
This post presents an unconventional approach to dreams as part of a brain maintenance process.
- Mounds of articles have been written about dreams and their meanings, from the Bible (Joseph the Dreamer) to the present day, and there is still no clear explanation for the phenomenon.
The subconscious mind records every second of our lives, including everything! It stores an enormous amount of information, and organizing it efficiently for storage and fast retrieval is essential.
Introduction- Dream model and the subconscious mind.
Dreams are a mixture of emotions, senses, experiences, fantasies, desires, and traumas that create strange scenarios that do not have to be realistic. The key to dreams is the subconscious, which bypasses logic. Since the brain "records" every moment of our lives, including telepathy and intuition, hidden messages may be mixed up in our dreams. Still, it isn't easy to attribute a prophetic message to them.
- Sleep disturbances impair memory because they impair the process of transferring files "to the Akashic library cloud" and thus leave the brain with not enough free memory.
The disorder of times and the mixing of events we experience in dreams are not by chance! They result from chemical encryption carried out by the brain in general and the subconscious mind in particular.
Dreams are a byproduct of subconscious encoding-decoding "brain files" in preparation for encrypted transmission.
These files, Including experiences, desires, fantasies, fears, and trauma, are then transmitted to the cloud for storage in the Akashic library. (library of knowledge of the entire universe), there is a detailed record of everything everyone has done and experienced. Of course, the theory is unconventional in its profound meaning, but it explains the findings well.
- The fact that we remember very little of what we dreamed is not an accidental result. We're not supposed to remember dreams in the first place. Dream sleep is important to all memory processes (it frees up space on the hard disk), but its contents were not intended to serve us in our daily lives.