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I've been having really weird dreams, and I wake up drained everyday. Can dreaming actually take energy from you while you sleep?

2006-08-30 05:36:32 · 16 answers · asked by aht12086 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

I haven't taken any medications, and it's always of someone else when it happends... it's been going on for the last week- if you want more details, it's in my blog- http://yahoo.360.com/aht12086

2006-08-30 05:41:45 · update #1

16 answers

Yes, you may be traveling in the astral and not be aware of it on a conscious level.

Blessings )O(

2006-08-30 05:40:06 · answer #1 · answered by Epona Willow 7 · 2 0

Actually, yes, if you have been depressed for long time. Even your dream will drain you to the point that when you wake up you will feel headache.

That is normal when you have some sort of weird dream. Dreams are brain activity at night and it does take some energy from your while you sleep. Especially people have nightmare, they often wake up with sweat!!

2006-08-30 14:37:40 · answer #2 · answered by YourDreamDoc 7 · 0 0

Hello. You may be experiencing problems breathing while you sleep and your sub conscious mind is trying to tell you this. Do you have a significant other with whom you live? Perhaps he/she could tell you if you are snorring heavily which may indicate you are having trouble getting O2 into your lungs. Sleep disorder clinic may be the order of the day.
May be this will shed some light on the issue you are having.
Other than that Dreams are useful for solving problem too. But I would look into the first part of this to start if you are getting physically exhausted. There may be a physiological reason: ie. breathing when sleeping.

2006-08-30 05:44:41 · answer #3 · answered by Batchlor of the Arts 2 · 0 0

your first mistake: you talk approximately a vampire to be a phsycic entity, something able to leaping interior your recommendations and construction photos. does no person study into xeno-biology anymore? the only phisical transformations are...aww, heck that concern's been picked to dying already. actuality is: vampires have not got psychological understanding above your easy human. your 2nd mistake: Sookie? it is SO no longer a actual-international term in human or vampire lingo. you even mentioned it grew to become into from a television coach, come on! while narnia hit cinemas, did you go searching in the process the back of your closet? at the same time as you won't have watched the vampire sequence in a at the same time as, your recommendations is better than able to recalling that style of subject into targets at any factor. your easy dream is basically your recommendations re-shuffling photos, recommendations and recommendations of the day, each so often coming up some creepy stuff. and you would recognize while it truly is the different style of dream. prophetic ones provide you a headache that makes a hangover look heavenly. end: a splash vampyr-hysteria. enormously uncomplicated these days as through a set of annoying books and television shows. human beings as an entire have consistently been atrracted to vampires, immortality, danger, seductiveness, all that jazz-funk, yet right here is the actual deal: your backyard form vamp won't be so polite as to drop in on you at the same time as your drowsing, he will basically settle for cornering you and the two breaking you instantaneous or putting you up by using your feet and...properly, it takes some days.

2016-11-06 01:57:34 · answer #4 · answered by sokin 4 · 0 0

You might want to have your blood-sugar checked. Diabetics with high blood sugar will sleep an entire night and -not- feel rested in the morning (it happened to me several times before I got my sugar under control).

High blood sugar is like eating a really big meal. Afterwards all you want to do is sleep. But with a normal person, the high sugar gets cleaned up by the body and after sleeping, the normal person feels rested.

But a diabetic's body does not clean up the sugar. It remains in the system so you're constantly feeling like you have a need for sleep, until you are active enough that your body uses up the sugar (which may not happen if you're eating all your meals).

Given the problems diabetes can cause, I suggest you have yourself checked and (hopefully) rule out that possibility.

Best wishes on that.

2006-08-30 05:54:19 · answer #5 · answered by bobkgin 3 · 0 0

Yes, especially if you have sleep apthnia. Your blood oxygen level goes down with difficulty in breathing while sleeping, resulting in restless sleep and more strange nightmares. See your Doctor to see if this could be the case. I had it so bad that I would wake up 2 or 3 in the morning in massive panic attacks, along with really wierd dreams. I rest much better now and wake up more refreshed.

2006-08-30 05:43:08 · answer #6 · answered by Jimbo 3 · 0 0

sometimes our bodies act out the dream - such as if you are running from a snake in your dream - your body is going to react as though you really were - the adrenaline can drain you

And many times a dream is the manifestation of a problem that you are wrestling with and your subconscience keeps right on going with that though, so you dont really relax when you are sleeping and miss the restorative benefits

2006-08-30 05:41:26 · answer #7 · answered by grammy_of_twins_plus two 3 · 0 0

YES it can really drain me like you , i get the same , i wake up feeling i have not slept at all,

solution change your sleeping times as i did and i felt better,

Why i don't know but it did so try it

Good luck & take care Pete

2006-08-30 05:47:41 · answer #8 · answered by pete 3 · 0 0

Dreams surely are difficult, confusing, and not everything in them is brought to pass for mankind. For fleeting dreams have two gates: one is fashioned of horn and one of ivory. Those which pass through the one of sawn ivory are deceptive, bringing tidings which come to nought, but those which issue from the one of polished horn bring true results when a mortal sees them.
Homer (800 BC - 700 BC), The Odyssey

2006-08-30 05:45:52 · answer #9 · answered by melissa 6 · 0 0

Definitely. Too much REM sleep can be as bad as none at all.

Check up on the medications you are taking because some of them can have this effect.

2006-08-30 05:39:05 · answer #10 · answered by freelancenut 4 · 0 0

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