
Nightmare/naitmea/n[C] a very frightening dream
-- Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The identities of nightmares vary in different ways. No matter are you chased by a 6-eyed neon pink monster or being thrown down from the top of a 60-storeyed tower, nightmares still mean something.
Why do we have nightmares?
Nightmares are surprisingly and fortunately, a compensation for the little amount of time we have,, especially nowadays to really sit down and contemplate on our lives. Therefore, they are often thought as a red light alert or a forewarning signal, to be cautious about something that might happen in real life that we should prevent or think of a solution to overcome. They also serve, magically, as exercises for our soul and mind for further disaster, or should I say, challenges we might face in order to lessen the actual pain we might face. These pain can be very intimate: separation of chums, deaths, loss of your beloved etc. Most crucially, it shows that the way you are handling a certain problem should be alternated. Once the problems are solved, nightmares will vanish.
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control of our brain
about our skull
major parts of our brain
different views of our brain
why do we dream?
what about nightmares?
what about recurring dreams?
how to remember our dreams?
what do my dreams mean?
what about televisions?
air conditioners?
light bulbs?
telephones?
clocks?
computers?
refrigerators?
microwave ovens?
Chinese culture?
who are the authors?
games
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