How the dream comes? what is the reason for the dream?
Answer:
Dreams are you thoughts when you are sleeping. But they reach a deeper concience than we are aware of during the day time. The reason for dreaming? no reason just our mind never stop thinking. THe next time someone asks "what are you thinking" and human reflex says "nothing" thats not even possible. the human mind is ALWAYS thinking about something.
Two different schools of thought exist as to why we dream: the physiological school, and the psychological school.
Both, however, agree that we dream during the REM, or rapid eye movement, phase of sleep. During this phase of sleep, our closed eyes dart rapidly about, our brain activity peaks, and our muscles suffer temporary paralysis.
The physiological theory centers upon how our body, specifically our brains, function during the REM phase of sleep. Proponents of this theory believe that we dream to exercise the synapses, or pathways, between brain cells, and that dreaming takes over where the active and awake brain leaves off. When awake, our brains constantly transmit and receive messages, which course through our billions of brain cells to their appropriate destinations, and keep our bodies in perpetual motion. Dreams replace this function.
Two underpinning physiological facts go towards supporting this theory of dreams. The first lies in the fact that the first two or so years of ones life, the most formative ones for learning, are also the ones in which the most REM sleep occurs. It follows that during this time of the greatest REM sleep, we experience the greatest number of dreams. The second physiological fact that lends credence to this theory is that our brain waves during REM sleep, as recorded by machines measuring the brain's electrical activity, are almost identical in nature to the brain waves during the hours we spend awake. This is not the case during the other phases of sleep.
Psychological theorists of dreams focus upon our thoughts and emotions, and speculate that dreams deal with immediate concerns in our lives, such as unfinished business from the day, or concerns we are incapable of handling during the course of the day. Dreams can, in fact, teach us things about ourselves that we are unaware of.
The dream is the process of defragment of the brain concerning the data it received throughout the day. Some of the images you received are strongly tied with emotions and slied down to the subconscious. Then the subconscious sorts the emotions according to the preexisting experiences (which make up your personality) and creates images (dreams) showing to you how you emotionally reacted to various stimulae without having cinsciousness of the process.
To put it in plain words, the dream is a way your subconscious uses to guide you on your emotional response to facts taking place in your everyday life. It is a way to show you if you are happy or not and basicly it is a way it copes with your fears.
For example if in actual life you fear something very much, but are afraid to face and confront your fear, your subconscious will create a dream where the fear will take the form of something random you saw during the day (eg a frightening image of an animal or man etc) which you subtly connected with the concept of fear and you will see a dream that, for example, you were hunted by this creature.
Generally speaking, it is all about strong emotional connections and how we react to them. I hope I helped.
Your subconscious mind . your UN finished things your feelings. and past desires.
In my own experience dreams are the result of unfulfilled desires,
fears and illusions.And generally we dream at the instance of a sound or action [small, big, rufflings, wind any thing] which related to our thoughts mentioned above.
There is no universally agreed-upon biological definition of dreaming. It was observed that dreams are strongly associated with REM sleep. (state of sleep in which brain activity is most like wakefulness, dreams are strongest, most easily remembered. During a typical lifespan, a human spends a total of about six years dreaming (which is about 2 hours each night) It is unknown where in the brain dreams originate .
Emotions
The most common emotion experienced in dreams was anxiety. Negative emotions are more common than positive feelings. Some ethnic groups like the Yir Yiront showed an abnormally high percentage of dreams of an aggressive nature. The U.S. ranks the highest amongst industrialized nations for aggression in dreams with 50 percent of U.S. males reporting aggression in dreams, compared to 32 percent for Dutch men.
Gender differences
In men's dreams 70 percent of the characters are other men, while a female's dreams contain an equal number of men and women. Men generally had more aggressive feelings in their dreams than women, and children's dreams did not have very much aggression until they reached teen age.
Sexual content
Sexual content is not as prevalent in dreams as one might expect. Sexual dreams show up no more than 10 percent of the time
Recurring dreams
While the content of most dreams is dreamt only once, most people experience recurring dreams—that is, the same dream narrative is experienced over different occasions of sleep. Up to 70% of females and 65% of males report recurrent dreams.
Common themes
Common reported themes have been : themes relating to school, being chased, sexual experiences, falling, arriving too late, a person now alive being dead, flying, and failing an examination. 12% of people dream only in black and white.
Due to the time of leisure after sound sleep
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