Dreams
Enviado por amiga1996 • 4 de Noviembre de 2013 • Informe • 331 Palabras (2 Páginas) • 186 Visitas
When you go to sleep, do you think about what you are going to dream about? Do you wonder if it will get answers to you?
Well... dreams are not what we think, dreams have a lot of meanings, dreams are symbolic, people used to think dreams were a way of dealing with thoughts and issues that were too painful to confront while you are awake.
It has been said that dreams are a succession of images, thoughts, or emotions passing through the mind during sleep. But dreams are more, dreams are , as we know we spend almost all our time dreaming during our sleeping time and this is the way we transform the unreal world to the real one in just 2 seconds without knowing that we are thinking.
In dreams you visualize the impossible, because the sleeping brain is mostly disconnected from the rest of the world, its activity can be more spontaneous, but because dreams actually have hidden meanings and tend to tell you something, which has never occurred to you. So, it’s important to identify those objects in your dreams and find out what it wants to tell you.
People dream for about one to two hours each night. We may have four to seven dreams in one night. But only some people remember their dreams.
Our dreams often include all the things that happened while we were awaked. Sometimes we dream the same dream over and over again. These repeated dreams are often nightmares, or bad dreams that frighten us.
Artists, writers and scientists sometimes say they get ideas from dreams. For example, the singer Paul McCartney of the Beatles said he awakened one day with the music for the song “Yesterday” in his head. The writer Mary Shelley said she had a very strong dream about a scientist using an electric machine to make a creature come alive. When she awakened, she began to write her book about a scientist named Frankenstein who creates a frightening monster.
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