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Theory on dreams

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posted on Aug, 17 2005 @ 01:13 AM
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Not sure if anyone has talked about this or thought of dreams in this manner before but here goes:

Ever had a dream that is extremely weird and you have no idea how you could have thought of such a thing?

My theory is that dreams are a construct of our memories and knowledge all rolled into one. So how can we dream things that have never been thought of before?

I'm beginning to think that these dreams could be from experiences in past lives and the memories are stored somehow within our brain (remember we don't use all our brain).

Just an 'out there' theory that I was thinking about and thought I should share.


DAF

posted on Aug, 17 2005 @ 03:59 AM
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Aren't dreams an indication of an active imagination? When we are asleep is the brain asleep as well? If it is what does that mean? Does the brain stop all thought processes.

Dreams may just be our subconcious projecting images into our minds.
Dreams may also be our fears, hopes for the future or just our imagination.



posted on Aug, 17 2005 @ 04:37 AM
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Originally posted by DAF

When we are asleep is the brain asleep as well?


LoL...Silly Goose, If Our Brains Slept While WE Did, We'd Never Wake Up. Think About It.

Your Heart Doesn't Stop Pumping...You Don't Stop Breathing, Do You? No. Sleeping Is Basically Just Resting Your Concious Mind And Relaxing Your Body While Your Eyes Are Closed, For A Set Period Of Time. Who Knows Exactly What Dreams Are Made Of? I Just Believe It's A Concoction Of Memories, Fears, Hopes, Thoughts, And Absract Subconcious "STUFF" Rolled Into One...There's Just Some Things You Just CAN'T Put The Stamp Of "100% Logical" On..."Dreaming" Is One Of Them.



posted on Aug, 17 2005 @ 09:41 PM
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"So how can we dream things that have never been thought of before?"

But we are able to imagine things we have never thought of before. Our brain is capable of creating original ideas and thoughts.


DAF

posted on Aug, 18 2005 @ 01:31 AM
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NaCirema_NY i knew that our brains dont sleep i was just rying to make a point that we still have brain activity.

And maybe we can we can imagine things never thought of before because that is what is called imagination, that creative side of the brain.



posted on Aug, 18 2005 @ 02:07 AM
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Dreams are very complex. there are obviously various ways it works.
once you fall asleep your body is resting and your brain functions as well (Except for the primary ones causing you to keep breathing and blood pumping of course).

your soul is not asleep and neither is that part of the brain, nor the part of the brain. at that time your soul leaves the body and goes to the astral plains. your own personal spot there. here the "dreaming" begins, the astral plains consist of energies which can be manipulated to create anything...that said

1. your subconcious, guides will form the "dream" for you. these are ment to give you deeper messages from within yourself and about yourself. these messages usually come in symbolism during the dreams. difficult to decypher but worth it.

2. since time at the astral plains works different it is possible to dream about fragments of possible futures. this is how people sometimes know when something happens before it actually took place

3. lucide dreaming is when you know that you're "dreaming" and you can take control. wake up and take your soul of automatic so the speak and move it yourself. you can then manipulate the astral energies yourself and do anything you wish there. this is one of the first steps to astral projecting btw

4. then there are the regular "dreams". nothing much happens and you just enjoy and relax.


during all that time your body and soul will stay connected so you never have to worry about not finding your way back. when you wake up in the middle of a "dream", and you wish to continue it, just keep laying in the same position without moving and fall asleep again. your dreams will continue where it left.

the reason you can think of new things is because during your dreamstate it's easier to get the right vibration to enter the akashic records unconsiously. so you can get suggestions for new ideas there without even knowing it.

same way einstein made his discovery. he was working on his research so intensely and then when he was about to give up he reached the right vibrational level and gotten the last push he needed from the Akashic. same way it works for loads of people.

so it's more a combination of human imagination and getting pieces of input for new insights from elsewhere.

those are the basic dreams, but there are a lot more.

[edit on 18-8-2005 by Enyalius]



posted on Aug, 18 2005 @ 06:10 AM
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To a certain degree, they show the future. This morning I dreamt my school report came. I got four As: latin, geography (both which I don't do) acn't remember other subjects, three Cs in the sciences and two Bs for something. This morning my mum found my report and I got :
Biology

Chemistry:C
Physics:C
Maths:A
English:B
French:B
Music:B
Religion:A
History:B

Not the best report, as I want to continue with physics, although it's enough to get me into being an officer with the Royal Marines.



posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 01:45 AM
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I believe some dreams are the product of our subconscious mind trying to deal with what information we were unwilling to deal with at the conscious level.

I believe some dreams are the product of our brains tapping into parts of the brain that seldomly surface to the conscious level.




posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 03:34 AM
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From the work of Stewart Swrrdlow, an expert on the topic of Mind-Control and programming, as well as hyperspace he states that whilst in the sleep state, our minds go into a level called hyperspace, which is the level of existance that eminates from the mind of god. Because our brains are not made to conciously decipher hyperspace (as it consists of tone, colour and symbols) when we dream the left brain is trying to interprit these messages and puts it into a pictogram form before we wake.

Have you ever woken and for a split second realised you know everything there is to know about everything, then all of a sudden that dissapears? Thats because the logical/female/left brain kicks in and tries to put logic behind it.

Dreams can be interpreted, because certain pictograms mean certain things in hyperspace.

You can have many types of dreams, from prophetic, to lucid, to programming dreams, the latter i find the most intriguing as programming dreams gives indiciations to what types of programs you have within your matrix if you happen to be a specifically programmed individual.

Hopes this helps.

All the best
Merger


DAF

posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 03:46 AM
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I have a question. Do people who have been blind since birth dream and if they do what do they see in there dreams? Do they see images or is it perhaps just sound.



posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 03:57 AM
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Merger, your absolutely right.
This happened to me.
I woke, and in that instant i knew i knew something i shouldnt. I remember it a plain as day.
In the millisecond i realised this my bedroom was filled with an awful screaming. I panicked. Checked my wife, ran around the house and checked the kids. Nothing.
At this point i realised i had forgotten what i knew when i awoke.
Is it possible that some force realised i had remembered and distracted me into forgetting.
Question.



posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 04:08 AM
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Well, dreams could be a connection with the world on the other side, or it could be the mind being able to conjure up new things. Either way, I had someone - I believe it was on this forum - that we weren't capable of creating anything new; that the mind builds upon previous knowledge.

I think that is a lot of bologna. In fact, if this were true, we wouldn't be able to progress and come up with anything new from the beginning of time. Their is such a thing as inspiration - whether it be divine or from somewhere else - but we do bring forth stuff that did not originate from our own understanding. Eureka!

I don't really come up with any idea that is new in my dreams but I certainly experience things I cannot do in real life. I do however, come up with things in my conscious state, that are original, in that I had no knowledge of them before and it just hits you without any other input or prodding.



posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 04:10 AM
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Jehova620,

Possibly, the powers that be have kick ass technology, and perhaps used technology such as ELF to wipe those thoughts as you woke, but more than likely, your left brain tried to decypher what came up and thought 'nah, won't hold this as a memory' and discarded it.

All the best
Merger



posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 07:25 AM
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You're brain's more active when you sleep than when you watch TV.
I don't think dreams are from past lives. When I was 9 I had a dream of being stabbed with giant pins and being teased, I don't see how that could've happaned in real life.



posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 08:56 AM
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I don't know what dreams are, but I find it interesting that dreams create their own reality. Last night I dreamed that I was a pilot in some kind of battle in orbit above the Earth. In my dream, I knew, as a matter of course, that I was a pilot and that I had always been a pilot and that my mission was to protect the planet. When I woke, I found it interesting that my dream was able to convince me that I was a wholly and completely different person, with different beliefs, memories and personality. It had fabricated a reality that was, for the duration of the dream, my primary reality.

I also find pain in dreams interesting. I have often dreamed of being shot or stabbed. Once I was stabbed in the arm in my dream and I felt the pain go through my arm into my shoulder and chest. Now, in the dream, I don't really have a physical body. There are no nerves, no impulses, no muscles and therefore there should be no pain. The conclusion that I reached was that your physical body must act on the situations in your dreams, sending pain signals when you are hurt, for example. How else could you experience the physical sensation of pain in what is essentially a non-corporeal state? After all, even if you appear to be on a battlefield, or at your childhood school, you really aren't anywhere. You are, in reality, in your own mind. I am aware that your body is essentially paralysed during sleep, to stop you from acting out your dreams. But do certain physical processes, such as the transmission of pain signals, actually complement what is happening in your dream? Any thoughts?



posted on Aug, 22 2005 @ 09:14 AM
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I have a question. Do people who have been blind since birth dream and if they do what do they see in there dreams? Do they see images or is it perhaps just sound.

Good question. Research suggests that people who are blind from birth have no visual component to their dreams. This is in contrast to people who lost their sight during childhood. In these cases, the individual typically loses the visual elements of their dreams as time progresses. There have been rare cases where people who were blind from birth described visual elements in their dreams. These elements, however, are believed to be more metaphorical than literal. This is evidenced by the fact that subjects would describe, for example, silver as "feeling pretty" rather than directly commenting on how the silver looks visually.

Typically, if a person is born blind, or becomes blind within the first 5-7 years of their life, they will not experience visual aspects in their dreams and will not undergo Rapid Eye Movement (REM) during their sleep. If a person loses their sight after the age of 7, they will typically retain the visual elements of their dreams into adulthood. If their sight is lost between the ages of 5 and 7, the individual will typically retain some visual imagery which will then fade with age.

People who are blind from birth do dream and their dreams are every bit as engaging as sighted individuals. They simply lack a visual element. They do experience sensations of touch, smell and sound. The following sites should help you if you wish to look into this fascinating subject in greater depth:

The Dreams of Blind Men and Women

How Do Visually Impaired People Dream?

Discovery Health - Sleep and Dreams

[edit on 22/8/05 by Jeremiah25]



posted on Aug, 23 2005 @ 11:05 AM
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Based on the theory of a Holographic Universe, dreams might be your unconscious mind tapping back into the 'human energy field' which in simple terms contains all human memories and experiences. Dreams could then be forming based on information from your memories and memories from that field.



posted on Aug, 23 2005 @ 07:29 PM
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This is my theory on dreams:

Dreams are the constructs of feelings, probrability and intuition.
Everyone dreams but it depends on the conscience state of the person whether the dream is remembered or forgotten. The Romans believed that dreams could describe the future, past and present events. The military did an experiment in 1954 trying to harness peoples dreams to find hidden Russian nuclear missles which had a 84% success rate, even though medical enhancements were implemented the effect was worth the risk.
It all depends on how receptive the person is and how you perceive the end dream. I can remember 100% of all dreams I have including dreams I have had when I was 4 years old to present. I have had dreams that warned of future events, once I dreamt that I was driving through the plains of Africa in my car and a lion attacked the front of my car. The next day I had a vehicle accident and the front of my car was ripped off like in the dream, not only was I freaked but I wanted to stop dreaming forever. I also believe that DNA retains some ancestors memory, how else would we know to create tumors or disease from past genetics. If our organs can have DNA to turn on genetic traits then the brain must contain DNA to give us experience from past genetics in order to survive. The DNA in our genetic makeup does not give us visual dreams but the emotions and feelings in which we present our own version with use of visual aids. Another type of dreamer was Edward Leedskalnin and his dream about how the Egyptians made the pyramids, he used that knowledge to create Coral Castle. Coral Castle is still a mystery he erected a 28 ton peice of coral by himself and other peices that still amaze people.

www.labyrinthina.com...

He never told anyone how he did it but scientists state he used a magnetic device to move 100tons of coral.



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