagnosed with severe sleep paralysis and associated halucinations.
fun stuff. but you haven’t mentioned Lucid Dreams in either of these lists! they are THE most amazing thing about dreams – dreams you can learn to control and influence.
About #3 — Watson and Crick actually cracked the double helix mystery while high on LSD.
Stephenie Meyer said she came up with the idea for Twilight from a dream… Another history-changing moment? (JUST KIDDING
)
sleep paralysis is the most terrifying thing ever to happen to me. you are more prone to it if you have drank alcohol shortly before going to bed and if you sleep on your back (how i like to sleep, dammit!). I am one of the unfortunate few who experience hallucinations along with the paralysis and have seen (among other things) my boyfriend hung in my wardrobe, a man watching me from the corner of my bedroom and my boyfriend placing a dead baby on my chest. Can usually tell when paralysis is coming as i hear a buzzing noise, alot of people hear chimes or similar as well. Recently found out my dad has been getting it since his 20′s and he is now in his 60′s but he says he gets it less and less as time goes by. There is medication available that relaxes your muscles but side effects are insomnia and hallucinations, d’oh that doesnt help!
The proper way to refute a published study is not to say, “Nuh uh, it doesn’t happen that way for me.” Comment anecdata: funny stuff.
In #4, why is 10 written “lO” (Lo, different caps)?
@Corey (124):
If only she wasn’t a Morman, she could have been a pothead and then it would have been impossible for her to dream such awful crap…
Well, one could only dream of a Twilight-free world.
Dreams have always fasinated me.
I love dreaming.
Although my turtles are reptiles I’m pretty sure they dream. When I check on them at night before I go to bed I will see a turtle moving his hands in a swimming motion even though he is on land. It happens quite often.
Watson and Crick actually came up with the structure of DNA by sneaking a peek at the unpublished findings of a female colleague who had worked it out for herself. Take a look at Bill Bryson’s “A Brief History of Nearly Everything”.
ringtailroxy (78) you’d rather not speculate??? does this mean you don’t even know what happened to this man?? wtf? maybe you meant to say, you’d rather not elaborate to us the state of his well being/death? jesus. no wonder you had nightmares. plus~what does that mean, you “knew” the cops?? hilarious, dude. makes me wonder if you should’ve been arrested for at least careless driving? i mean, wtf, you were exhausted? so what! people NEVER cease to amaze me………
I’m fascinated when a long dream ends when something in the dream turns into something in real life eg I remember a long time ago I had a dream about a picnic when someone singing in my dream turned into (or turned out to be) a rooster in the house next to our holiday house. Did my brain know ahead of time that the rooster was there, and time the dream accordingly, or did it hear the rooster and instantly concoct a dream to explain the sound? If dreams are concocted instantly, why does REM sleep last as long as it does.
(Another example is when an ambulance siren turns out to be your alarm. roxy’s dream in 78 may be another example, depending on how long the dream was before.)
I experienced Sleep Paralysis, Started around age 8 or 9. It’s kinda scary unless you just tell urself im gonna wake up and start moving and you eventually do. Sometimes I could open my eye’s but I could not move any other part of my body. Also it never lasted more then 1-2 mins at most. But as for the seeing things or being freaked out that has never happened, But I have been scared it could happen when I have a cold and I can not breath out of my nose and I sleep with my mouth closed.. Anywho Dreadful thing but you can live with it..
Resulting in me not breathing
, In case I didn’t make any sense
for many years i have had Sleep Paralysis.. it’s awfull, for sure! but now it have never happend again.. and i hope it never come back!
I had an epic dream involving me leading a military campaign across a fantasy continent. The only thing I remember, however, is waving goodbye to my companions and stepping through a portal, at which point I woke up. I am really, really sad, that I can’t remember it. It would have been awesome to think about.
I had an epic dream just over a year ago. To cut a long story short – it was like the film Zulu, I was surrounded by ululating warriors brandishing spears and merrily massacring my comrades around me. Several of my fellows, realising that death was inevitable, ran towards the enemy in a suicidal charge. I was too scared to join them, so – and this is the measure of the emotion I felt – I began looking through the many dropped rifles littering the ground to try and find a loaded one to blow my brains out. Being unsuccessful, the ‘Zulus’ eventually caught me and beat the living ***** out of me, until I thought I was dead.
However, I then ‘awoke’ to find myself very much alive, the Zulus gone, and several of my comrades still alive. I can still remember the enormous feeling of relief as I realised that I had survived and could make my way home…
I’ve never felt terror like that before or since. An epic dream in every sense.
wow forever first one to comment thanks jfray! It’s like bein’ back in my ol’ earth
I mean my comment way up there and doesn’t mean that I dun’t read thy comments it’s just I’m happy so sorry. Wanna regain my strength to be not so defeated by GiantFlyingRobo. I’ll pay all those who are top of me on about and I will pay whatever money they ask so I can be 1st again. Alright shut up saber you’re a schizo
ianz09(***** your puny ass and rip ya own penis and force it up yo ass. I wanna be bad but why couldn’t so I’ll beat it. And I wanna be bad. Coz i wanna be first!(befirst)Be first!(befirstr) I’ll show how yo be the fiirst!
This is a repeat posting. I originally posted it on the Top 10 Dreams and their Meanings list, but I have re-posted it here to reach more people…
I have had many dreams about losing teeth. They always leave me feeling horrified. Since high school I have had bouts of sleep paralysis. Sometimes several times in a night. Once the room was spinning and I looked up and saw myself floating above the bed, with me lying in it!! Sometimes I see flashing lights, hear bells and whistles. Mostly it seems like somebody is in the room with me. These dreams are ALWAYS accommpanied by a loud buzzing, which I hear and also feel… almost as though I am wearing a bee hive for a hat!! I always want to “go with it” and allow the sleep paralysis to continue undisturbed… I have heard that people often have Out of Body Experiences (OBEs) this way… But every time I end up fighting it, it is just too scary…. Anybody else experience this?
Hmmm,
Sounds like a wierd experience. Quite a few people on this list have commented that they experience sleep paralysis, so I think it is a rather common thing, but your case sounds a bit more intense then others. I have never experienced anything like it myself.
Great article! I always wanted to *****yze dreams.
I have sleep apnea, I’ve probably had it my entire life. I used to sleep all night, but I was always SO fatigued the next day. I’m so glad I saw a neurologist and got a CPAP machine to correct the sleep apnea. I’ve had so many vivid dreams and much better sleep since I started using it.
AMAZING…Some of those are RIGHT ON!
@Hmmm (141): I’ve never had dreams about my teeth, but I’ve had numerous (too numerous to recall) episodes of sleep paralysis. Every time I experience it the sleep paralysis is terrifying, with full body paralysis and both visual and auditory “visions”, along with the sense of others in the room with me, all of whom want to do me harm whilst they drone loudly in moaning, dreadful voices which vibrate the air with the force of their loudness.
The visual part is just as terrifying, but I’ll not go into that. Just suffice it to say that at no time do I want to “go with it”.
@Cait (144): I, too, discovered I was suffering from a complex form of sleep apnea. I have 75% Central (CNS) apnea, and 15% structural apnea. I sleep with a VPap machine with a full-face mask and an oxygen bleed. You are so right about the quality of sleep with the machine vs without! It’s hard to remember now how I actually got through a night without my VPap.
i feel what i dream anyone know what that is called? i also have extremely vivid dreams
something kind of creepy yet very interesting
http://www.disinfo.com/2009/10/ever-dream-this-man/
Ror: that is a marketing hoax.
@jfrater (149):
Are you sure? How do you know?
I quit weed n had a mad dream i was colouring golf balls in with fluro texters and hittin em at night with a strobe light on.. Trippy!!
@saber25 (140): Who are you? Why are you constantly bothering me? What did I do? Make sense, please. Or at the very least, explain why you are doing what you are doing.
@Ror (150): Go the web page you have provided, then scroll down to the first comment, where a commenter has provided information about the original source of the material. And don’t contradict Jamie on this site (unless you really are right and he really is wrong (which is rare)).
@Ror (150): Ror! My God! The name of the site the “man” and all of the “information” is taken from is titled “MISINFORMATION”.
Misinformation, in case you don’t know (and you seem not to) means FALSE information, BAD information, WRONG information.
In other words, they’re telling you upfront, that what they’re offering is all junk. Garbage. Trash. Lies.
And follow astraya’s advice. He’s spot on.
Yeah, like the lady said.
how about this for strange dreams.
At least 2,000 people around the world claim to have seen this man in their dreams, though they don’t know who he is, according to the website thisman.org. It began, they write, in January 2006, when a psychiatrist’s patient first made the sketch and said she’d been having recurring dreams with “This Man,” as he later became known.
@Ror (148): LOL i just posted a link to this oddity… great minds think alike!!
I have sleep paralysis and it really sucks. I’ve had it ever since I can remember and mostly happens when I take naps or only sleep for 2 or 3 hours. Bryan J to answer your question, yes it does feel like you are wide awake. I also never knew (until recently) whether or not my eyes were really open or not during the sleep paralysis because that is how real it feels that you are actually awake. (Which is partly true because your brain is.) The description that you have on this list is pretty dead on for what it feels like. The hallucinations are usually not scary for me (but they are for my mom)and it’s usually people I know coming into my room, it took a long time to get used to the fact that what I was seeing did NOT ACTUALLY HAPPEN. I also hear music and feel people touching me. It is not like dreaming though, it is ACTUALLY hearing music and ACTUALLY feeling people touching me, I guess a hallucination it’s hard to explain. I usually fight to move and wake up feeling exhausted from fighting. Recently I have gotten so tired of it I will stop fighting it and just lay there unable to move and think “dammit it’s happening” haha.
Sorry for the long explanation!
@stinkypetalhead (125) Thank GOD my hallucinations during my paralysis are not like yours, I don’t know what I would do if they were like that. I understand a lot of people with it have scary hallucinations but for some reason mine aren’t. That really sucks I hope in time your get sleep paralysis gets less and less.
ok ianz09 (152): I’ll explain why I have been this in three ways;
1. I am a deliberatley schizo.
2. I was the first in top commenters then you came and I just became third next to Randall.
3. It just bothers me much for you so commenting and why the heck jfrater hasn’t banned you yet like he did to me for commenting so much. Got my big break on the shark list.
@saber25 (160): saber, you are too new to know the past, the actual history of LV. I was top commenter for many, many month, and if not top at least one of the top 3. The top 3 (yes, including Randall, just rearranged itself from month to month). One of the top 3 fled LV for reasons all his own, I fled for work reasons, getting my portfolio ready for the world…I may have to take another break, as some unexpected problems have cropped up.
Being first isn’t an accomplishment. Being the most articulate is the most important, with facts to back you up.
Randall and I and our third member (a scientist) always had that in mind, and we all had different ways of presenting our side of the argument.
Posts which offer new information are counted as new posts, but posts just to be posts are annoying to everyone.
Do you see what I’m getting at?
@saber25 (160): I am a deliberatley schizo. I guess that’s ok if its deliberate
I was the first in top commenters then you came and I just became third next to Randall.
WTf? Was I top commenter?
It just bothers me much for you so commenting and why the heck jfrater hasn’t banned you yet like he did to me for commenting so much. Got my big break on the shark list.
frater aint gonna ban me for commenting alot, only if im obnoxious. and with the exception of a few arguments wherein my opposition really annoyed me and i swore alot, idt i have given a good reason to be banned. most of my comments are humorous (or a dumb attempt, but friendly nonetheless) or fairly articulate. anybody correct me if it turns out im actually more annoying than anything, i hope im not. and it doenst seem you have been banned either, you’re still hovering around, very much alive
@saber25 (160): Holy ass, I AM top commenter! Wow, i didn’t even know they kept track of that. Well, now all of your past posts of wanting the top spot back make sense. Damn, that really shed some light lol
Paul McCartney woke up with the melody to Yesterday. He had to ask people if it was an old song or not. This has always fascinated me.
http://myspace.com/deltidsharmonisk
@Buster (164): That kind of occurrence is far more common than one would think. Reading through the bio’s of some of the great scientists and mathematicians the same thing crops up again and again; answers just appear to them overnight, full blown, like a gift. It happens to ordinary people, too. It’s happened to me.
I know there is a simple, scientific explanation for it, but I’m not sure I remember what it is…something to do with the synapses firing more productively with the body and brain at rest, I believe…I could be a mile off, but I’m sure the underlying premise is true.
Is there a neurologist in the house?
@ianz09 (163): & @saber25 (160): I am going to give you two a couple pieces of advice, then going back to ignoring you.
1- Try to stick to the subject matter of the List in your comments. That doesn’t mean you have a tiny, straight track of information to adhere to, because no matter what the subject of the List, there are a dozen (at least) paths to take from there to other interesting points of view, pieces of information, bits of history…and so on.
2- Learn to spell.
3- Ditto parts of speech.
4- If you can make four short posts into one medium length post, do! No one is fooled by your race for first place, we’re just annoyed.
Now, go and good luck at retaining, or acquiring your number one spot on the commenter list to either of you!
@segues (161): One of the top 3 fled LV for reasons all his own
I am still bummed about that.
I fled for work reasons, getting my portfolio ready for the world
Glad to see you back posting fairly regularly now, segue. Btw, I didn’t have a chance to mention it earlier, but your site is way cool!
@Maggot (167): Thank you, Maggot! Believe it or not what I do is hard work, difficult to do, yet I love it; I feel my self expanding with every image I successfully produce (not to mention the swelling head from every compliment).
While I search for an agent, my time here will be limited a bit, but I’m glad to be back!
I have heard that “The Wizard of Oz” is the epic dream of the author.
@segues (166): I am a little offended by your comment. saber25 was rambling about how we were engaged in some sort of battle, which I was unaware I was participating in. I generally comment on the list, unless otherwise engaged in a conversation/dispute, which was the case here (also note I did not and do not bring up this stupid “competition”). Also, I could give a damn about the top commenter spot, it was news to me. If I weren’t even on the list, I wouldn’t care. saber25 made it a point to talk about my knocking him off the top spot, and until I poked around and discovered the Top Commenters list, I was confused as to what he was talking about. Now that I have the clarification, I thought it was cool I was top, but it isn’t like I fought for it, I only log on and comment on this site in my free time so it was a surprise. I really wouldn’t be upset if I was knocked off the list completely, I’m perfectly content with or without a trivial title. So please don’t mistake me for saber25′s willing opponent, he is consistently engaging me, not vice versa.
I`ve always dreamt falling down & wake up shaking….so what does that mean?
these are pretty good things……but usually i forgot my dreams…..just little a bit moment that is remember me…
IS this dream disorder????
@bondjames (172): No, it is pretty typical to forget dreams. You dream every night, I believe, and forget the majority.
@ianz09 (170): ianz09, you have my sincere apology.
I do pay attention to certain posters, those who appear to be more intelligent, well read, able to grasp the nuances of life. You are such a poster, which was why I was agog when saber25 seemed to involve you in that absurd pseudo debate.
It simply wasn’t like you.
I’m glad to have been wrong.
@segues (174): I appreciate the apology, and it was an honest mistake. He keeps bugging me on several different threads, (I think) insulting me, and claiming I should be banned. He desperately wants his Top Commenter spot, which I unknowingly took. I mean, he can have it back, I don’t really care. Despite my constantly telling him to screw off, he insists that he, Randall, and myself are locked in an epic conflict for the top spot. Now, I’m not sure about Randall, but I will certainly not put up a fight to hold on to a trivial title. I’m glad you did not ignore me, so that we could clear this up. We were having a quite pleasant conversation on an earlier thread, I was surprised you had lumped me in as another annoying poster, but thanks for coming around!
first time i experienced sleep paralisis was in 8th grade, i some how ended up on the floor and i looked up to see a demon or something holding me down, also have seen quite a few dead relatives during my sleep paralisis states. also my mother and my sister also have it.
Holy snaps! number 6 was right!
I dreamed I was in car down the highway shooting at mobsters.
@astraya (153): @astraya (153):
“And don’t contradict Jamie on this site (unless you really are right and he really is wrong (which is rare)).”
I didn’t contradict him, I asked him how did he know, not because I was trying to be a smart ass but because I actually wanted to know how he knew it was a hoax.
Segue, The site is called Disinformation, not Misinformation. And the site is not about what you think
http://www.disinfo.com/about/
(why is everyone such a douche in here)
PEOPLE WHO SMOKE ***** DO HAVE DREAMMS THEY ACTULLY HAVE REALLY GOOD ONES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
i always hve dreamz which is refered up as “sleep paralysis” it is rili scary sumtimes as the things happnin to me seems rili very real.i sumtymes even wake up screamin in the middle the of the night…if there is ni way to stop havin those kinda dreamzz plizzz do telll mee..