My Blog List

Friday, 13 January 2012

What is REM and why is it so important to our good health?


REM or Rapid Eye Movement is a trance state and is used during dream sleep.  It takes up about 20% of our sleep pattern and occurs about every 90 minutes. We need to enter the REM state in order to assimilate information. It is a state when we are open to suggestions and when in the REM trance state we are able to alter people’s perceptions.

During the day we build up stress in the form of undischarged emotions, such as when the elderly lady runs into us with her shopping trolley and doesn’t apologise, we get stressed and want to say something, but we don’t. This pent up anxiety is undischarged emotion, we deal with this by assimilating the event during REM and change it into a narrative form that can be safely stored in the neocortex but without the emotional content.

All our days stress and anxieties are dealt with this way, in an attempt to empty our metaphoric anxiety bucket. If we don’t manage to deal with all the stress and anxiety during our REM sleep, we lose our intellectual control and more anxiety builds up, we then fall into bouts of anger, depression or anxiety.

Depressed people worry excessively which creates an overload of dreaming, in turn all the energy expelled trying to deal with the worry leaves a person exhausted in the morning. The brain may even shut down before all the excess anxiety is dealt with and this results in the person being woken up typically around 4 am, still tired and with an anxiety bucket already partly full, their bodies haven’t had enough slow wave sleep – a type of sleep needed for our bodies to regain energy and make repairs to the body. Our job is to stop the excessive worrying and to get the sleep patterns back to normal. We do this by creating REM in trance work and feeding new information to the subconscious mind, by replicating this system we can deal more effectively with trauma.

REM sleep is also important to help us find solutions to problems and for memory consolidation during dreaming or daydreaming.

Karen Taylor Hypnotherapy


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