Dreams play a vital role in human life; they will give mysterious and propounding experiences in sleep. The individual holds the vision that the comatose plays a most important role in the construction of neuroses, the person will characteristic sensible implication to dreams as direct expressions of the unconscious. Studying dreams had an important place from the ages. This site hopes to understand more to the subject of “dream analysis” or analyzing a person’s dream and through that find solutions to disorders including but not limited to depressive disorder, anxiety, panic attack disorder, nightmare/night walking disorder, etc. This site is going to discuss the dream and how it’s going to affect people’s psychology.

This site will help dreamers; find better and more “to-the-root” solutions to a patient’s psychological issues by analyzing their dreams. It could also possibly help them make a better choice when it comes to diagnosing and knowing what kind of a mental issue a patient has presented them with. This site is elaborating on dreams of how it’s related to the psychology of persons.

Ancient Indians discussed dreams in Mundakopanishad and they even explained about dreams in Ayurvedic also. Dreams often contain material that is nonsensical and challenging to interpret rationally, making the characterization of dreams from an objective point of view to a perplexing task. The occurrence of dreaming and the experience of dreams have elicited both the dream researcher and scientist to propose and study the dream.

Although everyone dreams every day when they sleep, they can seldom recollect more than a few minute’s worths of their dreams after waking. Unless being recalled immediately after waking, dreams cannot be remembered. This observation led some researchers to suggest that dreams cannot be remembered. This observation led some researchers to suggest that dreams are probably meant to be forgotten. Nevertheless, the reason that people forget their dreams is that their temporary store has been switched to the retrieve-only mode in the sleeping brain of memory processing. Any brain mentation during this period could not be saved in the temporary memory store. Only the short-term memory (working memory) store is still available for memory storage during sleep. Since the short- term memory store immediately after waking. This explains why one can recollect so little of their dreams.

Everyone one of the dream, there is incredible variability in the subjective dream experience (Hall and Van de Castle, 1966; Spadafora and Hunt and Hunt, 1990). Some people rarely remember their dreams and erroneously conclude that they do not dream at all (Freud, 1900), while others experience vivid dreams with rich visual imagery and emotional content.

Sometimes, the story-lines that make-up people’s dreams follow a tight narrative and have a relatively smooth transition from scene to scene, they explain their emotions also. While at other times dreams appear illogical and haphazard associations lacking a coherent sense of flow. Some people have full control over their dreams, exerting conscious control over the supposedly random events which typify dreaming (Laberge, Levitan, Dement,1986), while others are more bystanders watching the events unfold without any sense of agency approximating waking volition. With the multiplicity of dream dynamics, it is no surprise that there are differing views on the nature of dreams, as researcher’s views on dreaming may directly relate to their own subjective experience of dreaming (Potter, 1996).

Despite this subjective nature of dreams, an evolutionary analysis of dreams should not be disregarded and considered outside the realm of scientific inquiry although for a competing view (Thompson, 2000). Since the cognitive revolution, psychology and other disciplines have made significant progress in developing and implementing methodologies meant to reveal truths about the mental process underlying our subjective experiences(Miller, 2003) for example the tools of cognitive neuroscience have allowed neuroimaging data to inform our theories of cognition(Kandell and Squire,2000). It is not unreasonable to think that these methods will one day allow for a correlation to be established between a certain pattern of brain activity and corresponding dream content, not unlike how current technology now allows accurate prediction of information from subjective experiences.

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