View Full Version : Do you remember your dreams?
reverett123
02-29-2008, 08:50 PM
Just got to wondering if I was the only one who seldom remembered what I dreamt the night before.
-Rick
ZucchiniFlower
02-29-2008, 10:24 PM
I wish I remembered them for longer than a minute. My dreams are like movies, in vivid color, and I wake up (usually to go to the bathroom) and think, wow, what a great dream, but in a little while, most of it is gone, except for some flashes of scenes. I recalled some dialogue from last night's: "She's hard saucie; that's saucie to the max." :eek:
I can go back to sleep immediately and continue the dream sometimes. I love that. I always go back to sleep very fast.
GregD
03-01-2008, 11:07 AM
I haven't had a dream I could remember in years. I'm to the point where I don't think I dream at all.
GregD
JACKMANA
03-01-2008, 12:07 PM
I wish I remembered them for longer than a minute. My dreams are like movies, in vivid color, and I wake up (usually to go to the bathroom) and think, wow, what a great dream, but in a little while, most of it is gone, except for some flashes of scenes. I recalled some dialogue from last night's: "She's hard saucie; that's saucie to the max." :eek:
I can go back to sleep immediately and continue the dream sometimes. I love that. I always go back to sleep very fast.
Hi Zucchiniflower,
I have always vivid dreams, mostly pleasant which I partly remember when I wake. Some are repeated & some I can 'dream' myself into as the begining stays in my mind. My husband says I can sleep for England. I have no trouble nodding off & like you I can get up & then resume the dream.
Angela.
JACKMANA
03-01-2008, 12:15 PM
Just got to wondering if I was the only one who seldom remembered what I dreamt the night before.
-Rick
Rick, I notice royal jelly has disappeared from your treatments. My husband is a bee farmer & he was sceptical about its efficacy. Apparently propolis is considered the main healer especially from our native bees (Apis mellifera). There is a chap in the USA who uses (venom from) live stings to ease arthritis.
Is there a particulr reason you have stopped taking it?
Angela
Yes, I remember my dreams - not every one, but many of them I remember well enough to tell at the breakfast table, and the really good ones I remember for years. I sleep wonderfully, and my dreams are fun and often very beautiful.
The best words I woke up remembering were, "And the parrot on the porch broke into gales of laughter". I wish I remembered that dream, but only the words remain.
My husband wakes me now and then because I seem to him to cry out and be afraid in my sleep, but more often than not I'm laughing in a dream, it just sounds like cries.
ZZZZZZ
birte
reverett123
03-01-2008, 10:08 PM
Just in case of discussion, I am going to reply seperately.
Rick, I notice royal jelly has disappeared from your treatments. My husband is a bee farmer & he was sceptical about its efficacy. Apparently propolis is considered the main healer especially from our native bees (Apis mellifera). There is a chap in the USA who uses (venom from) live stings to ease arthritis.
Is there a particulr reason you have stopped taking it?
Angela
CTenaLouise
03-02-2008, 03:29 PM
yessiree - I do indeed, I have dreamt like this since a very young child...
sometimes awesome -sometimes weirdooville,
scarydreaming is not resting -it is running from or away from preconceived
bad guys...monsters...etc.
http://www.answers.com/topic/allan-hobson
a newspaper interview w/ dr.allan hobson:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9C06E6DE113CF934A1575BC0A9649C8B63
There is exquisite control of sleep by the brain. In mammals, sleep is one of the key bodily functions controlled by the body clock in the hypothalamus. By these means it is also tied to the rhythm of body temperature, such that sleep occurs as body temperature falls and waking occurs when body temperature is highest. For most animals, including humans, these peaks in alertness and energy availability occur during the daylight hours, but animals (like rats) that rely more on smell than on vision are active at night and sleep in the daytime. In very hot climates humans may also shift their activity into the darker, cooler night and have a siesta during the forbiddingly hot period of the early afternoon.
The body clock times the occurrence of sleep via its direct nervous connection between the hypothalamus and other subcortical structures in the lower brain. Of particular importance are those collections of brain cells in the brain stem which manufacture and liberate from their endings two brain chemicals, noradrenaline (norepinephrine) and serotonin, which appear to have energizing effects needed for the waking functions of the brain and the body. In order for sleep to occur the activity of these brain cells must be quelled by the mechanism of inhibition. As their activity is more and more completely diminished, another group of cells becomes increasingly active and liberates more and more molecules of another chemical (acetylcholine), which appears to mediate restorative functions throughout the body and the brain. It is the reciprocal interaction of the two cell groups that appears to provide the basis of the cyclic alternation of NREM and REM sleep and their functional differentiation.
Functions of sleep
Sleep is vitally necessary. Recent experiments on the effects of prolonged sleep deprivation give hints as to why even short-term sleep loss is so disabling and why it is so vigorously compensated by the brain. If sleep deprivation is extended beyond two weeks, rats develop a distinctive group of signs that inevitably leads to their demise. Their skin breaks down and they show an increasing craving for food but cannot maintain their body weight no matter how much they eat. At the same time they develop more and more determined heat-seeking behaviour, as they cannot control their body temperatures when exposed to normal variation in environmental temperature. Short of these extreme effects, more modest sleep deprivation has been shown to create a wide variety of difficulties. Taken together these suggest that sleep may normally play an important role in the maintenance of such important bodily functions as the immune response and metabolic balance, as well as such critical mental functions as attentiveness, learning and memory, and emotional equilibrium. Shakespeare may have been correct when he said that sleep ‘knits up the raveled sleeve of care’, but he was underestimating the more active developmental and survival functions of sleep.
— J. Allan Hobson
:Yawn:
Max19BC
03-03-2008, 02:57 PM
Hi Ric,
I'll remember most of my dreams, I think that's because my body often wakes me up during the night, often during a dream, to let me know it's time to go to the bathroom (average 3 times a night). I drink lots of water during the day.
I find my dreams are much more vivid now, maybe the pd meds have something to do with it. I can remember most of my senses and emotions in my dreams. (smell, temperature, color, touch, pain, fear, smell, laughter, etc.)
Here are a couple of weird dream segments that I've remembered.
I'm watching a band playing in a crowded area. They are singing a song. I'm trying to sing along, but I don't know the words. But the band in my mind, during this dream knows all the words perfectly... weird
I had a similar dream last year, where I was trying to speak to someone in French. I had difficulty in knowing the french words, but he spoke french fluently. In the real world, I've never been able to fully speak this laungage, but my parents spoke french at home when I was a child.
This is my weirded dream experience. Keep in mind that I was asleep and dreaming during this time. Im my dream, I woke up and was analyzing the dream I just had. But I was still dreaming. I know this because my cat woke me up after this dream.
If you want to remember your dreams, the trick is try not to move around after you wake up, keep your head in the same position, recall your dream, than write it down right away. If you don't, there's a good chance you won't remember it later.
Dreams are fun, I always look forward to them. I had some limited success in directing my dreams to where I want them to go.
Pleasant dreams.
Max
jcitron
03-03-2008, 03:33 PM
I remember a lot of my dreams as well. They range from the mundane to the really weird. They are pretty much very vivid to a point where I can smell, feel, and hear things vividly. Just the other night I dreamed I was bicycle riding. I could not only feel the wind in my face, but also the tightness in the backs of my legs as I pedaled along. In the passed I used to long-distance bike ride so the feelings in this dream were pretty realistic.
In other dreams I've been covered with large swarms of insects. An ant or two doesn't phase me, but when there are large numbers, I get the creepies. In the dreams, I've put my hand into a closet to pull out a bucket, and have seen the bucket full of cockroaches, ants, and ticks. Eew Gross!
I think part of this has to do with the PD medications, and the part is my dreams have always been on the intense side. The medication just helps to amplify them.
I've only been lucky a few times in being able to pickup where I left off in a dream after waking up. When I do it's like I'm continuing a movie from where it left off.
John
ZucchiniFlower
03-04-2008, 09:38 PM
Hi Zucchiniflower,
I have always vivid dreams, mostly pleasant which I partly remember when I wake. Some are repeated & some I can 'dream' myself into as the begining stays in my mind. My husband says I can sleep for England. I have no trouble nodding off & like you I can get up & then resume the dream.
Angela.
Hi Angela, once (when I was using my vcr often), I was aware I was dreaming, and I rewound the dream and dreamt it again. It was so weird!
I don't dream of cities that exist; they're dream cities, sometimes European. I work in a lab, but when I dream of labs, they are dream labs. I don't know why I don't dream about my real lab and real towns. These dreamscapes recurr in my dreams. Airports and planes, too. Same with places where I live. The homes I invent in my dreams are very cool with many rooms and tons of closet space!
One time, a scary character from The Sopranos was in my lab building!
When I was a child I had a recurrent scary dream. Exactly the same every time.
CayoKay
03-07-2008, 05:06 AM
Hi Angela, once (when I was using my vcr often), I was aware I was dreaming, and I rewound the dream and dreamt it again. It was so weird!
a few minutes ago... I woke up from a dream.
the sky was purple, with fluorescent pink stars.
and I remember saying to myself... my husband's *never* going to believe THIS!
so, in my dream, (like you, ZF, I was aware that I was dreaming) I got up, went to my desk, got my little Nikon - I even remember unzipping the case, and slipping out my little digital Coolpix 4100...
I went back to bed, (and dream-sleep) re-entered the dream inside the dream, and took photographs of my dream-sky.
and I woke up humming:
Kodachrome...
You give us those nice bright colors
You give us the greens of summers
Makes you think all the world's a sunny day, oh yeah!
I got my Nikon camera
I love to take a photograph
So Mama, don't take my Kodachrome away
:D:cool::D
ZucchiniFlower
03-11-2008, 11:23 PM
CayoKay, that is too cool! Are you an artist? Your dream colors are divine!
~Zucchini
jcitron
03-12-2008, 01:27 PM
I woke up from a dream the other night where I was putting something in a small package into a bag. When I opened my eyes, my arms were moving like I was putting whatever it was in my dream into the plastic bag!
I've had this happen a long time ago, but this seems to get a bit more intense now.
John
CayoKay
03-12-2008, 02:04 PM
CayoKay, that is too cool! Are you an artist? Your dream colors are divine!
not an artist, lol, I wish!
took art classes in HS, and never did get the hang of perspective stuff.
abstract is more my style, I guess, and doodles, I just love 'em!
about that fluorescent dream-sky, actually, I remember finding it oddly disturbing, as if I was on another planet or something, a long, long way from home.
oh, and pleased to meet you, Zuchinni!
I don't really *belong* over here in Parkinson's (being an MS'er and all) but the dream topic was too tempting to resist, and I knew that if I didn't write it down *immediately* it would vanish into my cog-fog realm of lost memories.
:D
ZucchiniFlower
03-12-2008, 10:07 PM
Well, I'm glad your dream is now archived!
I used to spend time on the MS board a few years ago when it seemed to me and my neuro that I might have an autoimmune disorder, since I had discoid lupus in the 80's (had a biopsy) and he was clueless about my foot dystonia or my inability to tap my fingers or my stiff right side and slurring speech. How can respected neuros be so unaware? Boggles my mind.
Turns out people with the PD LRRK2 gene ( the ashkenazi one) often present with foot dystonia which was my initial obvious problem because I could not walk and was in agony. I begged for baclofen for 2 months before he gave it to me. I was spending $200 a week on taxies to get to work! He didn't even know it was dystonia. Guess I'm still angry about my unneccesary agony.
I've been in alot of pain recently, so my sense of humor is hard to find. :(
How are you doing? How's the board these days? Do people post on 'both' ms boards or is there a split?
The best dreams have real plots with conclusions. I often dream, and in my dream wake up and marvel at what I have dreamt, and still dreaming I relate my dream to the people in the new dream.
I also dream of the consequences of an earlier dream. In one dream we visited a small, exquisite white and gold castle in a forest. My children spent a long time roller skating on the castle's large balcony. In the next dream we were in a shop, and there we found a series of films with my children roller skating at the castle. Someone had filmed our visit to the castle, and was selling the films. It made us furious.... the sneaky filming of us, the invasion of our privacy..
In another dream we were having dinner at the house of good friends, and for once - and this is very rare - it looked like the house of these friends. All the children were there, ours and the friends', and when dessert had been served, the father of the house opened a little cabinet with controls, and while we ate cake, the house drove on rails through tunnels to end up at the Museum of Natural History's underground entrance. I don't remember the museum visit, the dream probably stopped at the door.
And one of my funniest dreams was that we bought a very large vacation house, and when I visited it for the first time, I brought my little 8 yr old grandson. We climbed up a large, elegant stair to the 2nd floor, opened the first door and found a large magnificent kitchen with everything sized for children. Then we heard voices, and went to check the next room. We opened the door to a large room filled with round tables at which women in pastel colored clothes and large, colorful hats with flowers sat drinking tea and chattering. I asked the woman standing by the door, ready to read a speech, what they were doing in my house, and she said, "Don't you know that your house keeper rents the house out to functions when you are not here? Look out the window, and you can see there is a wedding in the garden." I looked out the window, and there was the wedding. I laughed so hard that it woke me up.
And those three are enough for now.
Stitcher
03-13-2008, 10:49 AM
Never ever!!
CayoKay
03-13-2008, 11:53 AM
How are you doing? How's the board these days? Do people post on 'both' ms boards or is there a split?
some do, some don't.
:D
apart from a sprained ankle, I guess I'm doing ok.
jcitron
03-13-2008, 12:29 PM
I've been acting out my dreams lately. The second time happened last night. I was again stuffing packages into plastic bags and woke my self up with moving arms and hands. Later on in the same night, which probably explains why I'm so tired, I was playing the piano and my hands and arms were going to town to the music. The piece was a rondo (finale) from a Schubert piano sonata I looked at earlier in the evening. Needless to say, I'm pretty tired today. I'm not sure if it's all from the lack of sleep, at only 3.5 hours, or it's from all the moving all night.
John
ZucchiniFlower
03-13-2008, 08:25 PM
Birte, your dreams are wonderful! Have you ever considered writing children's books? While on line at a restaurant, we read some kid's books that were for sale. One was by David Mamet!
The house on rails on the way to the museum is very cinematic!
I love them. Please share more when you're in the mood.
vBulletin® v3.7.3, Copyright ©2000-2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.