Vivid dreams seem to be a family tradition. My dad would talk in his sleep and often would 'act out' his dreams. During a weekend stay at a local Scout camp (I worked for the Boy Scouts for about 20 years), we stayed in cabins; and in our cabin, his side of the bed was up against a wall (apparently his side of the bed at home wasn't). From my room across the cabin, I heard him smack in to the bedroom wall, later learning that he had jumped up in bed and chased someone right into the wall.
I spent my 40th birthday in my dad's hospital room, where dehydration was one of the doctor's concerns. Apparently, hallucinations are a symptom of dehydration. After an evening of zig-zag, sometimes-difficult-to-follow conversation, my dad asked me to get the nurse a Coke. I realized that he thought she was his home-health nurse when I looked at her name tag, and it wasn't the same name he was using.
I went to the nurse's station to ask what to do about his hallucinations. The nurse said to gently bring him back to reality and let him know that he's hallucinating. Some time around 2:30 a.m., I'd pretty much resorted to 'yeah, dad. whatever.'
I've carried on the tradition, in many cases, much to the concern of my wife. A couple of recurring dreams from my earlier parenthood days:
- I'd dive out of bed to keep my kids from falling, a dream that made a trip to the dome of the Texas capital building a nightmare (get away from the railing! Daddy, we want to see!) and a visit to the Grand Canyon a real nerve-tester.
- I'd stand up in bed and reach up to get the kids off the ceiling fan, a dream that significantly improved my wife's sleep-to-alert reflexes (I'm sure her response saved my fingers and the top of my head many times).
My 'favorite' has its own place in the lore of our family history, a story oft' repeated 'round campfires and television sets.
My wife stayed up late to watch a movie with daughter #1, and I'd already gone to bed. She walked into our room, and I jumped out of bed, ran to her and grabbed her by the shoulders. With what I would call my best Jack-Nicholson-'Here's-Johnny' leer, I started shaking her and shouting, 'I've got you now!' My wife's not petite, so fortunately I woke up before she and daughter #1 threw me down the stairs (I did make it a point to tell a friend because I'd heard that sleepwalking was a solid defense for murdering your wife if there's documentation of previous, similar events . . . I have since heard that it's not).
Now it seems like my action-filled dreams are limited to seeing 3-D geometric patterns on the ceiling, usually well-lit, and me waking up my wife to show her and explain the details. She's usually not interested.
But the tradition continues . . .
So far, daughter #2 only talks in her sleep. When my son was much younger, I woke up to him standing next to my side of the bed. Fortunately, my ever-vigilant wife sounded the alarm, 'He's still asleep . . . and he's about to pee!' When daughter #1 was younger, I followed her down the stairs in the middle of the night and caught her pulling down her pajama bottoms as she was getting ready to pee in the middle of the living room.
I have the flu this week, and I left work early Monday. After daughter #2 came home from school, I went upstairs to take a nap while she went across the street to play. Unfortunately, daughter #2 has become quite the 5th-grade socialite, and her friends started ringing our phone just a few minutes after she left. Around 5 p.m., I gave up and called her to come home.
From 5:17 p.m., when I gave her the phone, until 6:35 p.m., when my wife called, there were no dreams.
For somebody who always dreams, that's pretty frightening. When daughter #2 woke me up to talk to my wife, I felt like I had to crawl out of a deep black hole to wake up. And that darkness is all I remember about those 78 minutes.
Pretty scary, although I'm sure the fever prompted that deep sleep; but I keep wondering, where did I go?
Just in case you missed my previous post, only one person can answer that:
5 comments:
I only remember one time in my whole life that I woke up hours after I had gone to bed and didn't dream. It felt like I laid down, then woke up.
We had driven all day to Six Flags, had to change hotels because of bed bugs and air conditioner problems and fell into bed at around 10:30. I was about 9 years old but I'll never forget that weird feeling of not dreaming.
That must have been unsettling...is 78 minutes long enough to get to the dreaming stage of sleep? I have no idea...I often don't remember my dreams. But I'm a raging imsomniac these days, too. Oy.
PS. About my dog...he's good and all, but he's no Gandhi.
78 minutes? Pfffttt I've covered a good three episodes of dreams by then (see paragraph one). . . thanks!
insomniac
I also can't let my spelling mistakes go...keeps me up at night.
I didn't realize this was a family trait, I thought it was just me. I have vivid dreams as well, sometimes with intricate plot lines, sometimes even lucid. I've only managed to break through the sleep paralysis a few times.
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