The Guardian (Charlottetown)

COVID-19 issues at home

The pandemic means more people remember what they're dreaming about

- JOANNE LAUCIUS

If it seems you’re dreaming more frequently or more vividly than usual, you’re not alone.

The stress related to the pandemic means that sleep has become more fragmented, which means people are more likely to remember dreams.

And because many people don’t have to get up to prepare to go to work, they’re sleeping later.

The last cycle of REM sleep in the morning hours lasts longer and the sleeper wakes up immediatel­y after, which is what makes these dreams so vivid, said Dr. Joseph De Koninck, a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Ottawa who has studied sleep and dreams for five decades.

The amygdala, the part of the brain that processes memory and emotions, is active during dreaming, while the centre that controls rational thought is in repose. Few people read, write or count in their dreams, for example, said De Koninck.

“Dreaming is open season for the mind. There are no restrictio­ns in dreams. You can kill people or be killed. Fantastic things can happen. You can fly.”

NOT EVERYONE REMEMBERS THEIR DREAMS

Typically, only about half of people remember their dreams. Because sleep has become more fragmented, some people who don’t normally remember dreams are now recalling them. It has added up to an epidemic of dreaming, a phenomenon that has been reported around the world.

A survey of sleep habits launched by Canadian sleep scientists on April 3 has found that between 20 and 30 per cent of the approximat­ely 2,300 respondent­s have reported that the intensity and frequency of bad dreams and nightmares has increased.

“And for most of them, this is actually disrupting their sleep,” said Dr. Rebecca Robillard, who leads clinical sleep research at the Royal Ottawa’s Institute of Mental Health Research.

Those who reported greater frequency and intensity of bad dreams or nightmares were more likely to be female, and to have higher stress, anxiety and depressive symptoms.

The survey, which is still open, is aimed at taking the pulse of how people are coping and at assessing the psychologi­cal, social and financial impacts of the pandemic. “All of which interact with our sleep and dreams,” said Robillard.

Dreams are fascinatin­g because they have a function in themselves. They are not a repetition of conscious life, said De Koninck.

“Dreams are never a replay of the day. Usually, the only one who can make the connection is the dreamer, because dreams are distorted,” he said.

One study, for example, showed that it was very difficult for independen­t judges to connect the events a person reported from their waking day with the content of their dreams.

Issues that bother you in the day, which may be subliminal, follow you into the night, said De Koninck.

“There’s tension, not necessaril­y conscious, that eats up a lot of your brain’s time. You might not notice it, but you’re trying to deal with it. Everything you do now, even going to the grocery store, is quite stressful.”

In the pandemic environmen­t, the brain is constantly trying to process anxiety and uncertaint­y, he said.

“Your brain is like a computer. It’s like you have a computer virus that’s taking up space.”

DREAMS HELP ADAPT TO STRESS

De Koninck recently received a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council grant to further analyze a “bank of dreams” from 1,200 subjects ranging in age from 12 to 85 years old.

Many elderly people dream of things they did when they were adolescent­s. The intense emotions people had in that time resurface in their dreams for the rest of their lives, he said.

Some researcher­s have proposed that dreaming helps in the adaptation to stress.

The “threat simulation theory” of dreaming posits that dreaming is an ancient biological defence mechanism used to help mentally prepare for a worst-case scenario, said De Koninck. People asked to rate the stressful emotions in their own dreams often say that they cause less anxiety than an independen­t judge asked to rate the same dream.

The sleep survey has found overall increases in stress, anxiety, depressive symptoms, as well as sleep difficulti­es during the pandemic, said Robillard. But the nature and extent of those changes varied.

On average, people have reported that they are taking longer to fall longer to fall asleep and their sleep was more broken up. Others, especially those working from home, reported getting more sleep.

“Those who sleep less report poorer sleep quality, and also seem to be more stressed,” said Robillard.

Dr. Julie Carrier, a psychology professor at the University of Montreal and scientific director of Canadian Sleep and Circadian Network, said dreaming has received a lot of attention during the pandemic. But insomnia and other sleep disorders are an important issue.

Sleep scientists argue that restful slumber is a public health matter. Sleep deprivatio­n affects mood and motivation and results in bad decision-making. Among other conditions, sleep disorders have been linked to obesity, Type 2 diabetes, depression, and dementia.

Before the pandemic, about a quarter of Canadians suffered from sleep disorders, said Carrier.

She believes this proportion will be higher — not just during the pandemic, but for months after.

“The challenges, social and economic, will still be there,” said Carrier.

“Frontline workers were already on atypical schedules. Now they’re doing it under a great deal of stress. And they don’t have time to recuperate.”

 ?? 123RF STOCK ?? Dreams are fascinatin­g because they have a function in themselves. They are not a repetition of conscious life, says one researcher.
123RF STOCK Dreams are fascinatin­g because they have a function in themselves. They are not a repetition of conscious life, says one researcher.
 ?? POSTMEDIA ?? Rebecca Robillard directs clinical sleep research at The Royal Ottawa’s Institute of Mental Health Research.
POSTMEDIA Rebecca Robillard directs clinical sleep research at The Royal Ottawa’s Institute of Mental Health Research.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Joseph De Koninck is a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Ottawa and a sleep and dream researcher.
CONTRIBUTE­D Joseph De Koninck is a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Ottawa and a sleep and dream researcher.

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