Jen’s Reviews > Why we dream - the definitive answer > Status Update

Jen
Jen is 65% done
This book is growing my Mt. TBR...
Aug 22, 2020 08:04AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer

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Jen’s Previous Updates

Jen
Jen is 90% done
References and notes start at 90%. Love it! Review to come. It took a while for me to get into this book, but I think the screen I was reading it on was too small and I couldn’t focus well enough on it. Once I switched to a bigger screen, it was great! LOVED this book!
Aug 23, 2020 06:25AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 83% done
“Interesting studies from WHO show that flourishing rural communities in third world countries, using these sort of naturally supportive approaches, have a much higher success rate in curing psychotic illness than developed western countries that have come to rely on ‘antipsychotic’ meditation. (Note 46)”
Aug 23, 2020 05:53AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 83% done
“Because psychotic people are so hypersensitive to metaphor, mental health professionals need to be trained how to reduce their patients’ arousal levels with calming metaphors. Conversely, they need to consciously avoid metaphors that may remind patients of their predicament, flipping them back into right hemisphere dominance and psychosis.”
Aug 23, 2020 05:50AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 82% done
“Neurophysiological evidence confirms that, when schizophrenic people are hearing voices, the speech centers in the left neocortex are activated. (Note 38)”
Aug 23, 2020 05:47AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 82% done
“We don’t talk when the right hemisphere is dominant during dreaming in REM sleep... during a psychotic episode, if the person is in the REM state awake, there would still be some logical activity and thinking taking place in the left hemisphere. But, because the REM stare is not anticipating any input from the left hemisphere, it has to interpret those thoughts metaphorically...” (aliens, voices, etc)
Aug 23, 2020 05:46AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 81% done
“...she was very agitated and in an active psychotic state. The more we studied the video, the more it became clear to us that the teacher was exhibiting REM state phenomena. These included rapid eye movements with the eyes open, dissociation, instant emotional responses to metaphors, ... This gave us the possibility...schizophrenia is waking reality processed through the dreaming brain.”
Aug 23, 2020 05:43AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 80% done
“It is in Stage 4 slow-wave sleep that growth hormones are released, which is thought to repair the damage caused to body tissues by the west and tear of everyday activities.” So too much REM sleep prevents the body from healing.
Aug 23, 2020 05:39AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 78% done
“In one meta-analysis of hundreds of studies, for example, it was found that depressed people given psychodynamic, ‘insight’ oriented therapy (such as psychoanalysis and gestalt therapy) had a poorer outcome than control groups of depressed people who received no treatment of any kind. (Note 29) In other words, psychodynamic forms of therapy can make depression worse.”
Aug 23, 2020 05:38AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 77% done
“Today’s worry brings on tomorrow’s depression.”
Aug 23, 2020 05:35AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


Jen
Jen is 77% done
“Research by drug companies (not highly publicized) has shown that there is virtually no difference in outcome between antidepressant treatment and treatment by placebos. (Note 28)... a well-delivered placebo generates hope. And hope will focus attention elsewhere. With realistic hope in place, individuals are less likely to misuse imagination and catastrophise.”
Aug 23, 2020 05:34AM
Why we dream  - the definitive answer


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