Question:

Dream about partner's sister?

by Guest61781  |  earlier

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i had a dream that i was with my partner's sister (who is my close friend),kissing,touching..what does this dream mean?

just so u know i was talking to my partner last night just before i fall asleep and just before that i was talking to my partner's sister (who is a very close friend to me)

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  1. It means your Bi


  2. ummm well you can't be sure yet of ur feelings

    u might like her and this dream might be telling u that

    or you might not, cuz we can't control our dreams

    however, its for the best if you figure out if you do or don't

    and you could do that by sitting there and thinking these thoughts wen u arent dreaming and if u like it- u like her

    if its just wrong or u dont like it or feel anything- u dont like her

    simple :).xx


  3. Maybe you are feeling too close to her, or just right? I think this dream is just about feeling close. I wouldn't take it literally unless you think you are attracted to her. Most dreams that are about s*x are about something else entirely. :)

  4. you like her

  5. dont go there  

  6. Obviously your partner and her sister would have the same characteristics and you are attracted to those same qualities.

    You have chosen your partner, and you have already stated that the sister is a close friend.  Normally you would kiss and touch a good friend but you wouldn't do it to her openly because it would be seen as inappropriate and taken the wrong way so you do it in your dreams.

    It is a way of connecting to her on a cosmic level, it is beautiful display of love and affection between two friends, that's all.  

    Of course this is just my interpretation.

  7. Sounds like you love this girl. Dreams about touching,kissing, inappropriate things can mean you have a obsession or an affection towards the person.

  8. Wow! I'd pay to watch your dreams. Mine pale by comparison.

    Sounds like you may be attracted to her. Remember, there is nothing to be ashamed of if you are attracted to another woman.

  9. By the sounds of it, she might come to you to ask you out, or vice-versa.  Or that your partner's sister wants to "experiment"

  10. Dreams are the images, thoughts and feelings experienced while sleeping, particularly strongly associated with rapid eye movement sleep. The contents and biological purposes of dreams are not fully understood, though they have been a topic of speculation and interest throughout recorded history. The scientific study of dreams is known as oneirology.

    Contents [hide]

    1 Neurology of sleep and dreams

    1.1 Discovery of REM

    2 Dream theories

    2.1 Activation-synthesis

    2.2 Continual-activation

    2.3 Dreams and memory

    2.3.1 Hippocampus and memory

    2.4 Functional hypotheses

    2.5 Dreams and psychosis

    3 Cultural history

    4 Dream content

    4.1 Emotions

    4.2 Sexual content

    4.3 Recurring dreams

    4.4 Common themes

    5 Relationship with mental illness

    6 Dream interpretation

    7 Other associated phenomena

    7.1 Lucid dreaming

    7.2 Dreams of absent-minded transgression

    7.3 Dreaming and the "real world"

    7.4 Recalling dreams

    7.5 Déjà vu

    7.6 Dream pre-programming

    7.7 Dream incorporation

    8 See also

    9 References

    10 Further reading

    11 External links



    [edit] Neurology of sleep and dreams

    Main article: REM sleep



    EEG showing brainwaves during REM sleepThere is no universally agreed biological definition of dreaming. General observation shows that dreams are strongly associated with rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, during which an electroencephalogram shows brain activity to be most like wakefulness. Participant-nonremembered dreams during non-REM sleep are normally more mundane in comparison.[1] During a typical lifespan, a human spends a total of about six years dreaming[2] (which is about 2 hours each night[3]). It is unknown where in the brain dreams originate, if there is a single origin for dreams or if multiple portions of the brain are involved, or what the purpose of dreaming is for the body or mind. It has been hypothesized that dreams are the result of naturally occurring dimethyltryptamine (DMT) in the brain.[citation needed]

    During REM sleep, the release of certain neurotransmitters is completely suppressed. As a result, motor neurons are not stimulated, a condition known as REM atonia. This prevents dreams from resulting in dangerous movements of the body.

    Studies show that various species of Mammals and Birds experience REM during sleep.[4]

    [edit] Discovery of REM

    In 1953 Eugene Aserinsky discovered REM sleep while working in the surgery of his PhD advisor. Aserinsky noticed that the sleepers' eyes fluttered beneath their closed eyelids, later using a polygraph machine to record their brain waves during these periods. In one session he awakened a subject who was wailing and crying out during REM and confirmed his suspicion that dreaming was occurring.[5] In 1953 Aserinsky and his advisor published the ground-breaking study in Science.[6]

    [edit] Dream theories

    [edit] Activation-synthesis

    In 1976, J. Allan Hobson and Robert McCarley proposed a new theory that changed dream research, challenging the previously held Freudian view of dreams as unconscious wishes to be interpreted. The activation synthesis theory asserts that the sensory experiences are fabricated by the cortex as a means of interpreting chaotic signals from the pons. They propose that in REM sleep, the ascending cholinergic PGO (ponto-geniculo-occipital) waves stimulate higher midbrain and forebrain cortical structures, producing rapid eye movements. The activated forebrain then synthesizes the dream out of this internally generated information. They assume that the same structures that induce REM sleep also generate sensory information.

    Hobson and McCarly's 1976 research suggested that the signals interpreted as dreams originated in the brain stem during REM sleep. However, research by Mark Solms suggests that dreams are generated in the forebrain, and that REM sleep and dreaming are not directly related.[7] While working in the neurosurgery department at hospitals in Johannesburg and London, Solms had access to patients with various brain injuries. He began to question patients about their dreams and confirmed that patients with damage to the parietal lobe stopped dreaming; this finding was in line with Hobson's 1977 theory. However, Solms did not encounter cases of loss of dreaming with patients having brain stem damage. This observation forced him to question Hobson's prevailing theory which marked the brain stem as the source of the signals interpreted as dreams. Solms viewed the idea of dreaming as a function of many complex brain structures as validating Freudian dream theory, an idea that drew criticism from Hobson.[8] Unhappy about Holmes' attempts at discrediting him, Solms, along with partner Edward Nadar, undertook a series of traumatic-injury impact studies using several different species of primates, particularly howler monkeys, in order to more fully understand the role brain damage plays in dream pathology. Solms' experiments proved inconclusive, however, as the high  

  11. Lets be reasonable I had a dream once I was getting eaten by a pizza but do you honestly think a pizza could eat me. Just because you had a dream about your partner's sister doesn't mean you have feelings for her. You would know if you have feelings for her if that's what your scared about. I wouldn't take that dream seriously.  

  12. you usually dream about what happened in the day

    since you talked to this girl she was somewhere in your mind and so you dreamed about her

    the kissing part may have nothing to do with your conscience

    but it might also mean that you have feelings deep down for her

    or feeling for girls

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