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The Science of Us Sleep Institute presents "The Good side of bad dreams."
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Do you find yourself tossing and turning at night, plagued by weird nightmares about stuff that's been worrying you?
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You know, like a dream where you catch a disease that's been in the news, or where your boss is literally eating you alive.
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Don't worry, those terrible visions are actually helping your mental health.
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Research shows that the things that concern us most while we are awake, continue to mess with us when we sleep.
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Your unconscious brain takes your abstract fears and turns them into stories in the form of nightmares.
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When you experience a nightmare, you wake up, and remember it like something that really happened to you.
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Even if it was totally unrealistic.
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In other words, nightmares are sort of like factories that turn your fears into memories.
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Here's where things get interesting.
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Memories are easier for the human mind to deal with than vague anxieties about the world around us.
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A memory might make you feel bad, but your brain thinks of it is something in the past.
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And therefore, something you don't need to panic about in the present.
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That's right, nightmares actually help distance you from your fears.
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And don't let dread of bad dreams keep you from going to sleep, because that can land you in real trouble.
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Researchers have found that sleep deprivation correlates strongly to the development of mental disorders.
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You need bad dreams to help you process all the bad stuff in the world around you.
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So, let's all take a moment to thank our evil nighttime visions.
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Without them, waking life would be the real nightmare.