The experience of dreaming every day?

Updated on healthy 2024-05-28
12 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    That's how I am, it doesn't seem like there's a day I don't dream, even if I only sleep for half an hour during my lunch break. As I remember, I write it down in my phone calendar every morning when I wake up. I didn't feel tired, on the contrary, I felt that I had a deep sleep after dreaming for a long time.

    When I was a child, I often had nightmares, but when I grew up, they were all better dreams. In daily life, all kinds of magical things will be done, but the most beautiful dream is to dream of idols, I will dream of falling in love with my favorite idols, it feels very real, and I don't want to wake up at all.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    The dreams continue every night. In fact, there will be a little expectation, but it will also be affected by the feeling in the dream to wake up. Sometimes I even feel like my daytime life is caught in the cracks of my dreams at night. After all, in dreams, they are also full of realistic consciousness.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    As long as I have any troubles or happy things in real life, they will be reflected in my dreams, for example, some time ago I was very unhappy at work, and I felt that the leader was always looking for me, and I was always scolded by her, so I abused her in my dreams, so during that time, I wanted to go to bed early every day, so I abused the leader in my dreams.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    If you dream every day, then your life during the day must be very tired, because the brain does not get enough rest, and then you think too much during the day, thinking about it day and dreaming at night?

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    It's hard to tell the difference between dreams and reality, because I dream every day, and I feel confused.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Sometimes dreams are fantastical, and I've been through countless stories, especially about life and death, gunfights, people killing me, I kill others, others die in front of me, or I commit suicide. There is even a crossing. There are also all kinds of wars, all kinds of intrigues and cruel stories.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    I was a little scared because I had a lot of nightmares. And I have a lot of lucid dreams. I have seen loved ones in my dreams, and I have seen evil spirits.

    I've seen more distorted desires. Dreaming is more like a mirror, reflecting what I desire and what I fear. Suddenly I stopped dreaming, and I suspected that I hadn't slept.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    For as long as I can remember, I've dreamed every night, whenever I'm asleep, and sometimes during recess. I'm really curious what it's like to not dream? Ever since I was a child, I have always felt that the meaning of sleep is to have a dream!

    It was only in my dreams that I felt like I was sleeping.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    I said that I not only dream at night, but also dream when I sleep, even if it is a nap. It's like that, since I can remember, I've been dreaming every night, and occasionally not dreaming, it makes me feel lost and uneasy, because I can't live without it.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    I have been a veteran dreamer for more than 20 years, and I can even control my dreams, including what I want to dream, and I can occasionally control it, sometimes like the feeling in Inception. And basically every dream I remember the next morning.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    I've been dreaming every night since junior high school, and I can count the days when I don't dream on one hand, and my dreams are all kinds of things, including ancient, modern, friends, family, colleagues, and classmates. In short, only I can't think of it, and I can't dream of it!

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Every night, as soon as I fall asleep, I dream and run around, tired to death, and in the morning I wake up tired all over.

Related questions
17 answers2024-05-28

Dreaming is a normal physiological phenomenon in people. Psychological explanation of dreams: Dreams are a spontaneous mental activity produced during sleep in a certain stage of consciousness. >>>More

3 answers2024-05-28

Dreaming is a normal and essential physiological and psychological phenomenon of the human body. After a person falls asleep, a small part of the brain cells are still active, which is the basis of dreams. Why do people dream, and how do they react if they don't dream? >>>More

10 answers2024-05-28

Everyone sleeps dreaming all the time, otherwise they are brain dead. Human sleep is divided into fast-wave sleep and slow-wave sleep, and when you wake up in the fast-wave sleep stage, you feel a lot of sleep; In the slow-wave sleep stage, you wake up feeling dreamless or unable to remember dreams.

14 answers2024-05-28

Personally, I think that if they have dreams that are bizarre and weird, they should be right-brained.