In the Dreamscape of Nightmares, Clues to Why We Dream at All
The patient was a 37-year-old man who had been physically abused as a boy by his schizophrenic mother, often while he lay in bed trying to fall asleep. Nevertheless, he had grown into a reasonably normal, gainfully employed adult, and he thought that the worst was behind him, until one night he awoke to find an intruder rummaging through his dresser drawers. After that, his nightmares began — terrifying, recurrent dreams in which the intruder was a middle-age woman and a knife dangled with Damoclesian contempt from the ceiling fan over his head.
By all evidence, outrageously bad dreams are a universal human experience. Sometimes the dreams are scary enough to jolt the slumberer awake, in which case they meet the formal definition of nightmares — bad dreams that wake you up. At other times, they are even worse. The sleeper thinks the nightmare is over, only to step into Your Nested Nightmare, Chapter II. Whatever the particulars of the plot, researchers say, nightmares and dreadful dreams offer potentially telling clues into the larger mystery of why we dream in the first place, how our dreaming and waking lives may intersect and cross-infect each other, and, most baffling of all, how we manage to construct a virtual reality in our skull, a seemingly life-size, multidimensional, sensorily rich nocturnal roundhouse staffed with characters so persuasive you want to ... strangle them, before they can strangle you.
This is the lead and nut graph for a story that i found particularly interesting. It revolves around bad dreams and the architecture of dreams in general. I found this so interesting because it seems to give at least a little insight into a subject that is some what of a disconcerting topic for me. Regardless it is a good article with an anecdotal lead that sets the scene that grabs the reader. Good facts and structure, and i especially like the ending, "If you feel yourself falling, spread your arms and learn how to fly, " very colorful ending
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1 comment:
It *is* interesting. How about a link for people who want to read the whole thing?
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