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Let me sleep on it: Creative problem solving enhanced by REM sleep

06/30/2009 · Leave a Comment

The study by Sara Mednick, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry at UC San Diego and the VA San Diego Healthcare System, and first author Denise Cai, graduate student in the UC San Diego Department of Psychology, shows that REM directly enhances creative processing more than any other sleep or wake state. Their findings will be published in the June 8th online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

 

“We found that – for creative problems that you’ve already been working on – the passage of time is enough to find solutions,” said Mednick. “However, for new problems, only REM sleep enhances creativity.”

 

Mednick added that it appears REM sleep helps achieve such solutions by stimulating associative networks, allowing the brain to make new and useful associations between unrelated ideas. Importantly, the study showed that these improvements are not due to selective memory enhancements.

 

A critical issue in sleep and cognition is whether improvements in behavioral performance are the result of sleep-specific enhancement or simply reduction of interference – since experiences while awake have been shown to interfere with memory consolidation. The researchers controlled for such interference effects by comparing sleep periods to quiet rest periods without any verbal input.

 

While evidence for the role of sleep in creative problem-solving has been looked at by prior research, underlying mechanisms such as different stages of sleep had not been explored. Using a creativity task called a Remote Associates Test (RAT), study participants were shown multiple groups of three words (for example: cookie, heart, sixteen) and asked to find a fourth word that can be associated to all three words (sweet, in this instance). Participants were tested in the morning, and again in the afternoon, after either a nap with REM sleep, one without REM or a quiet rest period. The researchers manipulated various conditions of prior exposure to elements of the creative problem, and controlled for memory.

 

“Participants grouped by REM sleep, non-REM sleep and quiet rest were indistinguishable on measures of memory,” said Cai. “Although the quiet rest and non-REM sleep groups received the same prior exposure to the task, they displayed no improvement on the RAT test. Strikingly, however, the REM sleep group improved by almost 40 percent over their morning performances.”

 

The authors hypothesize that the formation of associative networks from previously unassociated information in the brain, leading to creative problem-solving, is facilitated by changes to neurotransmitter systems during REM sleep.

 

Source: University of California – San Diego

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10 Common Dreams and their Meanings

04/26/2009 · 3 Comments

Source: The List Universe

 

Everyone dreams (even if we don’t always remember them after the fact) and researchers have found that the majority of us have dreams with similar themes.

 

For years people have tried to interpret the fleeting images that we see when we go to sleep – some interpretations are outright bizarre, while others are pretty understandable. This is a list of the interpretations that the Association for the Study of Dreams has given to the most recurring and common types of dream.

 

10. Car Troubles

 

In these types of dreams you are usually in or near a car or some other type of vehicle which is out of control or has other problems that seem insurmountable. For example, the brakes may have failed, you may have lost control of the steering, or be heading over a cliff or crashing. You can either be the driver or the passenger. This is a very common type of nightmare and it occurs in all people – not just those who can drive. This dream usually means that you are feeling powerless over something in your life – or that you are heading for a crash (metaphorically speaking).

 

9. Faulty Machinery

 

In the faulty machinery dream you are trying to operate mechanical equipment which either fails to work, or fails to work in the way that you expect it to. The vast majority of these dreams involve a telephone – either trouble dialing, losing a connection, or dialing a wrong number. It can involve a lost Internet connection, or something manual like a jammed or broken machine. This dream often means that you feel you are losing touch with reality, or that a part of your body or mind is not functioning as it should. It can also occur when you are feeling anxious about making a connection with another person in real life.

 

8. Lost or Trapped

 

Dreaming about being lost is very common and will usually occur when you are having conflict in deciding how to react in a situation in real life. In the dream you are trying to find your way out of an area – such as a forest, city streets, a large building, or other maze-like structure. Another way this dream plays out involves you being trapped, buried alive, caught in a web, or unable to move for some other reason. This is often accompanied by a feeling of terror. This dream usually means that you are trapped in real life – unable to make the right choice.

 

7. Missed a Boat or Plane

 

In this type of dream you are rushing to catch a bus, train, plane, or other type of public transport – but you miss it – usually by a fraction of a second. Rather than feeling fear in this dream, you usually feel frustration. This dream can also occur in a different form, in which you arrive late for an important performance or sporting event that you are supposed to participate in, only to find that the event has already begun. This dream usually means that you feel that you have missed out on an important opportunity in your real life. It will often occur when you are struggling over an important decision.

 

6. Failing a Test

 

This dream usually manifests itself in people who have been out of school for a long time. In the dream you are prevented from passing a test in a variety of different possible scenarios. In one scenario you find that you are unable to make it to the test on time, often through being unable to find the test room. In other versions you are unprepared (either through lack of study) or you are missing equipment. This dream usually means that you are feeling tested in some way in your real life. You may feel that you are unprepared for something or playing the wrong part in life.

 

5. Ill or Dying

 

In this dream, you (or a loved one) are ill, injured, or dying. It is a moderately common dream and, not surprisingly, occurs often at the onset of an illness. Aside from becoming ill, this dream can mean that you are emotionally hurt or are afraid of becoming hurt. The dream may also be warning you of an upcoming physical risk to yourself or a loved one. When it is someone else in the dream that dies, it can mean that you feel that part of yourself (that you see represented by that person) is dead. It may also mean that you wish the person would go away, or that you fear losing them.

 

4. Being Chased

 

Dreaming of being chased can be a truly horrifying experience. Most often the chaser is a monster or some person that is frightening, and occasionally it may be an animal. You may be surprised to know that this is the most commonly experienced nightmare theme. The meaning of these dreams is that someone, something (possibly something as obscure as an emotion) is making you feel threatened. One way to determine the root of the threat is to ask yourself who or what in your real life most closely resembles the “creature” or circumstance in your dream. It is also worth noting that sometimes this dream is a replay of an actual event in your life.

 

3. Bad or Missing Teeth

 

Teeth dreams are fairly common and they usually involve the discovery of extremely decayed or missing teeth in your own mouth. Sometimes you will dream that you open your mouth and your teeth begin to fall out. The fact that the majority of people today have reasonable teeth (perhaps with the exception of the British), it is not surprising that we feel so emotionally disturbed by these dreams. So, what does it mean when we dream about missing teeth? At the most basic level it means that we are afraid of being found unattractive. At a deeper level, it can signify a fear of embarrassment or a loss of power in real life. Oh – I was just kidding about the “British” thing!

 

2. Dream Nudity

 

In this type of dream you are in a state of undress, partial undress, or inappropriate dress (for example wearing pajamas to work). Occasionally you are the witness of another person who is naked while you are clothed. This is often accompanied by feelings of embarrassment and shame, but occasionally with the feeling of pride or freedom. The meaning of this dream is that you are feeling exposed, awkward, or vulnerable, or you are afraid that you have revealed too much of yourself (such as a secret or a very personal feeling) in a real life situation. An interesting fact about this type of dream is that it occurs much more frequently in people who are involved in a wedding ceremony in their real life.

 

1. Falling or Sinking

 

We have all had falling dreams – it is such a common dream, in fact, that myths have arisen over them; the most common myth is, of course, that you will die if you hit the ground in the dream. I can assure you, having hit the ground in more than one falling dream, that this is not true at all. In the falling dream we are usually falling through the air and frightened. Occasionally we may be sinking in water (and in danger of drowning). Typically a person having this dream is feeling insecure or lacking in support in their waking life. These dreams often occur when you are overwhelmed in life and feel ready to give up. If you have this dream you should evaluate your current situation and try to locate the problem that is overwhelming you. Deal with it and this dream should go away.

 

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Dream Reveals Wife’s Killer

03/16/2009 · Leave a Comment

Rod Spraggins says it came to him in a dream that his political opponent was an alleged wife-killer.

 

Source :CNN

 

More than five years ago, Rod Spraggins made a sensational charge at a candidate forum, publicly accusing a political opponent of murder with nothing to back up the allegation except, it turns out, a vision.

 

Now police say Spraggins was right.

 

Barry Waites, Spraggins’ opponent in the 2000 race for Lanett City Council, was arrested this week on murder charges in the 1998 slaying of his wife, who was found dead in their split-level home in this sleepy town of 8,000 along the Georgia line.

 

In 2000, Spraggins, a bail bondsman, stunned a crowd of 100 when he accused Waites of killing his wife and dared the man to sue him for slander if he was wrong.

 

Waites was not at the forum, never responded publicly to the accusation and never sued.

 

In an otherwordly turn to the saga Friday, Spraggins disclosed that he never had any evidence to make the accusation and that it was based entirely on Mrs. Waites’ appearing to him in a series of dreams.

 

“She started appearing to me within the first weeks of her death,” said Spraggins, adding that the dreams prompted him to enter the City Council race for the sole purpose of making the accusation.

 

Both he and Waites lost their bids for the City Council amid the controversy, but Spraggins said he got what he wanted in the end.

 

“I hate it for his family. … I hate it for Charlotte’s family. But I’m glad justice is finally going to be served,” he said in a telephone interview.

 

Waites, 58, was arrested Thursday at a clothing store he runs with his current wife. He was jailed on $150,000 bail. It was not immediately known whether he had hired a lawyer.

 

Police Chief Ron Docimo would not comment on exactly what led to the arrest, saying only that it was a “culmination of years of following up on leads and tips.”

 

Waites was serving as interim mayor when 49-year-old Charlotte Waites was found strangled and with a blow to the head.

 

The victim’s brother, Gene Brown, said police told him within a week of the slaying that Waites was the prime suspect.

 

Brown said that the couple had numerous financial problems during their 28-year marriage and that he believes an argument over money resulted in her death.

 

In 2002, Waites was sentenced to six months in jail after pleading guilty in an ethics case that was uncovered during an investigation of his wife’s killing. He admitted taking money from a National Guard armory where he worked.

 

Brown credited Spraggins with keeping up public pressure on police to solve the murder case.

 

“Rod had it pegged from the beginning,” Brown said. “I had doubts about his methods. But he’s got guts.”

 

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Psychic Dream Wins Man £25,000

03/16/2009 · 1 Comment

SOURCE: BBC

 

A football fan won £25,000 after dreaming that Liverpool’s Xabi Alonso scored a goal from his own half.

 

After the dream in July, Adrian Hayward placed a £200 bet, at odds of 125-1, that Alonso would score from behind the halfway line at some point this season.

 

His dream came true on Saturday when the Spaniard scored against Luton Town in the FA Cup 3rd round.

 

“I’ve never placed such a large bet before but I had a feeling about it,” said Mr Hayward, of Newbury, Berkshire.

 

“I was watching the Luton match on TV with my family and I saw the keeper off his line. I was shouting ‘Shoot!’ and he did.

 

“It seemed to take an age to hit the net but when it did, I just went berserk.”

 

The 42-year-old father-of-two said he might spend some of the winnings on a family holiday.

 

Bookmaker Paddy Power said: “When he placed the bet we thought it was the easiest £200 we had ever made.

 

“But fair play to him. It’s great when these unusual bets pay out and it shows that dreams do come true.”

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A Few Famous Dreamers : The Power of Dreams

01/17/2009 · Leave a Comment

By Catherine Guthrie

Source: The Ledger

 

In her book, “The Committee of Sleep,” dream researcher Deirdre Barrett, Ph.D., recounts stories of celebrities and historical figures who’ve successfully mined their dreams for gold.

 

Billy Joel: The singer/songwriter says he often dreams musical arrangements; he’s gone so far as to say, “I know all the music I’ve composed has come from a dream.”

 

Annamaria Gundlach: This artist found over time that she could design pots by waiting to see the next one in a dream. She observed its shape and size; it would usually be embedded with everyday objects such as nails and fabric, and she would faithfully re-create it. Her major traveling show was called Dreams in Clay.

 

Paul Horowitz: A real-life version of Jodie Foster’s character in the movie “Contact,” he’s a Harvard physics professor whose passion is designing telescopes to hunt for evidence of extraterrestrials. When he’s building a new one and gets stuck on a technical glitch, he’ll dream he’s looking over the shoulder of a man solving the very problem that has stumped him.

 

Frederick Banting: This Canadian doctor dreamed a way to isolate insulin and, therefore, make diabetes treatable.

 

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley: On a rainy night in 1816, Lord Byron challenged his houseguests to write a horror story. That night, Shelley dreamed the basis for what would become her best-selling novel, “Frankenstein.”

 

Paul McCartney: In 1965, the 22-year-old Beatle dreamed the melody of the song “Yesterday.” Upon waking, he immediately sat down and played it on the piano.

 

Stephen King: The prolific writer of grisly tales admits that he’s reaped images from his vivid dreamscapes for his novels and short stories, including Salem’s Lot and It.

 

Katherine Mansfield: An unusual dream experience became her successful short story Sun and Moon. It is an impressionistic tale seen through the eyes of a 5-year-old boy. “I dreamed it all,” she said.

 

 

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Sleep Can Bring Life Changing Ideas

12/09/2008 · 3 Comments

From solving problems to flashes of inspiration, scientists are beginning to unravel the creative powerhouse that is the mind at night.

 

By Kate Wighton / Source: The Times UK

 

History is peppered with tales of phenomenal ideas taking shape in sleeping minds; Paul McCartney said that he awoke with the tune of Yesterday in his head, and Robert Louis Stevenson said that the idea for The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde came to him in a dream.

 

But what exactly is going on in our minds while we sleep? Does slumber really prompt creative genius? And can the most uncreative of people receive flashes of inspiration once their head hits the pillow?

 

Scientists believe that the mind at night weaves together bits of information in innovative ways. Throughout the day your brain rarely gets a chance to stop and think. In a state of constant alertness, it responds to a stream of challenges, from writing a report for a work deadline to remembering where you left your car keys and figuring out what to buy for dinner.

 

Even when we are relaxing in front of the television, the brain is still beavering away, processing the information about the plot lines, or co-ordinating your arm movements every time you sip your wine. Believe or not, even watching Strictly Come Dancing requires brain power.

 

Sleep is the only time when your brain gets to relax and mull over the thoughts of the day. This is when new ideas and ways of thinking start to emerge.

 

“Think of your brain like a web,” says Russell Foster, Professor of Circadian Neuroscience at Oxford University.

 

“During the day the web is very tight, so you can only put information in a certain number of places. During sleep the web expands, and with the luxury of time, those bits of information can be put into lots of different places and make new associations.”

 

 

He adds that this process may help to foster the formation of new ideas. Experts, however, are divided on whether this occurs when you dream, or during deeper, non-dreaming sleep. This bringing together of seemingly unrelated bits of information is crucial to helping the brain think itself out of problems, says Matthew Walker, a sleep researcher at University of California, Berkeley.

 

“Sleep seems to stimulate your mind to make non-obvious connections. It puts all the information from the day into a big biological theatre and forces the mind to speak to people at the back of the theatre, who you may not think you have any connection with. This is the basis of creativity – connecting ideas, events and memories that wouldn’t normally fit together.”

 

In fact, this creative process has been visualised by scientists. By placing volunteers into brain scanners and sending them to sleep, scientists have seen that the areas associated with emotion go into overdrive, especially while dreaming, while the areas that are responsible for logic are switched off. This not only explains why dreams are incredibly random – you can be talking to a colleague one minute and the next minute sitting in a your old school classroom dressed in your pyjamas – but this rewiring also explains how the brain can pull together disparate information. As to how much sleep we need, experts believe this varies from person to person. But a sure sign of sleep deprivation is feeling sleepy during the day, aside from the mid-afternoon slump.

 

How to be inspired

 

Lack of sleep kills creativity: According to Professor Foster, a good night’s sleep increases the likelihood of developing novel solutions to problems. If your grey matter won’t produce a solution to a vexing problem – sleep on it.

 

Go to bed early: One study suggests that the most creative part of our sleeping occurs in the first half of the night, during slow-wave sleep. So if you need an answer to a solution and are short on time, it’s best to go to bed early and get up early, rather than to stay up late.

 

Mull over a problem before you go to bed: Try to direct your creative powers by thinking about the problem you want to solve, but don’t fret over it – you won’t be able to sleep.

 

 

 

Storing Memories and Building Consciousness

 

Once asleep, your brain gets busy making sense of your experiences from the previous day, consolidating memories and transforming short-term memories into long-term ones. Become sleep-deprived and your memory suffers.

 

Jan Born, a neuroscientist at the University of Lübeck, Germany, believes that this memory storage takes place in non-dreaming deep sleep, and that most of it is done in the first half of the night.

 

“Sleep is very important for establishing consciousness by creating long-term memories. Without memories we wouldn’t have consciousness.”

 

According to Jim Horne, a sleep researcher at the University of Loughborough, brain recovery begins after 30 minutes of sleep, and continues for the next five hours.

 

How to improve memory

 

If remembering phone numbers and directions is taxing, make sure that you’re getting enough sleep – about seven hours. Lack of shut-eye can affect our working memory.

 

One of the best times to commit something you want to learn to memory is between 6pm and 8pm, because that’s when our learning circuits are most active.

 

If you want to ensure that your grey matter has enough sleep to function properly, but find it hard to drop off, performing a routine before bedtime may help. According to Russell Foster, of Oxford University, routines help people to switch off and calm the chatter in their head. “For me, it’s reading. I have to read something before going to sleep, even if it means doing so by torchlight with my wife asleep next to me,” he says. Others find that the process of making a hot (caffeine-free) drink can help to prepare their minds for sleep.

 

Reining In Emotions

 

Studies have indicated that the emotional circuits in our brain are 60 per cent more active when we are tired, or, put another way: “When we are deprived of sleep, we have the emotional integrity of Britney Spears,” says Matthew Walker, a researcher at University of California, Berkeley.

 

Through his experiments he believes that the parts of the brain that keep our emotional brain in check start to dwindle when we need sleep. This results in our brains switching to an almost Neanderthal state – impulsive and driven by emotions. “Sleep refreshes the brain’s emotional circuits so that it can deal with emotional challenges,” he says.

 

Fretting points

 

Perils of sleep deprivation If you’re going through a tough time in your professional or personal life, getting enough sleep is essential. Become sleep-deprived and your frayed emotions will reach breaking point. Lack of sleep increases levels of the hormones cortisol and adrenalin, making us tetchy.

 

Don’t fret If you are worried about something, and find it hard to get to sleep, don’t lie there fretting. It’s likely that you will then start worrying about not getting enough sleep, and so the worry perpetuates. Jim Horne, a sleep researcher at the University of Loughborough, and author of Sleepfaring: A Journey Through The Science Of Sleep, recommends doing a jigsaw in a dimly-lit room. This will take your mind off your worries (more so than TV or a book), and should have you feeling sleepy within 10-20 minutes.

 

Don’t make important decisions late into the night Hold that conversation until the next morning, and have a fresh look at that angry e-mail before hitting send.

 

 

Battling the Midnight Munchies

 

Once you’ve nodded off, the brain ramps up various hormones to ensure that you’re not woken up by a gurgling tummy. These hormones trigger the release of fat from the body’s stores to keep hunger at bay until the morning. Unfortunately you won’t shed any pounds, although it’s worth remembering that not enough sleep can result in weight gain because the hormones are thrown out of sync.

 

How to keep hunger at bay

 

Try to avoid eating just before bedtime This applies to fatty foods in particular, as they may cause heartburn. Ditch the cheese sandwich in favour of a hot drink.

 

If you are on a diet It’s essential to get enough sleep if you want to lose weight. A lack of sleep plays havoc with the appetite controlling hormones, leptin and gherlin, making you super-hungry.

 

Avoid night-time trips to the fridge In most cases midnight snacking is simply comfort eating; your body doesn’t actually need sustenance. And for a good night’s sleep forget the nightcap, as alcohol can disrupt sleep.

 

Secret Dreams – And Those You Remember

 

Many of us will know people who claim that they never dream. They’re wrong; during a typical night we have four periods of dreaming sleep. However, although we all dream for 100 minutes a night, we remember only the last few minutes of a dream, if any of it at all.

 

The only way we can remember a dream is to wake up while it’s happening. Typically, this happens during our last cycle of dreams, which are the most intense, and occurs just before we’re due to get up and our alarm clock brings us out of slumber. Don’t over-analyse your dreams. According to Jan Born, of the University of Lübeck, we fill in the gaps in our dreams and stitch together random events to produce something meaningful.

 

Sweet dreams – and how to get them

 

Don’t fret over anxiety-filled dreams If you’re very anxious during the day, the chances are that you’ll have anxious dreams. Try to work out what’s worrying you – perhaps try writing it down, along with possible solutions.

 

Don’t watch the news or a depressing TV programme just before bed. Your head will be full of angst and woe, and this will bleed into your dreams. Try deep-breathing exercise to switch off your brain before going to sleep.

 

Try a herbal sleeping pill containing valerian and hops A study of 30 people last year found that it could ease insomnia. Similarly, in 2006, a study of 43 student nurses found that placing lavender oil on your pillow helped to reduce anxiety.

 

Protecting Us From Ourselves

 

As a form of self-protection, your brain paralyses the body while dreaming. However, if awoken suddenly from a nightmare, a person may find themselves briefly unable to move. This is known as sleep paralysis and in severe cases it prompts hallucinations, with the nightmare continuing in the waking mind.

 

Sleep-walking and sleep-talking occur in a non-dreaming stage of sleep. Consequently, your body is still able to move. Another type of “dreaming” that occurs in non-dreaming sleep is night terror. Particularly common in young children and people suffering from post-traumatic stress, these terrifying visions wake the person in a severely upset state. Yet the dreamers have no recollection of this in the morning.

 

Get a handle on sleep-walking and talking

 

If your child or partner is sleep-walking The most important thing is not to worry, as this could worsen the problem. Sleep-walking is linked to stress; if the person detects that you’re worried, it may make them more anxious.

 

Find the source of their angst And try to resolve it. Talk to the person or child about anything that may be troubling them

 

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10 Common Dreams and their Meanings

10/21/2008 · Leave a Comment

Source: The List Universe

Everyone dreams (even if we don’t always remember them after the fact) and researchers have found that the majority of us have dreams with similar themes.

For years people have tried to interpret the fleeting images that we see when we go to sleep – some interpretations are outright bizarre, while others are pretty understandable. This is a list of the interpretations that the Association for the Study of Dreams has given to the most recurring and common types of dream.10. Car Troubles

 

In these types of dreams you are usually in or near a car or some other type of vehicle which is out of control or has other problems that seem insurmountable. For example, the brakes may have failed, you may have lost control of the steering, or be heading over a cliff or crashing. You can either be the driver or the passenger. This is a very common type of nightmare and it occurs in all people – not just those who can drive. This dream usually means that you are feeling powerless over something in your life – or that you are heading for a crash (metaphorically speaking).

9. Faulty Machinery

In the faulty machinery dream you are trying to operate mechanical equipment which either fails to work, or fails to work in the way that you expect it to. The vast majority of these dreams involve a telephone – either trouble dialing, losing a connection, or dialing a wrong number. It can involve a lost Internet connection, or something manual like a jammed or broken machine. This dream often means that you feel you are losing touch with reality, or that a part of your body or mind is not functioning as it should. It can also occur when you are feeling anxious about making a connection with another person in real life.8. Lost or Trapped

 

Dreaming about being lost is very common and will usually occur when you are having conflict in deciding how to react in a situation in real life. In the dream you are trying to find your way out of an area – such as a forest, city streets, a large building, or other maze-like structure. Another way this dream plays out involves you being trapped, buried alive, caught in a web, or unable to move for some other reason. This is often accompanied by a feeling of terror. This dream usually means that you are trapped in real life – unable to make the right choice.7. Missed a Boat or Plane

 

In this type of dream you are rushing to catch a bus, train, plane, or other type of public transport – but you miss it – usually by a fraction of a second. Rather than feeling fear in this dream, you usually feel frustration. This dream can also occur in a different form, in which you arrive late for an important performance or sporting event that you are supposed to participate in, only to find that the event has already begun. This dream usually means that you feel that you have missed out on an important opportunity in your real life. It will often occur when you are struggling over an important decision.6. Failing a Test

 

This dream usually manifests itself in people who have been out of school for a long time. In the dream you are prevented from passing a test in a variety of different possible scenarios. In one scenario you find that you are unable to make it to the test on time, often through being unable to find the test room. In other versions you are unprepared (either through lack of study) or you are missing equipment. This dream usually means that you are feeling tested in some way in your real life. You may feel that you are unprepared for something or playing the wrong part in life.

5. Ill or Dying

In this dream, you (or a loved one) are ill, injured, or dying. It is a moderately common dream and, not surprisingly, occurs often at the onset of an illness. Aside from becoming ill, this dream can mean that you are emotionally hurt or are afraid of becoming hurt. The dream may also be warning you of an upcoming physical risk to yourself or a loved one. When it is someone else in the dream that dies, it can mean that you feel that part of yourself (that you see represented by that person) is dead. It may also mean that you wish the person would go away, or that you fear losing them.4. Being Chased

 

Dreaming of being chased can be a truly horrifying experience. Most often the chaser is a monster or some person that is frightening, and occasionally it may be an animal. You may be surprised to know that this is the most commonly experienced nightmare theme. The meaning of these dreams is that someone, something (possibly something as obscure as an emotion) is making you feel threatened. One way to determine the root of the threat is to ask yourself who or what in your real life most closely resembles the “creature” or circumstance in your dream. It is also worth noting that sometimes this dream is a replay of an actual event in your life.3. Bad or Missing Teeth

 

Teeth dreams are fairly common and they usually involve the discovery of extremely decayed or missing teeth in your own mouth. Sometimes you will dream that you open your mouth and your teeth begin to fall out. The fact that the majority of people today have reasonable teeth (perhaps with the exception of the British), it is not surprising that we feel so emotionally disturbed by these dreams. So, what does it mean when we dream about missing teeth? At the most basic level it means that we are afraid of being found unattractive. At a deeper level, it can signify a fear of embarrassment or a loss of power in real life. Oh – I was just kidding about the “British” thing!2. Dream Nudity

 

In this type of dream you are in a state of undress, partial undress, or inappropriate dress (for example wearing pajamas to work). Occasionally you are the witness of another person who is naked while you are clothed. This is often accompanied by feelings of embarrassment and shame, but occasionally with the feeling of pride or freedom. The meaning of this dream is that you are feeling exposed, awkward, or vulnerable, or you are afraid that you have revealed too much of yourself (such as a secret or a very personal feeling) in a real life situation. An interesting fact about this type of dream is that it occurs much more frequently in people who are involved in a wedding ceremony in their real life.1. Falling or Sinking

 

We have all had falling dreams – it is such a common dream, in fact, that myths have arisen over them; the most common myth is, of course, that you will die if you hit the ground in the dream. I can assure you, having hit the ground in more than one falling dream, that this is not true at all. In the falling dream we are usually falling through the air and frightened. Occasionally we may be sinking in water (and in danger of drowning). Typically a person having this dream is feeling insecure or lacking in support in their waking life. These dreams often occur when you are overwhelmed in life and feel ready to give up. If you have this dream you should evaluate your current situation and try to locate the problem that is overwhelming you. Deal with it and this dream should go away.

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