?Examining the mysterious and fascinating moods in your dreams can help you achieve a better understanding of their ultimate meanings.
In the mysterious and fascinating world of dreams, the rules of reality do not apply, but sometimes simply examining the moods in your dreams can help you achieve a better understanding of their ultimate meanings. Unlocking and interpreting the moods in your dreams can often help you get a clearer view on your personal relationships, and your real feelings on many of your life’s important issues. There are no exact answers or meanings to your dream moods because your own dreams are unique to you and no other person has the exact same emotions and experiences. In this way your own dreams can only be connected to your own personal life and experiences when it comes to interpreting their meanings in a dream.
Once you have gained a bit of insight and understanding of your dream moods, it can help provide you with a better understanding of your self in your waking life too. It is also important to note that the moods you might experience in your own dreams are not symbols that are replacing something else. Your dream moods are more like reflections of your inner feelings, and the moods and feelings expressed in your dreams can help you to deal with issues like depression, guilt, or other complex emotions.
Psychologists have noted that sometimes your true underlying moods may have been repressed during waking life, and they can be more exposed and more accessible when they are expressed within your dreams when your normal defenses are not as strong as they are when you are awake. It is interesting to not that in the world of dream moods, negative moods, emotions and feelings tend to occur twice as often as good moods or pleasant feelings. Surprisingly, researchers have found that for most people, fear and anxiety are the most commonly experienced moods remembered after a dream, followed by anger and sadness.
The mood of fear in a dream can indicate you are experiencing true anxieties in various parts of your waking life. Fear in a dream can also signify that you believe your real life activities may not be as successful as you had hoped or anticipated. The mood of a fearful dream might also mean something as simple as resistance to changes in your normal waking life. Anxiety, like fear, is a dream mood that shows you are probably experiencing true anxiety in part of your waking life, and can be considered as a reflection of what you’re feeling during the daytime. Any dream that is dominated by the mood of anxiety might be trying to tell you that you may have real problems with repressed thoughts, unexpressed emotions, resentments, and hostility in your waking life to deal with.
Dream Moods
by dreamland.comIn the mysterious and fascinating world of dreams, the rules of reality do not apply, but sometimes simply examining the moods in your dreams can help you achieve a better understanding of their ultimate meanings. Unlocking and interpreting the moods in your dreams can often help you get a clearer view on your personal relationships, and your real feelings on many of your life’s important issues. There are no exact answers or meanings to your dream moods because your own dreams are unique to you and no other person has the exact same emotions and experiences. In this way your own dreams can only be connected to your own personal life and experiences when it comes to interpreting their meanings in a dream.
Once you have gained a bit of insight and understanding of your dream moods, it can help provide you with a better understanding of your self in your waking life too. It is also important to note that the moods you might experience in your own dreams are not symbols that are replacing something else. Your dream moods are more like reflections of your inner feelings, and the moods and feelings expressed in your dreams can help you to deal with issues like depression, guilt, or other complex emotions.
Psychologists have noted that sometimes your true underlying moods may have been repressed during waking life, and they can be more exposed and more accessible when they are expressed within your dreams when your normal defenses are not as strong as they are when you are awake. It is interesting to not that in the world of dream moods, negative moods, emotions and feelings tend to occur twice as often as good moods or pleasant feelings. Surprisingly, researchers have found that for most people, fear and anxiety are the most commonly experienced moods remembered after a dream, followed by anger and sadness.
The mood of fear in a dream can indicate you are experiencing true anxieties in various parts of your waking life. Fear in a dream can also signify that you believe your real life activities may not be as successful as you had hoped or anticipated. The mood of a fearful dream might also mean something as simple as resistance to changes in your normal waking life. Anxiety, like fear, is a dream mood that shows you are probably experiencing true anxiety in part of your waking life, and can be considered as a reflection of what you’re feeling during the daytime. Any dream that is dominated by the mood of anxiety might be trying to tell you that you may have real problems with repressed thoughts, unexpressed emotions, resentments, and hostility in your waking life to deal with.