[Src]
A dust mite that enters your moist bed sheets as you sweat.

No title available
No title available
d e v o n
wallacepolsom
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

izzy's playlists!

PR's Tumblrdome

Discoholic 🪩
trying on a metaphor

oozey mess

Product Placement
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Today's Document
cherry valley forever

Andulka
Three Goblin Art
Sade Olutola

if i look back, i am lost
tumblr dot com

Kiana Khansmith
seen from Brazil

seen from Türkiye

seen from Singapore
seen from Colombia

seen from Mexico
seen from Kenya
seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Mexico
seen from Belarus

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Canada
@jolie-baie
[Src]
A dust mite that enters your moist bed sheets as you sweat.
BAZAAR’s Little Black Book: The Top Wedding Planner’s In the U.S.
Diamond ring? Check. Next, have one of these top-tier event designers on speed-dial.
See the full list.
Oh, oh, oh
Won't you come and give me more?
Couture Catalogue — Tony Ward F/W 2016 Highlights (1 / 2)
Marchesa Resort 2017
The dresses of my DREAMS
oldie but goodie
TVアニメ『モブサイコ100』 ティザーPV
SO MUCH YES.
Takumitoxin - https://twitter.com/takumitoxin
Vologda, Russia. Photo by @memory-of-the-romanovs.
Daydream delusion Limousine Eyelash Oh, baby with your pretty face Drop a tear in my wineglass Look at those big eyes See what you mean to me Sweet cakes and milkshakes I am a delusion angel I am a fantasy parade I want you to know what I think Don’t want you to guess anymore You have no idea where I came from We have no idea where we’re going Lodged in life Like two branches in a river Flowing downstream Caught in the current I’ll carry you. You’ll carry me That’s how it could be Don’t you know me? Don’t you know me by now?
Before Sunrise (1995)
Details // CHANEL Spring-Summer 2014
Why do we dream?
In the 3rd millennium BCE, Mesopotamian kings recorded and interpreted their dreams on wax tablets. In the years since, we haven’t paused in our quest to understand why we dream. And while we still don’t have any definitive answers, we have some theories. Here are seven reasons we might dream.
1. In the early 1900’s, Sigmund Freud proposed that while all of our dreams, including our nightmares, are a collection of images from our daily conscious lives, they also have symbolic meanings which relate to the fulfillment of our subconscious wishes. Freud theorized that everything we remember when we wake up from a dream is a symbolic representation of our unconscious, primitive thoughts, urges and desires. Freud believed that by analyzing those remembered elements, the unconscious content would be revealed to our conscious mind, and psychological issues stemming from its repression could be addressed and resolved.
2. To increase performance on certain mental tasks, sleep is good, but dreaming while sleeping is better. In 2010, researchers found that subjects were much better at getting through a complex 3D maze if they had napped and dreamed of the maze prior to their second attempt. In fact, they were up to ten times better at it than those who only thought of the maze while awake between attempts, and those who napped but did not dream about the maze. Researchers theorize that certain memory processes can happen only when we are asleep, and our dreams are a signal that these processes are taking place.
3. There are about ten thousand trillion neural connections within the architecture of your brain. They are created by everything you think, and everything you do. A 1983 neurobiological theory of dreaming, called “reverse learning,” holds that while sleeping, and mainly during REM sleep cycles, your neocortex reviews these neural connections and dumps the unnecessary ones. Without this unlearning process, which results in your dreams, your brain could be overrun by useless connections, and parasitic thoughts could disrupt the necessary thinking you need to do while you’re awake.
4. The “Continual Activation Theory” proposes that your dreams result from your brain’s need to constantly consolidate and create long term memories in order to function properly. So when external input falls below a certain level, like when you’re asleep, your brain automatically triggers the generation of data from its memory storages, which appear to you in the form of the thoughts and feelings you experience in your dreams. In other words, your dreams might be a random screensaver your brain turns on so it doesn’t completely shut down.
5. Dreams involving dangerous and threatening situations are very common, and the Primitive Instinct Rehearsal Theory holds that the content of a dream is significant to its purpose. Whether it’s an anxiety filled night of being chased through the woods by a bear, or fighting off a ninja in a dark alley, these dreams allow you to practice your fight or flight instincts and keep them sharp and dependable, in case you’ll need them in real life. But it doesn’t always have to be unpleasant; for instance, dreams about your attractive neighbor could actually give your reproductive instinct some practice too.
6. Stress neurotransmitters in the brain are much less active during the REM stage of sleep, even during dreams of traumatic experiences, leading some researchers to theorize that one purpose of dreaming is to take the edge off painful experiences to allow for psychological healing. Reviewing traumatic events in your dreams with less mental stress may grant you a clearer perspective and an enhanced ability to process them in psychologically healthy ways. People with certain mood disorders and PTSD often have difficulty sleeping, leading some scientists to believe that lack of dreaming may be a contributing factor to their illnesses.
7. Unconstrained by reality and the rules of conventional logic, in your dreams your mind can create limitless scenarios to help you grasp problems and formulate solutions that you may not consider while awake. John Steinbeck called it “the Committee of Sleep” and research has demonstrated the effectiveness of dreaming on problem solving. It’s also how renowned chemist August Kekule discovered the structure of the benzene molecule, and it’s the reason that sometimes the best solution for a problem is to “sleep on it”.
And those are just a few of the more prominent theories. As technology increases our capability for understanding the brain, it’s possible that one day we will discover the definitive reason for them; but until that time arrives, we’ll just have to keep on dreaming.
I want to touch you but I'm too late
I want to touch you but there's history
Ashi Studio Spring/Summer 2015 Haute Couture