Dream dictionary and dream science

Dream dictionary and dream science

Dream dictionary

I have heard that many people declare that not all dreams mean something and if they did, it was always the reverse. For example, to dream of a wedding means something bad is going to happen or somewhat to that effect. It is normally ain’t something good.

For me, I think it feels like deja vu because it has happened so many times to me that sometimes, I’m quite afraid of it. One case was I dreamt that I was in a room packed with people, sitting in a circle and I could see the expressions of the people in the room, but unclearly. I could still make them out no doubt but it was in my dream. Many moons later on, I went to a seminar, I found myself in exactly the same situation, same people, even same room. It was strange! I also once dreamed that we went to bring back my brother from the train station, I could see his face and all that but very strange thing I do not have a brother. Turned out that mother lost her baby before me and it could have been him.

Did you have a dream last night? Why do not check out that dream using a dream dictionary? I’m going to check out what it means to dream of a baby

A VISIT TO A SLEEP LAB part 2

Meanwhile, he has started to make precise measurements o f Joan’s scalp with the miniature tape measure and marks it with a special, soft, red pencil. “The electrodes have to be placed on specific locations on the head several inches above each ear called C3 on the left side and C4 on the right side and another at the back of  the head at 0 1 or 0 2 .  The same measurement technique is used worldwide to apply electrodes. That way results from any lab can be directly compared.” He carefully marks a spot on each side of the head about one-third of the way down from the center of the top o f the head toward each ear. He picks up the comb and several hair clips and parts the hair over the marked area on the right side. Then lie picks up a cotton tipped stick and a bottle o f liquid. Read more

A VISIT TO A SLEEP LAB part 1

W e arrive at the sleep lab a little before 10 p.m. and walk down a pleasant, carpeted
hallway that has several doors on either side. W e are directed to an open door
leading to a brightly lit room.
The “subject”for tonight’s study is a paid volunteer who has changed into her
pajamas and is sitting next to a small table partially covered by a clean white towel.
On this table are some rolls of medical tape, a few bottles, scissors, a toothpaste-like
tube, some gauze, a comb and hair clips, a tape measure, an electrical meter, and other
similar things. On the nearby wall hang a dozen or so long wires with disc-like
enlargements on one end and metal pins about the size o f match sticks on the other
end. The 23-year-old subject has short, black hair done in one of the latest styles. She
has bright, attentive eyes. Read more

A Visit to a Sleep and Dreams Lab

I f you were asked to determine i f someone is asleep, what would you look for? You
probably would check the person’s eyes to see i f they were closed, see i f the person
were relaxed and still, be sure they are not very responsive to stimuli, were breathing
regularly, and so on. But you, like just about everyone, have at one time or another
done all o f these things to fool other people into believing you were asleep. Then, too,
someone in a coma shows all o f these signs, appearing to be asleep. I t i s apparent that
you cannot tell very accurately i f a person is asleep simply by observation. Read more