Sleep Dreams
April 4, 2009 by
Filed under General Arts
Almost everyone experiences sleep dreams. They come from the inner, hidden mind. In dreams many images and objects spin together in a sometimes nonsense way.
A Google search is a great way to learn about something. There are many interesting images associated with sleep dreams. One of them is from a tattoo e-zine. It's a child's head floating over a field by the ocean. These images are all jumbled together, as would happen in a dream. Individually they make little sense. Someone would be hard pressed to determine their relationship to each other. However, it's likely the person dreaming the dream would know what they mean.
Another photo that comes up for the search term sleep dreams is of a woman sleeping. There are electrodes connected to her face and forehead. She's in some type of dream study. It's part of an article about new ideas about dreams. People who miss sleep will often have more dreams. Don't sleep on Monday and you're more likely to dream on Tuesday. The reason is that people who are very tired sleep more deeply. Now people who want to dream have a way to ensure they do dream.
Another sleep dreams photo is more of a cartoon drawing. It's another excellent depiction of the images seen in the dream. A young girl sleeps in bed. Her bed is outside next to a tree where animals' heads grow. A house with legs stands on her head board. She's sleeping next to a fish. A tentacled owl watches her from the foot board of the bed. The bed floats in the sky. What looks like a satellite, and some shooting stars, pass by. There's nothing sinister in the image. The girl seems to be enjoying her pleasant dream.
Sleep dreams shows yet another cartoon drawing. It's a man in bed. He was cold. Because now he has pulled the radiator from the wall. He's using it like a cover. The radiator would burn him if he really tried that.
Google lists over 4,350,000 images for sleep dreams. That's a lot to seeSleep dreams results in over four million hits on Google. Pick one to explore.
http://dreamming.com/

