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Why i dream every night 4 2019

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Dream Interpretation

Link: => compsanture.nnmcloud.ru/d?s=YToyOntzOjc6InJlZmVyZXIiO3M6MzY6Imh0dHA6Ly9iYW5kY2FtcC5jb21fZG93bmxvYWRfcG9zdGVyLyI7czozOiJrZXkiO3M6MjM6IldoeSBpIGRyZWFtIGV2ZXJ5IG5pZ2h0Ijt9


In the answer posts there were the usual Dreams are normal and You need Dream,but there was something I never heard before. I also remember my dreams as well. I've read that it can you move into nonrem sleep.

More weird, i had this dream when i was maybe like 10. I also have lucid dreams very often.

7 Possible Reasons Why You’re Having Whacked Out Dreams

Dear all, Im experiencing the following situation which perhaps some of you can advise me better. History Back in 2005, I experienced a sleep disorder condition that lasted everyday for almost a year. I would sleep with ease, but would remember my dreams very clearly and wake up feeling not rested and tired through the day. Prescribed medication did not help. It seems quite random as sometimes it happens, sometimes it don't. Present The same issue revisited me and its Day 6 already. Sometimes halfway through the dream, the ringing of telephone etc in reality would suddenly wake me up and it feels as if someone had just pulled you out of the dream. Im out of ideas 6 likes, 160 replies i have sleep problem for 4 years now and i have learned somethings about sleep that we do not know about. While we get to the switch, what happens is that after putting our head on the pillow, our thoughs keep going in our mind just like when awake, controlled by our mind. And as we relaxe and advance toward the edge of switching in unconsciousess, our thoughs are transformed because they become uncontroled by our mind so, our unconscious mind is now letting our inside uncontroled thoughs out. Our dreams our only our uncontroled thoughts from deep inside, revealing our unconcious mind. So, pay attention to your dreams and try to translate them in association with emotions. This reveals what you want to tell yourself that you do why i dream every night want to see when conscious. So, you are lucku to be conscious of these dreams because you place your unconscious thougths in front of your conscious mind meanwhile not really sleeping. But the good thing is that you are not sleeping but at least you are relaxing which is better than being busy and doing things. During this pre-sleep phase, we usually do not realise the switching because we go right into deep sleep and that leads us to the end of the sleeping phase, usually fallowed by another complete phase. But, when you spend your whole night into the dream phase, it is because you do not cross the edge and you do not switch into a deep sleep where growth hormones are produced, hormones essential to body repaire. That is why you do not feel rested. Because you do not restore since you do not produce growth hormones. What I have learned, for compensating that fact that I do not sleepI have learned a technique of meditation that helps me not create any negativity around the fact that I don't sleep. So when I don't sleep, i do this technique and in the morning I do not feel as tired as if I only stayed in bed without sleeping. I wishthis can help you understand better this phase that keeps you fromdeep sleep and find a way to get pass it when you go to bed. I have also found out that there parts of our brain that are responsable for entering into deep sleep and is located on the left side of the brain. When you are conscious but in bed, notice if your thoughts are located in the upper part of your brain and try to bring your conciousness to the left side, lower, closer to the top of the ear. Easyer if you put lay your head on your left side. I have noticed that falling asleep is done there, on the left side. Tip; it is all in relation to your life. If you are struggling with something or alot of time unsure of what you are doing is right or not. It just might be a reason that your mind is telling you that you are looking it the wrong way. Once you put everything on paper, it is easier for conscious mind to build a picture and solve the problem. Once your write it, relate that dream with your life, emotionally. Look in what situation in real life you find yourself similar to dream. In many times as you can see some people don't give up for their dreams, even when all other people are teling them to quit. But they keep believing and in the end they become rich. Believe in your dreams and you will become unstoppable. I would say that every person has to have their own meditation. Simply because everybody has their own view of life. To fix the problem you just have to look at the problem with different perspective What ever makes you happy and to beleive in yourself. Once you find a problem, it is time to take action and work on solution. It is never easy to work on problems with yourself, especially if you have to do it alone. But remember that if you take few weeks or a month to fix the problem, what is that in relation to the life ahead of you. Imagine what will you be able to achive. You could have sleep apnea Or you could have a form of narcolepsy. This keep you from feeling rested because if you skip the first stages of sleepyou will not wake rested. Typically im a heavy sleeper no issues etc zzz from 1-2am to 8+ am in the morning. The last time I had this issue was early last year when I had to relocate to another country. The vivid dreaming issue lasted for almost 3 weeks and went away almost immediately after I had to resort of an off the shelf herbal supplement. Retrospectively, it might have been a placebo effect but it did work. Here's what happened in the weeks leading up to this current issue: Went for my first blood donation about 3 weeks ago and felt very fatigue after that. Was sleeping as early as 7pm for a straight 12-13 hrs. This went on for almost 2 weeks right up till Tuesday while I had a series of very bad stomach flu. Then the current sleep issue came out of non-where from last Tuesday. Also, just as a side note, if you have any stomach problems, try taking some before bed. Lastly, drink water before sleep. It thins our your blood and makes it easier to pump, so night time doesn't make your sleep cycle take so long that you feel like you have to sleep longer than 8 hours. Sorry but I must chime in here. With all due respect I think that if the only solution to this condition was to not oversleep we would have all figured this out by now. But sleeping 'normal' hours are not the solution to this problem. On your second point, I would not recommend antacids for anything. Your gastric acid contains valuable digestive enzymes that help break down food, help and fight bad bacteria. It is certainly not something you want to diminish. Taking antacids or acid blocking medication may give you more problematic symptoms in the long term. But in the last three years, they've done a better job of relating to reality. I wake up exhausted every morning with memories of at least two to four dreams from the night before. I feel as if I didn't get any sleep because I am never awake nor asleep-- I just 'live two lives'. I never actually feel like I've slept whenever I wake up in the morning because I wake up and I feel like my brain has been working the entire time I've been asleep. Some people insist certain medications can cause weird dreams. I was put on Zoloft sertraline when I was 18 but have experienced vivid dreams and nightmares since age 15-16. Three years ago, I told my doc it wasn't working anymore. I thought my tiredness could be just a symptom of my. They chalked it up to chronic fatigue and switched me to Wellbutrin because they said it would help with wakefulness. I now take 300mg bupropion daily and my chronic fatigue has been much worse lately. I even developed a significant alcohol problem which I can only now admit after 5 months of outpatient rehabwhy i dream every night I won't say all, but part of the reason I drank so much was because if I blacked out, or even just got drunk enough, I wouldn't dream. My doc told me to find a psychiatrist because she basically said, I can't help you; there's nothing wrong with your bloodwork, no physiological symptoms, so it must be psychological. I've been looking for a psychiatrist, but have had no luck finding one yet. But when I do go, I was almost considering asking for an Adderall script to help me stay awake long enough to get my work done, instead of doing four hours of work and needing a nap or something. Is this something you've tried in the past. Or are you still on the low dose of Xanax. Is it still working well for you. I'd love to hear about your progress. Thank you soo much for sharing for story. I feel its the hardest thing in the world to explain to people, they just don't understand how it really feels so wake up like you Really haven't slept. I have Never met anyone who experiences the same. Sparrow, Thanks for the update. As it so happens, I do have a few developments to share. But since I last posted, there's something else interesting that I realized in relation to my medications: Often times, another reason I just want to sleep all day is because I feel overwhelmed with all that I have to get done during the day normal tasks: work, phone calls, a visit to the post office, a trip to the grocery storeand if the slightest thing goes wrong e. I don't wake up when I originally planned to I can't get back on track for the life of me. I usually end up giving up on nearly every plan I had for the day because it's not going according to plan, and since I feel tired anyway, I decide to take a nap because I think it will make me feel better, but as we all know, it never doescutting out an even larger chunk of my day. Five-six years ago, I started taking Sertraline for a combination of anxiety and depression. Over the past few months, I've been thinking it was just the fatigue getting worse. But now, I'm thinking it may have a lot to do with my anxiety. This is only because I've recently come across a few articles that describe people who are living with high anxiety. The articles describe me, but I would never have worded my 'struggle' as dramatically as these articles did because I guess I didn't really realize that how I operate day-to-day isn't how everyone else operates. To explain a little more, I'm a list person-- always have been-- but lately, I think I feel so out of control with my sleep issues that I'm attempting to exert control over other areas of my life ridiculous, insignificant things to make me feel better. I make lists and schedules, planning my days out by the hour, sometimes five days ahead of time. I won't let my boyfriend put groceries away because he puts things on the wrong shelves-- same with laundry, dishes, etc. I'm constantly doing bill math in my head again, weeks ahead of time, trying to predict what my paychecks will be to see how the month will go and on what day I can go grocery shopping or buy this or that. After reading some of these articles, I had an idea: I searched Zoloft Sertraline and looked up what it is designed to treat as opposed to Wellbutrin what I'm currently on. Wellbutrin is not used to treat anxiety. Now that I'm 'sober,' the anxiety is beginning to resurface because I'm no longer on actual anti-anxiety meds. And I didn't realize this until just a few days ago. But now, I don't know which path to take. Do I attack the anxiety and try something like Xanax, or attack the fatigue with an amphetamine or other stimulant. I wanted to do all this because the first thing any relatively intelligent person would ask is, are you treating your body right. Now, I don't necessarily have the energy to become a full-on gym rat though I would love to lolbut these are improvements nonetheless. Also want to give acupuncture a shot. Getting a little tired of just throwing pills at whatever problems I have. Anyway, looking forward to hearing about your progress. Tip: if anxiety is not something you struggle with regularly, ask your doctor about switching to Wellburtrin as an antidepressant-- 1 they switched me over in the first place because I needed to try something different and because the doc thought it might help increase wakefulness. I saw significant improvement with my fatigue problem not necesarilly the dreaming part, but the staying-awake-all-day part. Like I said, it's only recently been getting bad again. Hey laura4814, I'm glad my post provided you with some comfort-- no matter how minimal. Yes, other people absolutely have dreams that either make zero sense or that present similar-to-real-life situations. People dream every night they sleep. However, most people don't remember the majority of their dreams. I feel like normal people remember a dream every once in a while, or maybe even a few times a week. Alcohol was my go-to because instead of just transferring from one world to a more logical world what waking up feels likeall I would remember is black. It was a relief to think back and realize the last thing I remembered was walking to someone's car, or whatever. But that's no way to live life. But to think I thought at the time that it was 'better' than the alternative is just mind-blowing to me now. I graduated from college with a 3. That's another reason the whole situation is so bothersome-- if I had always been a person who had little to no drive, I would probably just think I was depressed due to my constant desire to sleep. But it's not depression my medical records say dream anxiety lol. I found an organization that pays people with psoriasis to take surveys for medical research. I felt so disoriented and just couldnt keep my eyes open. I resolved to rest for just 5 more minutes. By then, I had to go to work and I didn't have time to call. Like really, excuse me, but wtf. So, I know how hard it is to explain to people, so I feel for you, really. In my response to Sparrow's post above, I mentioned I have an appointment with a psychiatrist within the next couple weeks. I'll be sure to post any new developments once I have my appointment. Keep us posted on your progress as well. As I was reading through your posts, it was just like someone who knew me all my life writing about me. I have had this dreaming situation all my life, since i was a child, as far as i can remember. A few things i wanted to add for those who think medications might be inducing this. I am not a fitness freak either. It sounds like i might have the answer to my problem it has at least worked for me in the past but lately, I am barely left with any energy, and more importantly enthusiasm I guess thats a sign of old age creeping in to why i dream every night burn a couple of thousand calories after spending a demanding 10 hour workday followed by a night of poor quality sleep. There were several fridays when i would literally crash as soon as i reach home. Thank you for sharing your experiences. College-double major, no drinking or drug issues, litterally everything down to the weird work-out schedule. I know I feel better when I work-out but I can't muster the energy why i dream every night get to the gym or get outside enough for it to count. I'm on a health and wellness program at work that monitors blood work and weight and such and I'm perfectly healthy. I just dream litterally all night long and I feel as why i dream every night I have not had a mental break. Maybe it's time to get back to the gym. I have been a vivid dreamer all of my life. That barely describes the depth, variety, incredible motion picture like bizarre quality of my dreams. It is like travel to another dimension. I have had why i dream every night lives, one dream and one awake and can recall years of dreams as memories that I have lived. I woke this morning with difficulty. I had little sleep the night before due to my choice, and a glass of wine last night which may be why I am groggy. So I Google searched lucid dreaming and ended up on this why i dream every night. All I can why i dream every night is that over the course of my life I have had those meds for depression, sleep apnea, and diabetes. But none of this is the reason for my dreaming as this pre-existed all of the above. It is just the way you are made. I am gladdened to hear that there are other vivid dreamers out there. I dream of incredible places, scenarios, buildings, places I have been in real life but take on a new quality and story, all in color and motion picture like in plot and continuity. I have had recurring dreams maybe with theme, or with place. I dream of everything from sex occasionally to shopping for antiques to work to just plain old scifi. I had at least 5 different ones that may have been rolled together one into another. A beautiful beach with a beached mamamal getting medical attention and a wedding ceramony taking place at the edge of the surf at twilight, starting from me looking out a window to see what was at the exact opposite of the earth, which was a beautiful coastline and suddenly I was there looking into a huge cave changed before my eyes into a tunnel with a giant in it. Much more detailed and flowing. And sometime in the future I will remember this out of the blue and in a split second I will know it to be a dream memory versus a real life memory. My vivid dreams are very detailed too. In ancient times, we might have been diviners, oracles, prophets, and shamans. Babies sleep long hours and dream a lot, because it's their brain's way of learning and retaining new knowledge. Does that mean we are still learning or that our observations and thoughts trickle into our dreams and we absorb more knowledge than others who have normal sleep. I'd like to think that we're all super smart, because of our dreams. Olanzapine 10 mg is the solution for dreams and waking up exausted. Olanzapine working very good and providing natural sleep. I have used resperidine for a month and stopped cold turkey without tapering off. Reason i had no knowledge of tapering. From then onwards my mind going into dream condition but not sleep condition. After suffering 6 months i found the solution in olanzapine 10 mg. Hi sparrow How are you now Olanzapine 10 mg is the solution for dreams and waking up exausted. Hi, gc, had vivid dreams my whole life; I'm always feeling tired through the day, giving up on pleasurable activities just to be able to rest, yet terrified of the moment I fall asleep and my other life begins. Been on Zoloft for a long time, but the dream issue predates it. At some point the intensity of the dreams and the frequence of the nightmares escalated to a point where I was getting suicidal. Long story short, I fell upon this thing on internet - the binaural waves. You can download many tracks for free on youtube or get others from paid apps or sites. I tried especially to use delta waves, since they are associated with dreamless sleep. I'm not cured of dreaming, but I managed to get rid of nightmares. Can't comment on the scientific base, but it doesn't seem to be harmful. Read about and maybe give it a chance. I've been reading your posts and I'm so happy to see others here who suffer the same thing. I dreamt so much last night at one point, I thought it's got to have been like 5 or 6 hours, but it had been 2 or even less. I dream a lot and always have and am always surprised how little people around me tend to dream. It's definitely affecting my quality of sleep too because I can sleep for 7 hours or so and then, especially in the last 4 months, I am awake maybe an hour before I have to go back why i dream every night bed. I can nap fine in the day, 3 to 5 hours and not wake up or dream much, but as soon as I sleep in my bed at night, I'm waking anything from 3 times on a good night, to nearly every hour on other nights, all in the meantime having over 75% of my sleep probably dreams. I can have half hour naps, and immediately be in a dream as soon as I've drifted off, and I can have many in one night and be able to recall all of them. I've not resorted to alcohol because even at times when I drink, I still wake a lot and alcohol just isn't my thing, and would it sound wrong if I said I was scared to not dream at all. I have depression and anxiety stemming from a fear of death, or what is after death and I don't think if like to not dream at all, but to dream a bit less and wake up refreshed would be nice. Nobody seems to take me seriously though with my sleep, and are always adamant I just need to get better sleep hygiene routines and stuff and not sleep in the day, but I can't get through the day why i dream every night a nap, and the odd days I do, the sleep deprivation makes me irritable and exceptionally emotional so it's not worth trying, and even then my sleep at night is horrendous. Sorry if my post doesn't seem to have much point to it, I'm sort of just venting and getting this out of my system and just been so nice to find others in this thread with similar experiences, if not exactly the same in some cases. I hope you're doing okay lately. I'm a vivid dreamer who does not get restful sleep. I'm also on Sertraline as well as Wellbutrin. It's possible that the Sertraline is contributing to the sleep issue although it didn't cause it. I've always had vivid dreams, but I didn't used to wake up tired. It feels like the dreams go on all night even though I'm sure they don't. I can dream an entire play or movie not one that I've seen before. It's entirely new and of my own making. It's also possible that I have sleep apnea, though. I'll consult with a sleep specialist about getting tested. Mainly, I wanted to let you know that it's possible to take both Sertraline and Wellbutrin together if you still need something of anxiety. For me, I started taking Sertraline, but found that we needed to keep increasing the dosage in order to get the same benefits. At some point, my psychiatrist added in Wellbutrin which he said could bump up the effect of the Sertraline and that seemed to be the answer. I've been on a steady dose of both for many years. The problem with tapering off and stopping completely to see if my sleep quality improves is that once you've gone off some of these meds, they're no longer effective if you decide to go back on them. It's good to read this thread because this vivid dream thing is a fairly new problem. I haven't felt like I've slept well at night for months. I do, however get some amazing restful naps from time to time and my limbs are tingly when I do. Also, my naps can be hours long. Is xanex the answer to everyone's problem. I'm hesitant to go to a psychiatrist but I may if this is my only way out. It seems to help maybe 40% of the time. But to be honest, I haven't been able to try it out all that much because turns out I just figured this out recently, after having been on the prescription for 4-5 months that I've been and taking the modafinil in my sleep. I'll pick up the prescription, I'll have it for a week, then one day, I go to open the bottle and take one, and there's 5 pills left in the bottle and I have another 2-3 weeks til I can refill it. Finally, my boyfriend said he's seen me take them in the middle of the night, and when he tells me 'you did it again last night,' I have no memory of doing it. Anyway, just thought I'd share about my experience with the modafinil. I have been suffering for a year with vivid dreams and no decent sleep after stopping Fentanyl which I was taking for a spinal cord injury. I made a suggestion to my doctor regarding your post on Olanzapine. First time I have been able to sleep for more than a couple of hours at a stretch. Cannot tell you how much I appreciate your suggestion. Dear smokey rain I appreciate you got some relief. If you ever want to stop olanzapine,you need to taper it slowly by small reduction monthly. Also you can read there,how people are suffering by stopping olanzapine suddenly without taper. My first dream memory is of Mr. Rogers and the Land of Make Believe, and how I was being chased by the lion puppet. This was not a nightmare, it just was what was happening. Most dreams last a day or a few days, though. I can tell the difference between dream memories and real memories, but I still have to parse through both of them to remember anything I why i dream every night to remember in waking life. Which of course makes the whole experience even worse. It helps about 25% with the sleepiness. And I advise those taking benzos be very careful. These are deadly substances if stopped without medical supervision and it is probably best to avoid starting to use them regularly to begin with. I have medication for anxiety and undiagnosed mental health issues. I also have dream apnea and insomnia so everything together. My apnea is under control but my nights are spent dreaming away continually. Doctor dont understand it or underestimate. Recently i Heard about a medicine, prazosine. It is used for postraumatic stress and nightmares. I am thinking to try it since i have no solution whasoever Prazosin is the medication I forgot the name of in my original post - I was told that it is used for blood pressure control, however, among its off-label uses is to prevent night terrors. My doctor thought that it might help with my condition, even though I do not have night terrors and they do not consider what I have to be night terrors. I think it basically made the time I experienced in my dreams shorter - so, days rather than months, hours rather than days. I warn that I would be reeeeally light-headed for at least 8 hours when taking it; I fell quite a few times and almost severely injured myself when going to the bathroom in the middle of the night while on it. I actually have to urinate often throughout the night someone else mentioned this in another post so I eventually stopped taking the Prazosin as the dangers outweighed the nominal benefit. We want the forums to be a useful resource for our users but it is important to remember that the forums are not moderated or reviewed by doctors and so you should not rely on opinions or advice given by other users in respect of any healthcare matters. Always speak to your doctor before acting and in cases of emergency seek appropriate medical assistance immediately. Use of the forums is subject to our and and steps will be taken to remove posts identified as being in breach of those terms.

People who are born without hearing or unable to move are likely tapping into these parts of the brain as they dream about tasks they cannot perform while awake. I woke this morning with difficulty. I no longer smoke quit 2 weeks ago don't eat after tea normaly but I do drink diet pepsi. Your response is much appreciated. So transitioning can be painful. You could have sleep apnea Or you could have a form of narcolepsy. But it's not depression my medical records say dream anxiety lol. Okay,I tried the brainwave music and all I got was a headache. By looking at what occurs in your dream, you will be better able to interpret its true meaning.

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released October 24, 2019

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