The question cannot be answered meaningfully as it is phrased. All humans dream in the same way, so "how" a person dreams is determined by being human. The mind, which is a function of the brain, produces dreams during sleep. Not everyone remembers their dreams, and various factors can influence the experience of dreaming. Those factors include illness, such as fever, which causes vivid, disturbing dreams, as well as alcohol, caffeine, various medications and drugs, and physical discomfort experienced during sleep. See the link below for further information and additional resources.
no person has the right to ruin their dreams
Yes you are correct, a person has 27684 dreams a year
Abnormal dreams are the dreams which differ from the normal dreams. They generally scare the person. Cause them to feel uncomfortable.
No, your dreams only express your own thoughts and feelings. Your dreams provide no information about the thoughts or feelings of the person you see in your dreams.
It is not real. a person's sub-conscious control dreams.
The price, how informed the person is and the quality of the goods are the factors that determines whether a person will buy inferior or normal goods.
There is a a person ("adjuster") assigned to each case This person determines weather the injury and disability qualify
If a person thinks constantly about a certain individual, it is not unusual for that individual to appear in the person's dreams.
No. Having a certain person appear in your dream every day suggests that you are thinking and day-dreaming about that person. But it means nothing about that person's dreams, thoughts or feelings. Your dreams take place within your own mind, just as your thoughts and feelings take place inside you. Your dreams do not affect anyone else's dreams, and their dreams have no affect on yours.
If you see a friend crying in your dreams, then someone close to you is struggling and you are wishing you could help. If the person crying in your dreams is an enemy, you are seeking to hurt this person emotionally.
It is no one's business what another person dreams, particularly students and their instructors.
A person who believes in their dreams can be referred to as a dreamer or an idealist.