While you sleep….
As you climb the Great Wall of China, Fernando
Alonso races past you in his glistening Ferrari, chasing an extinct species of
a deer and Salma Hayek awaits at the summit in the most exotic outfit
imaginable, when suddenly the alarm bell rings, bringing you back to reality
with a Time to get up! Or consider this; the physics problem that you were
chewing on the entire day, having tried every theorem you’d ever known,
suddenly gets solved in your brain with all the numbers and variables falling
in place while you are asleep. You just pulled an Einstein!
Though they seem to be perfectly real as they
occur, we always tend to question their authenticity upon gaining
consciousness. Dreaming is a Natural yet often Unbelievable phenomenon.
There has been a great debate over the years
over the reality of dreams, how they happen, why do they happen and if there is
any basis in reality for what goes on in your head as you sleep. Out of these
many debates, a chosen few have been termed acceptable, yet most have been discarded
without even giving them a second look.
Could there be a different way of how we go
about interpreting our dreams?...As Ravi (Storyteller & MD - NeoSynapses) usually says, let’s first talk about
the things we can agree on.
The process of dreaming occurs in the Brain
Stem, which takes care of all the automatic body functions like breathing,
heartbeat etc. It has also been established that Dreams take shape when we are
in the 5th stage of our sleep, with our body paralyzed and when REM
(Rapid Eye Movement) has taken over (almost 90 minutes from when we first
dozed off) – Our heart rates go up, our blood
pressure rises, and our brain activity is raised to the level it’s at when
we’re awake. Our Limbic System, which plays an important role in
controlling our emotions and beliefs, also plays an important role while we
dream, which is why, every once in a while, you wake-up from a dream only to
find yourself drenched in a pool of sweat.
Now, let’s talk about abstracts. Ahem…..
Some researchers believe that dreams mostly
occur out of the ‘Declarative Memory’, which comes from the Hippocampus.
Hippocampus is the part of the brain where short term memory exists. This means
that most of our dreams are about instances or things that have recently
occurred – may be excerpts from the movie we recently saw clubbed with our
experiences in offices in the previous weeks and so on.
Some other very prominent and renowned
researchers believe that dreams occur out of the information that is left over
in our brain (you may call it the Sub-conscious) that our pre-frontal cortex,
the active brain information centre, has not registered when we were awake,
which also tells us just how and why we get solutions to some problems in our
dreams and why we see un-related random images as we sleep. Research
suggests that very few dreams are actually about people or places the dreamer
knows of or has encountered in real life. Most—that is, 80%—are actually random
events or people the dreamer doesn’t know in any way whatsoever.
Does all this also hint to what many Spiritual
Leaders have been saying for years – The Power of the Subconscious is much
greater than the Power of the Conscious Mind? Is it also possible that we in
our dreams can actually talk in a language we have never learnt, but just heard
a couple of times?
There is still no agreement on what happens and
why, but the best way I can suggest to answer this for yourself is to stay wide
awake while you dream.
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