I need help with this. I don't know. I have been dreaming every night for the past 2 weeks. I have never done this before, and what makes it worse is that they get progressively weirder. I described this one in chat a few minutes ago.\ [9:11:37 AM] aHydroAmbience: (09:07:29) HydroAmbience: I just had one where there was windows 9 and it was coming out in march 28 2014 (09:09:55) HydroAmbience: That was after I had one with the people slipping into a different dimension but there body was still there in the first dimension but they where still acting like they would in the first dimension as they would in the second. One was when a mother kept on saying Sweet dreams over and over again with twisted face. One was a baby on a tricycle that a clown on the front of it. Another was with someone turning a differnt color and rolling on the floor. (09:10:04) HydroAmbience: That's my dream last night ._. I'm just wondering if there is something you guys know to make it stop or to make them stop getting weirder. Thanks and I hope there will be some answers. (Also could a staff member move this to serious discussion. I accidentally posted it here)
My best recommendation for you would be to try lucid dreaming. It will allow you to control the dream to make it what you want it to become.
First off- you always dream when you sleep. It's whether or not you remember it. Second- Dreams are often non-sensical and illogical and/or contain hidden meanings relating to things about your life. I'm not a professional dream reader (the cclosest thing I hhave to training is a year of a high-school psychology class) but... The multi-dimensional one could be you subconciously knowing someone is lying about who they are to you, The person with the changing colors could mean you are changing from who you used to be and are a little worried about it, and I dunno aabout the other two. But as I said, dreams can also be complete and total nonsense, wiith no hidden meaning. And then there's lucid dreaming but that's another thing completely.
Wow, you read my mind completely. How the hell did you do that. Both of those answers are relateable to me. Thanks for sharing.
[MENTION=5915]Dreamer[/MENTION] has it right. Basically, you're just remembering your dream, and possibly not even all of them. Assuming you get enough cycles of proper sleep every night, you must also have multiple dreams every night. So, you're remembering some intriguing ones that you might not have otherwise. That's about the size of it. That's mostly a matter of understanding that most people who live within one society have similar concerns regarding everyday monotony. Dream-reading is a kind of guessing game where you relate average social and personal concerns with figurative representation. And, like Dreamer also said, sometimes dreams don't mean anything in particular at all (or at least have no meaning relevant to your everyday life).
Hm, I had the same problem when I was 12 years of age. I only dealt with it by playing Halo 3 for two nights strait. It helped me, but I wouldn't suggest unless you wanna get grounded by your parents.
While we're on the topic, I've been having this recurring dream every night for the past 6 nights. Not sure if I'm trying to tell myself something on a subconscious level, or if it's total nonsense. :/
From the sound of things, it would seem like you never remember your dreams, which is quite common. Now that you are starting to remember some, I have to ask: Have you made any changes to your diet or sleep patterns lately? Been eating anything you don't normally eat, or going to bed earlier or later than usual? A lot of factors go into determining dream recall, so if you've recently started doing something differently, that could be partially responsible for your sudden increase in recall. Also, no need to be alarmed by the nature of your dreams - it's quite normal for them to be either totally bizarre or totally mundane. (Or bizarre in a way that seems mundane within the context of the dream, but the strangeness of it all finally dawns on you when you wake up.) I actually enjoy dreaming, especially if it's weird, so I just kind of embrace it. But that's just me. If you're disturbed by what you've been dreaming, I'd try to analyze patterns and common themes you're finding in your dreams so that you can train yourself to recognize when you're dreaming, thus inducing a lucid dream. Lucid dreaming isn't easy to accomplish for most people, but it's been used by many as an effective method for conquering recurring nightmares and other disturbing dreams, so if making a change to your diet or sleep patterns doesn't set things right, you might want to look into that.
This isen't recommended but it does help break the cycle try cheese before bed, it might give nightmares for the night but don't worry luna will protect you from serious harm