Interestingly, recent sleep studies and observations of dreams indicate that learning skills might be one purpose of dreaming. Subjects who played Video Games just before sleeping (and dreaming) were found to have improved their skills overnight. It is possible that dreams can provide opportunities to "practice" skills, try out various options and learn from mistakes.
The cast of Waking Dreams - 2004 includes: Tina Holmes as Becky Kevin Lageman as Patient Stephanie McVay as Mrs. Mills
You probably do have dreams but don't remember them. It is possible to experiment by setting an alarm clock to wake you up an hour or two before your normal waking time. You are more likely to awaken in the midst of a dream, and so realize that you are dreaming.
No, dreams do not have any physical matter or mass. They have the same sort of electro-chemical energy that your waking thoughts have.
It implies that your dreams are just a re-hashing of your experiences during your waking life.
Your dreams have access to vital information that is not readily available to you when you are awake. Your dreams serve as a window to your subconcious and reveal your secret desires and feelings. Through dreams you learn more about yourself.
Angela Nwosu has written: 'Waking dreams : poems'
Dreams are just dreams and do not "mean" anything. The mind is sorting out stuff and there is no reason to place any importance in anything you may remember upon waking up.
Dreams are produced by the subconscious mind during sleep. Dreams reflect the dreamer's emotions, experiences, thoughts and memories. They occur naturally and involuntarily; dreams cannot be "gotten" by the conscious (waking) mind.
Not in any practical sense. Dreams are produced by the subconscious mind while the conscious (waking) mind rests in sleep. Choices and desires are functions of the conscious mind, which has only indirect influence on the subconscious. However, it is possible to focus or meditate on a particular subject before falling asleep, which will increase the chances of dreaming about that subject.
Our waking experiences happen with the conscious mind. Dreams are messages to the conscious mind from the subconscious mind and is related in the picture language, the universal language of mind also referred to as language of the soul, during sleep. By learning this language and interpreting your dreams you can see how you are doing as a thinker. Dreams will normally relate to the previous day's experiences.
Nothing, dreams have no meaning in the waking world.
Dreams have no relation to the waking world.