What is it about?
Women’s dreams have been more negatively affected by COVID-19 than men’s dreams, according to this international study of 2,888 participants. Women showed lower rates of positive emotions and higher levels of anxiety, sadness, anger and references to biological processes, health and death in their pandemic dreams compared with dreams from ordinary tines. Men’s pandemic dreams showed somewhat higher levels of negative emotions, anxiety and death than in common dreams, but the effects were less pronounced than for women.
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Why is it important?
Dreams can help us understand our emotional reactions to the pandemic. For example, one mother in the study dreamed that her child’s school contacted her to say that the child’s whole class was being sent to her condominium to be home-schooled for the duration of the pandemic. When mothers of young children hear that dream, there is a laughter but also usually a strong empathy at the overwhelmed feeling the dream dramatizes. Your dreams can make you more aware of just what about the pandemic is bothering you the most--and sharing them with trusted others is a good conversation-starter for talking about these shared feelings.
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Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Dreams about COVID-19 versus normative dreams: Trends by gender., Dreaming, September 2020, American Psychological Association (APA),
DOI: 10.1037/drm0000149.
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