Why Do We FORGET Our Dreams _ Dream Science To Fall Asleep To
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In this episode, I uncover why the brain is designed to forget most dreams. During REM sleep, the neurotransmitter norepinephrine, which is essential for memory formation, is almost completely absent. Without it, the brain struggles to encode dream experiences into long-term storage. The dreams you do remember are usually the ones you wake up during or immediately after. Interrupted REM cycles trap fragments of the dream in your working memory before they dissolve.
Another theory suggests forgetting dreams is protective. Dreams often contain bizarre, disturbing, or socially inappropriate content. Remembering every dream could blur the line between reality and imagination, causing confusion and distress. The brain may be designed to forget as a form of psychological hygiene.
This episode is structured to help you drift off while satisfying your curiosity about the mysterious world of dreams. No sudden sounds. No jarring transitions. Just gentle narration and the slow unraveling of one of sleep's greatest puzzles.
Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play because the dream you cannot remember may be the one your brain decided you did not need to keep.
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