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<title>Dream Interpretation and Types of Dreams</title> 
<link>http://www.bharatbhasha.net/psychology.php/37378</link> 
<description>... be very useful both to people attempting to interpret their own dreams and to professional psychologist and therapists striving to interpret the dreams of others.  This article will discuss these categories of dreams.

Dream #1 - the Daydream
While not technically a dream, since it takes place while we are awake, researchers are looking into just where the daydream fits on the spectrum of dreaming, and what it can teach us about more traditional dreams.

It is estimated that most people spend between 70 and 120 minutes each day engaged in daydreaming.  Daydreaming is thought to be a...</description> 
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 <item>
  <title>The Dialogue of Dreams - Part I</title> 
  <link>http://www.bharatbhasha.net/psychology.php/21843</link> 
  <description>... intoxication. With the exception of this highly dubious role, dreams do seem to have three important functions:To process repressed emotions (wishes, in Freud's speech) and other mental content which was suppressed and stored in the unconscious. To order, classify and, generally, to pigeonhole...</description> 
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  <title>The Dialogue of Dreams - Part II</title> 
  <link>http://www.bharatbhasha.net/psychology.php/21844</link> 
  <description>... of the brain (EEG). A dreaming person has the pattern of someone who is wide awake and alert. This seems to sit well with a theory of dreams as active therapists, engaged in the arduous task of incorporating new (often contradictory and incompatible) information into an elaborate personal...</description> 
  </item><item>
  <title>Do We All Dream in the Same Language?</title> 
  <link>http://www.bharatbhasha.net/psychology.php/21939</link> 
  <description>... our emotions to our survival? Take a look at what the human infant, what Dr. Richard Lewis refers to "the world's most interesting noncognitive mammal."Probably you've read about the studies with infants and the human face - there's nothing, NOTHING more captivating to an infant than someone's...</description> 
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  <title>Senoi Dream Theory</title> 
  <link>http://www.bharatbhasha.net/psychology.php/22030</link> 
  <description>... the psychological world in 1953 on "accident" by a man named Carl Jung.Many Native tribes where known for using dreams as a source for healing and sometimes other aspects of life such as choosing a 'career'. The Senoi were no different. The Senoi were a group of people from Malaysia numbering...</description> 
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  <title>An Explanation Of The Chinese Dream Dictionary</title> 
  <link>http://www.bharatbhasha.net/psychology.php/169103</link> 
  <description>... other facts about the Chinese dream dictionary.

The Grandmaster Zhou is known by another name also which is Zhong Gong. Grandmaster Zhou lived about 3000 years ago and the reason he is so important when it comes to the Chinese dictionary is that he is known to have made the first Chinese...</description> 
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