![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Even nightmares have their uses - Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein began as a bad dream. James Watson was studying DNA when he dreamed of two spiraling snakes and realized DNA might be shaped like a helix as well. Paul McCartney first heard the tune of the Beatles’ iconic “Yesterday” in a his sleep. So will making an effort to remember your dreams give you that creative boost you’ve been searching for? It’s certainly helped many creatives in the past. Multiple studies that have shown people who make an effort to remember their dreams are more creative. This ability to connect and synthesize new ideas is why many people believe dreams can help creativity. Many believe that dreams give our brains time to process and store the day’s events in long term memory, allowing your mind to make connections among disparate ideas and themes. Why we really see things when we fall asleep is something scientists are still trying to figure out. Ancient Egyptians believed gods communicated omens to us while we slept, and Ancient Greeks believed the god Hypnos waved a fan to send people into deep, dreaming slumber. Given how much of our lives we spend snoozing, it’s no surprise the significance that has been attributed to dreams throughout history. Despite each session being relatively short, it’s estimated that people will spend about a month dreaming each year. That endless dream you have about running in slow motion down a hallway probably only lasts about five to twenty minutes in real-time, science says. In fact, most people have several in each sleep cycle. Whether you remember it or not, you’re probably dreaming every night.
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