The Truth About Dreams
Every night, when you close your eyes, your mind opens another world.
A world with no rules, no gravity, no logic.
You can fly across cities that don’t exist.
You can talk to people who passed away years ago.
You can fall endlessly — and yet never hit the ground.
It feels real… until you wake up.
Then everything fades — like smoke in sunlight.
But what is a dream, really?
Scientists say dreams happen during REM sleep, the deepest stage of the night.
Your brain becomes almost as active as when you’re awake —
but the part that controls logic and reason shuts down.
That’s why your dreams are so weird, so random, so impossible.
Your brain is basically remixing your memories, emotions, and fears —
turning them into a story that only you can experience.
Some dreams are peaceful.
Some are terrifying.
Some feel like a message.
And maybe they are.
For centuries, people believed dreams were windows to the spirit world —
messages from ancestors, gods, or even your higher self.
Modern science calls them psychological “housekeeping” —
a way for the brain to clean up thoughts, process emotions, and organize memories.
So who’s right?
Maybe both.
Because sometimes, a dream can predict a real event.
Sometimes you wake up with an answer to a problem you didn’t know you had.
And sometimes… you meet someone in a dream,
and when you wake up, you still feel them.
But there’s another mystery.
Why do we forget most dreams the moment we open our eyes?
It’s because our brain’s chemistry changes instantly when we wake.
The neurotransmitters that store memory — they reset.
So the dream is lost before it can be saved.
Gone forever… unless you write it down.
Yet once in a while, one dream stays.
A face. A place. A feeling you can’t explain.
And maybe that’s not random.
Maybe it’s your subconscious — or something beyond — trying to speak to you.
Every night, we die a little.
Every morning, we are reborn — with memories of worlds we’ll never see again.
Dreams remind us that reality isn’t always what it seems.
Because even when we’re asleep…
part of us is still awake.
Comments
Post a Comment