Why
Do We Dream?
The
brain receives stimuli from many different
sources all day long. There are far too
many stimuli for it to process. The mind
prioritizes the stimuli and makes you aware
of those that need immediate attention (the
crying baby, the out-of-control car, your
boss' request) so that you may act accordingly.
The
stimuli that you are not consciously aware
of are nevertheless noted by the brain,
but on a subconscious level (the drip of
the bathroom water faucet, the remark by
a coworker at the water cooler while you
were on the telephone.)
Furthermore, you feel emotions all day.
Some you acknowledge and act on (you say
thank you and smile when you are complimented.)
Some you repress or do not allow yourself
to act on (you don't punch your boss in
the nose when he tells you the report you
worked on for a week is no longer needed.)
Traumatic
experiences occur that you face (you call
the police) or if it too painful, you deny
them happening and send them deep into your
subconscious (repression.)
In addition to all these emotions and stimuli
the brain must process daily, it also keeps
your body functioning; it remembers names
and faces; it allows you to talk and walk
and chew gum (sometimes all at the same
time); and performs numerous other activities
that you take for granted.
You must admit -- that's a lot to do. At
night, when your body must rest, the mind
continues working. When no longer called
upon to type letters and do the grocery
shopping, the brain concentrates on processing
all of those subconscious stimuli and emotions
(while still maintaining body temperature
and breathing, etc.)
This is why we dream. Only you are not awake
to receive the signals at a conscious level
-- you can not hear or see or touch (at
a conscious level) while you are sleeping.
The brain must resort to other means to
get the signals through to your conscious
mind. This is why we dream the way we do.
The
mind uses everything at its disposal (which
is everything it has ever been exposed to)
to get the message across. Simply put, dreaming
is the minds way of processing all of the
stimuli and emotions it has received during
the day or repressed over time, so that
you may act on them.
All in all, it's a pretty neat system. But
unless you are remembering and making sense
of your dreams, you are missing out on countless
opportunities to learn about yourself and
experience life to its fullest.
Even though we’ve addressed it before,
it bears repeating. Why
should you try and remember your dreams?
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