Nightmares and their effects on our lives is a subset of sleep hygiene
that gets little attention. Nightmares are often thought of as a symptom
of a much larger problem or diagnosis, such as anxiety, posttraumatic
stress syndromes, insomnia or psychosis. It has not been traditionally
thought of as a stand-alone issue until fairly recently. Since it is
estimated that up to 30 percent of adults report they have nightmares at
least once a month, it is not a small issue. For the sake of this
article, I will define nightmares as dreams that impact the sleeper
enough to wake them and/or affect their daytime life in a significantly
negative way.
At the Maimonides
International Nightmare Treatment Center in Albuquerque, the
treatment method used for those seeking relief from debilitating
nightmares is called imagery-rehearsal therapy. The patient is taught to
use visualization during the day to transform the nightmare into a more
positive context and have it become a different dream. By training the
mind during the day the nightmare becomes less debilitating.
In a 2001 paper
by Krakow, et al., 168 women who had been victims of rape and were
experiencing repeated nightmares were studied.1 The women were divided
equally into a control group and study group. The experimental group was
taught to focus on a very relaxing situation they could recall in their
minds and to write down their disturbing dream and change it in any way
they wished. They were then to spend about 10 minutes a day visualizing
this newly configured dream scenario. This process lasted for six
months. Those who had done the imagery-rehearsal therapy have fewer
nightmares and of less intensity than the control group. Other symptoms,
such as insomnia and posttraumatic stress, improved more significantly
than the control group.
Since then, other studies were performed with children and war
veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan. The returning vets are part of a
joint program funded by the Pentagon and administrated by the University
of Pittsburgh, led by Anne Germain, a
Canadian sleep scientist. All of these studies showed the power of
visualization in improving the nightmare scenario.
William
Domhoff from UC Santa Cruz is a dream researcher and sleep
specialist who is a proponent of imagery-reversal therapy. He believes
that the nightmares are manifestation of our deepest concerns. It is not
so important that the dreams be analyzed in great detail but rather
seen for their overall emotional story. If they are waking the patient
up and preventing them from falling asleep again then it is worthwhile
focusing on transforming the nightmares into a less destructive force.
An interesting aspect of nightmares is how the greater culture or
media influences them. Michael Schredl, a German researcher reviewed
studies of nightmares over the last 100 years and found certain
trends regarding content. The bogeyman was a prominent theme in
nightmare content in the 1920's, which then gave way to ghosts, devils
and witches in the 1950's and 1960's. Recently, Freddy Krueger and Voldemort
have entered into our collective dreamscape. His study of German
children found that there was no appreciable
difference between the heavy computer users and TV watchers vs.
average TV and computer users regarding frequency of nightmares.2 The
content of the nightmares was influenced by media but the frequency was
not, so it would seem.
One might ask what the purpose of nightmares might be? Is there an
evolutionary reason for having nightmares? Do we need them or are they a
type of dysfunction?
One theory is that nightmares evolved as a form of simulation,
training for real-life threats that could be worked out or rehearsed in
our dream life so that we would be prepared should a real-life scenario
present itself. Another theory is that nightmares are a way of
desensitizing the sleeper to something frightening by repeated exposure
in a less frightening way. Each approximate encounter would act to
lessen the reaction in the mind.
Yet another concept is that nightmares, instead of preparation for a
possible future encounter, might be a way to resolve a past trauma.
Studies have shown that trauma victims have more nightmares, which would
indicate some way of working out the disturbing experience in the dream
life, or subconscious. The most appealing concept of dreams and
nightmares, which makes the most sense to me, is that dream life, like
waking life, is purely a reflection of our reactions to our experiences.
In waking life, our thoughts and emotions run the spectrum from what we
crave and desire to what we resist and fear the most. Why shouldn't our
dream life reflect this same spectrum of positive and negative
experiences?
Understanding the Dream Life
As physicians, we need to be aware of whether or not the dream life
becomes an obstacle to health and well-being, and intervene in a way
that is beneficial. David Eisenberg's 1985 book, Encounters With Qi, has
a chapter entitled "Freud is not here." He felt that there was a
somatization of inner life in modern China, particularly of mental
illness. Insomnia was relegated to liver qi stasis, with liver yang
rising or heart fire. This is perhaps a vast oversimplification on our
part, as Westerners looking into Chinese medicine's treatment of sleep
disorders. Or maybe Chinese medicine, as embodied in mainland China in
the 1980's, was lacking in a refined approach to treating a disturbing
dream life. The West doesn't have much sophistication in this field
either until now.
The Tibetans seem to be more attuned to this type of disorder. Dream
yoga, as practiced in Tibetan
Buddhism, is a way of utilizing the art of lucid dreaming to
continue bringing awareness and intention into the dream life. Lucid
dreaming can be learned by training the mind to notice dreaming then
manipulate the dream while still dreaming.
Tibetan Lamas might argue that there is not much difference on an
absolute level between waking and dream experience, both being illusions
of reality. What is the difference in experiencing a memory of what
happened yesterday at lunch and what happened last night in our dream?
Both experiences are conceptual. What the Tibetans and the sleep
researchers who are doing imagery-reversal therapy would agree upon is
the fundamental understanding that we can alter our experience by using
our minds to create new experiences. We can alter our dream life by
consciously creating new scenarios, images to focus upon over and over
again to condition ourselves to a new outcome. Our mind is our most
powerful tool for change.
As an example, basketball players taught to visualize perfect free
throws only in their minds outperformed a group who
physically practiced shooting free throws. When focusing the mind on a
goal, the mental image formed creates a picture that the subconscious
can grab. Since the unconscious mind cannot distinguish between real and
fake images, it takes all images to be real. The feelings and emotions
that result from creating these images have the same effects on the
physical body as a real event would have.
The power of visualization as a tool for creating profound change in
an individual's life cannot be over emphasized. Whether it is changing
the patterns of disturbing dreams or impacting repetitive negative
belief systems that underlie bad habits, intentional visualization can
create real physiological health.
References
- Krakow B, Hollifield M, Johnston L, et al. Imagery
rehearsal therapy for chronic nightmares in sexual assault survivors
with posttraumatic stress disorder: a randomized controlled trial.
JAMA 2001 Aug 1;286(5):537-45.
- Schredl M, Anders A, Hellriegel S, Rehm A. TV viewing, computer
game playing and nightmares in school children. Dreaming
Jun 2008;18(2):69-76.