Everyone has nightmares. Being chased by something or someone intending
us harm; falling in an abyss without a parachute; looking into a mirror
in our dream discovering that our appearance has altered alarmingly;
seeing someone we love die or disappear, are a few examples. There are
as many different types of nightmares as there are people but our
reaction to them is the same. We awaken sweating, sometimes screaming
out loud, heart beating fast and so enormously relieved to discover it
was a nightmare and not waking life!
Their meaning is likely as individual as we are however, there are
several common reasons. One is that we have had experiences in our
lives that have traumatized us severely. We may not allow ourselves to
ponder these experiences consciously because the effects are still too
raw. Our consciousness however must integrate and file these
experiences into our psychic makeup. We must give them context, meaning
to hopefully reach a place of peace and acceptance.
Dreaming the Horrors of War
There are other common reasons for nightmares; fear of failure, poor
health, or victimization. Being bullied generates more than its share
of nightmares in a victim of any age. Being faced with a difficult
choice, behaving in a manner unfamiliar to our self-concept,
abandonment, loneliness, lack of safety can all trigger the advent of a
nightmare.
They do mean that we need to pay closer attention to something happening
in our everyday lives. We are either guilty of ignoring the threat
entirely or minimizing its impact on our psyches. During WWI for
example, military psychiatrists noticed that when men on the front lines
began dreaming of the horrors of war they needed to be removed from the
battle. Somehow the horror had breached a psychic barrier which often
presaged the onslaught of a crippling mental illness. So nightmares let
us know that a fear of something has breached our normal defenses and
we ignore its message at our peril.
Consider nightmares to be rather like a psychic scream. Our unconscious
mind has been murmuring warnings to us to which we’ve failed to give
credence that has in turn forced our psyche’s to amplify the volume. In
essence our psyche has been left little choice but to alarm us to
attention!
Nightmares May Signal Encroaching Mental Illness
Keeping in mind however, that dreams amplify our waking life experiences
by tenfold, a nightmare may be highlighting a growing neurosis – fear
of something not founded in reality but rather a phobia or unfounded
worry. People who describe themselves as “worry warts” tend be plagued
more frequently with nightmares. Regardless, a nightmare in this case
still demands attention. A growing phobia can be crippling in
preventing us from living an abundant and healthy life. If a nightmare
is alerting us to a creeping neurosis, that doesn’t mean it isn’t
relevant and just as crippling.
As children we’re plagued by nightmares often. Children experience fear
daily yet must continue to exist. The world they find themselves
inhabiting is vast and those around them so much larger and stronger.
Loving adults can help in offering moments of safety and respite but
there are by necessity times when they cannot offer the assurance of
safety so craved. Encouraging children to talk through their nightmares
and offering them suggestions about how to imaginatively deal with the
monsters can help a child to feel empowered and less threatened in their
waking lives.
Nightmares as Creative Inspiration
Ignoring or discounting nightmares as “only dreams” doesn’t ultimately
offer any help in dealing with them for like most forgotten dreams, they
will simply return. The best way to deal with nightmares is to
consider them. Do what we can to interpret the meaning of the symbols,
characters, feeling and action. Imagine what the nightmare is asking of
you the dreamer. Further, you might consider a couple of different
endings to the dream. Often a nightmare is interrupted by an abrupt
awakening triggered by our increased heart rate and breath; using your
imagination envision what the ending might have been.
Use the nightmare as a creative inspiration. Draw, paint or collage the
images. Title your nightmare. The stories of Jekyl and Hyde,
Frankenstein, and Dracula were all inspired by nightmares. When you
describe a nightmare to someone, it is likely they will immediately
identify and empathize with your experience. There is nothing quite
like a sharing a nightmare to bring an uncommon level of intimacy into
your social intercourse.
Don’t shy away from your nightmares. They are important messages from
your unconscious mind. It is highly likely it is an important message
at that. If you don’t wish them to revisit, then give them creative
expression. Ponder their messages and see what you might learn about
how to remedy a troubling waking situation. At the very least you will
find yourself awed at the majesty, grace and condensed form it has
presented of a waking life situation that really does need more
attending that than which you have been affording it.
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