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He can be fast asleep and then gets on all fours in his cot and starts pointing and crying, very restless banging into the sides of his cot.

2006-06-17 12:42:08 · 18 answers · asked by dampc621 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

18 answers

YES even newborn babies dream. In fact, although adults only spend about a third of their sleep period dreaming, babies spend 50 to 80 percent of sleep in dreams. Some researchers, carrying their investigation into the womb, state that at 24-30 weeks gestational age the unborn baby dreams a 100 percent.

And although you cannot have a conversation with your baby in the same way I did with my young son, if you see your baby is having disturbing dreams you can still talk to her or him, even while they are asleep. Your baby is incredibly sensitive to the sound of your voice, and your own state of calm or agitation lying behind the way your voice sounds. Therefore you can sit with your baby and imagine a situation in which you feel calm and loving. When you feel calm and strong, gently talk to your baby telling it you are holding it close in your love, and you are with it while it meets whatever is disturbing it. Tell it your love is the strength it can use, and imagine wrapping your baby in your calm and love.

2006-06-17 17:00:40 · answer #1 · answered by jennanna 4 · 1 1

Children do dream from the time they are born. Your grandson is having what they call Night Terrors. They are much more frightening that an actual nightmare. Night Terrors seem to occur during the first phases of a deep sleep. Night terrors are very frightening to children because they seem quite realistic to them. Sometimes children will even sleep walk or sit straight up.
I would recommend talking to a pediatrician for advice since this seems to be a constant problem.

2006-06-17 12:59:48 · answer #2 · answered by HappyCat 7 · 0 0

Generally babies and toddlers make sense of the day when they sleep - so they replay the day in their dreams - and as most kids under 3 can't go a day without crying - he is just reliving the day - however, some children have been known to have nightmares at young ages - buy you should never try to wake them as it can do more harm than good - if it is really panicing you take him to see a doctor

2006-06-19 08:09:48 · answer #3 · answered by colletteukuk 3 · 0 0

My daughter use to have night terrors, the same thing you are describing, I took her to the Doctors, they gave us some pamplets on it and told us when she starts one not to wake her up, that is the worst thing you can do, just make sure there is no way they will hurt themselves on anything. You can talk to them in a soothing voice without waking them up, that helps some, Just don't pick them up while they are doing this. They also told me that the cause is lack of sleep during the day that could be causing it, if their naps aren't long enough or even to long can make it so they didn't rest and then they will have night terrors. If your really worried though you should take him to the doctors.
Good Luck :) and I hope I've helped

2006-06-17 16:18:26 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

From what you have described, it could be night terrors. A very strange malady that very well have it roots in sleepwalking. Not much is known about it's causes and there's even less information about treatment and there is no cure. Children often grow out of it but on the other hand it can continue into adulthood.

2006-06-17 12:50:15 · answer #5 · answered by Albannach 6 · 0 0

Yes, your grandson is able to dream. Babies dream too.

He sounds upset though, and I don't think this is just to do with dreams (although it is more likely if he had a traumatic birth)

Could it be colic? Maybe check with your doctor.

He could be teething.

All you can do is soothe and reassure him. Help him to have a very peaceful evening before you put him to bed. You could try playinga gentle music tape (Mozart for Babies is a good one, see Amazon.co.uk to order)

It is probably a phase and will pass. Stressful for you, but try not to worry as he will pick this up and be even more restless.

But yes, he does dream, and dreaming is a wonderful thing!

2006-06-17 12:49:21 · answer #6 · answered by Suzita 6 · 0 0

I do think kids do dream of maybe the kind of day they had. I dont think its bad that they dream, it show they have emotion. The dream could be confrontational because of the kind of confrontational things that a toddler tends to go through. Maybe he didnt like you taking his sippy cup away from him, or why couldnt grandma read me that story again you know the one with the fluffy rabbit. Wheres the moon gone nanna? And thats it. Nothing wrong. Just shows hes learning and developing around boundries and rules.

2006-06-21 12:17:56 · answer #7 · answered by lonely as a cloud 6 · 0 0

damn you Enki, that`s a not common one. Are you planning to write down a e book or script or some thing? there are a good number of episodes that i will surely no longer pick to relive even in simple terms in my memory. way too a lot discomfort and that i'm no longer effective that i ought to proceed to exist them back. in part for significant information? particular, because a good number of what we save in recommendations generally is distorted and this will be an possibility to set the record precise. also there turned right into a good number of truly relaxing stuff, you comprehend ? So no, i does no longer pick to ignore all of it. at the same time is is scary because any destiny action that became replaced or distinct from the unique would in all likelihood reason a good number of the subsequent episodes to get replaced because each distinction makes a distinction, like in falling domino homes. on the different hand the prospect is likewise very in all likelihood that questioning about the dream episodes with any respectable quantity of emotion motives those episodes to be created in a parallel existence in a parallel universe. yet that`s getting into exceedingly deep on your question. finally, properly of direction it ought to point plenty to me. i'm no longer so particular that i'd have the potential to navigate by those memories now and in each second make wise judgements cuz there's a lot more effective the following than meets the traditional eye. would (i presumed you suggested finally previously) I choose it wasn`t only a dream or be happy it in simple terms became? properly imo it wouldn`t make any distinction. The mind doesn`t comprehend the version, after the very actuality of remembering it) so what makes you imagine i'd comprehend it? contained in the in simple terms precise diagnosis, my end is that after we depart our bodies (previously or after its death) we ought to easily be in a position to save in recommendations all the distinct parallel lives in a more effective effective way and prefer say, Hmmm that one is exciting, or Oh lookie the following! Kinda like after we bypass by lots of of photos. Then, we ought to also see some opportunities that should be exciting to take position in a destiny existence and say, whats up, i elect to provide that a shot, and boom!, there I`d be, in some woman`s abdomen once back. Cheers! .

2016-11-14 22:07:33 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'd say almost definitely yes. According to a nappy advert on the telly, children make sense of the world when they're asleep, or something like that.

2006-06-17 12:48:20 · answer #9 · answered by Kango Man 5 · 0 0

a young child can have night scrares and this could indicate an underlying problem if he is gereraly happy it is nothing to worry about maybe there is a period of transition in his life and when we sleep it gives the brain time to process and sort eveything that has happened during the day. maybe a bumper would help protcet his head though.

2006-06-20 01:45:50 · answer #10 · answered by jen 2 · 0 0

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