If we are not dreaming, our lives will be different. In an article titled "Sleep Science: The Mystery of Dreams and Dreams", the author defines his dream as "through expression of thoughts, emotions, and events when we are sleeping" (Ember 1). Whenever we sleep every night we can say that we review the things we do every day and see and feel a bigger volume. For example, if your mother is to slide on ice, that is an interesting moment, and then what you dream about is a slip on the ice, turning into a monster whose little memory is chasing you .
No, instead, you must admit that our brain works in a mysterious way. Nobody really knows why we dream about what we are doing! One night, I dreamed that you did not pass the big exam and then you will have a vivid, clear and very visual dream. . Just face me: the brain is a big mystery!
So, you have a graphic dream about Mr. DNA, this is an anthropomorphic cartoon dual helix from Jurassic Park.
After all, dreams are often unknown. The brain is usually designed to forget our dreams. When we fall asleep, the neural connections of our brain work differently than when we are awake. I do not remember, although I dream because paths generated by memory are not activated or synchronized. One way to remember your dreams for someone like me is to set alerts about every 90 minutes. This is roughly consistent with the REM (rapid eye movement) cycle of sleep. If you wake up after the Rem cycle, you may think about your dream. You can also record a memo immediately by attaching a diary next to the bed. This increases the possibility of reminding you of your dream.
While REM sleep, when our brain is actively as active as waking up, dreams will be most vivid but dreams are not exclusive but our body is usually temporary called Atonia I am in paralysis. But the time to dream is obvious, but what, how, and why it is subject to hot discussion. In the 19th century, people regarded their dreams as "delirium" often. However, Russian doctor Mariede Manacéïne thinks that dream is a way to use the brain part that we are conscious of unused. In 1899, Freud's "Explanation of Dreams" firstly presented his theory of dreams as a symbol of realization of sexual desire and desire. Carl Jung was originally a supporter of Freud's dream interpretation, and later believes that a dream is an imaginative function, a way to explore a universal prototype, and dreams need not be interpreted as fulfilling their functions The existence is to link conscious and unconscious thinking