What's up with your nightmares? - podcast episode cover

What's up with your nightmares?

May 18, 202614 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Summary

This episode delves into the science of sleep and dreaming with sleep scientist Michelle Carr, author of "Nightmare Obscura." She explains the four stages of sleep, particularly REM sleep's role in emotional regulation, and how nightmares can be linked to stress and trauma. The discussion also covers therapeutic approaches like imagery rehearsal therapy and emerging technologies for dream engineering.

Episode description

Dreams of flying? Nightmares of teeth falling out? Falling off a cliff? As a sleep scientist at the University of Montreal, Michelle Carr has pretty much heard it all. In Michelle’s new book Nightmare Obscura, she explores the science of dreams, nightmares – and even something called dream engineering, where people influence their own dreams while they sleep. Today on Short Wave, co-host Regina G. Barber dives into the science of our sleeping life with Michelle Carr. (encore)

Interested in any upcoming science books? Email us your question at shortwave@npr.org.

Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.

NPR Privacy Policy

Transcript

Intro / Opening

On NPR's Wildcard podcast, Julio Torres says he doesn't need to prove himself to anyone. When someone makes me feel like I have to prove something to them, I just walk away. Seek help. Watch or listen to that wildcard conversation on the NPR app or on YouTube at NPR Wildcard. From NPR.

Unraveling the Mystery of Nightmares

You come home from work, you're exhausted. You finally get into bed, and your head hits the pillow. And then the next thing you know, Your car is barely out of control on the highway. You're going around that turn. But you're in the back seat. You can't reach the brakes. At least that's my recurring nightmare. But when I told that to Michelle Carr, she wasn't phased.

That is a very common dream theme. I have it all the time as well. Uh I think it's just related to our physical body being like not really receiving any sensation of the car pedal. So the dream is like going out of control. As a sleep scientist at the University of Montreal, her job is basically watching people sleep. So when it comes to dreams and nightmares, she's pretty much hurt it all. Teeth falling out or flying or falling or uh finding new rooms in my house.

Michelle is the author of the new book called Nightmare Obscura. In it she explores the science of dreams, nightmares, even something called dream engineering, where people are able to influence their own dreams while they sleep. But why we dream or get nightmares is still a bit mysterious for some people.

We know so much about how important sleep is for our health, but we're only just beginning to uncover whether dreaming and the way that we feel during sleep is significant in in our health as well. Somewhere around one-third of our lives asleep, we had to know more. So today on the show, why your nightmares. Shell car and make nightmares a little more known, a little less scary. I'm Regina Barber, and you're listening to Shortwave, the science podcast from

Sleep Stages and Emotion Processing

Michelle, sleep happens in cycles. So can you just walk us through the four different stages? Sure, yeah. When we first start to fall asleep, there's this stage where we're still a little bit awake and we just start entering a a s a stage where our brainwaves start to slow down and that's obviously called stage one sleep. It's just a really brief period of sleep onset, a transition. And already in stage one sleep we can start to have really bizarre thoughts or images that appear in our mind.

And uh stage two is when our brainwaves slow down a bit more. It's a much more stable uh sleep state, and we're really disconnected from the sensory environment. And gradually we move into a deeper state, stage three, or slow wave sleep, where there are really a lot of very slow waves throughout the brain. And this is the state with the least amount of dreams. Uh our dreams are really short and brief and maybe thought like when we're in stage three sleep, or we don't remember anything at all.

And then the fourth stage is REM sleep. It's called REM because our eyes are moving, rapid eye movement. Um and our body and our mind are actually quite active during REM. Our m our brain is even it looks very similar to wakefulness. We have a lot of really high frequency activity in the brain. And REM sleep is the stage when we also have the most vivid and emotional and sensory uh dream experiences.

It seems like at least for me and many people, uh like th there's an emotional component to sleep and and in your book Nightmare Obscura you write about a study you love where participants

watched embarrassing videos of themselves singing and then their brain showed signs of shame. But that changed after a night of sleep. What does that tell you about like the importance of Yeah, I think this is maybe something that a lot of people can relate to that um, you know, we all go through different stressful experiences during the day.

Uh and at night just before sleep you might be worrying about, you know, an argument you had or like really stressed about s you know, something that happened during the day. And then after a night of sleep, if you think about that same problem, it almost it seems completely manageable. And this is one of the functions of sleep. It's helping us to essentially

in a way let go of um a lot of the distress that we accrue during during the day, like all of the emotions that get activated during the day. We kind of are are able to let go of them during a night of sleep and even for memories that we have, we we let go of the emotion that's attached to them. So it helps us to adapt and to be better able to manage Anything that might come up the next day. It kinda sounds like exposure.

Yeah, I think that there is a a similarity there in that your But I think one of one of the keys about sleep and what what makes it different from maybe like being exposed to stressors and waking life is that there's actually a very physiological component that the brain and the body are in a specific state where

during sleep, we're able to reactivate emotional memories, like the amygdala is active, but our physical body is actually subdued in certain ways. So we think that's really essential to being able to strengthen and to hold on to and to store important memories. But to let go of the kind of stress and arousal that's attached to

Causes and Benefits of Nightmares

And then that makes me think of nightmares, w which mostly seem to happen in that fourth rem sleep stage, when our amygdala, which deals with fear, is more active. In your book you call nightmares almost like a self-attack. Like there's this mental autoimmune reaction. Is that what's happening? Like why do we have them? Mm yeah, I guess part of that analogy is that um the source of nightmares is something that we have experienced. And um so it's we do see that nightmares are specific

Very highly correlated with past experiences of trauma or with adversity. They occur a lot more during periods of stress. It's almost like so strong that it it kind of disrupts sleep anyways. It causes the body to become really aroused and you just are your sleep is interrupted and you wake up in a state of uh distress. Are there any benefits of nightmares? You know, like this mental autoimmune reaction that we have in our minds?

I mean I think there's a benefit to bad dreams in general and even occasional nightmares and I think if nightmares are occurring occasionally or if you're having bad dreams, I think these are all reflecting what is an adaptive process of of sleep and of dreaming, which is you're trying to work through these stress or negative experiences that you've had.

So where do scientists see nightmares in the brain? Is this a different like part of our brain than pleasant dreams? Um I'm I'm just so interested. Yeah, there's actually not too many uh actual recordings of people having nightmares in the sleep lab. This is one of the kind of curious things about studying nightmares or any sleep disorder actually that patients who have nightmares or other sleep disorders frequently at home, they very rarely have episodes in the lab. So Wow

I know. We think I mean that's one of the theories, but um in general, you know, we we have some evidence that Experiencing emotion or uh memories and dreams, it seems like it's the areas of the brain that are active in waking life. But there is some work on kind of the brain basis of nightmares and nightmare disorder. And

One thing that we have seen is that people who have nightmares potentially have um a difference in how their brain regulates emotion. And specifically, um We know that sleep is important for emotion regulation and it specifically helps this connection between basically frontal or prefrontal areas of the brain, which are responsible for helping us to control and to regulate our emotions. and their connection with the amygdala, with our emotional arousal centers.

So in people who have nightmares, what we see is that there's actually less activation in their frontal areas of their brain when they are experiencing emotional distress. In principle, we think this means they're less able to regulate and to control and to manage their emotion, and that this is occurring both.

during REM sleep when emotion regulation is really maintained. And then this spills over into wakefulness as well, making them that they'll have a harder time managing and dealing with stress and waking life because

Dream Engineering and Nightmare Treatment

Oof. And speaking of stress when you're awake, you mentioned in your book that there's a point where nightmares can become harmful to overall health. So what are some methods researchers use to treat nightmares? The main methods to treat nightmares are um imagery rehearsal therapy is the most common therapy, and there's just a lot of other variations of that. And it's basically uh a technique uh

What's called rescripting a nightmare's content. Because nightmares very often have very recurring themes. So if somebody has um, a nightmare of a a tidal wave or a nightmare of being chased. They tend to have these themes that recur over time. And it's almost like this

Script that's learned in in your mental imagery. And so imagery rehearsal therapy works with first just a little bit of exposure to the nightmare, like kind of being more comfortable with looking at your nightmares, talking about them, writing them down and not being so aversive to them.

And then uh changing the nightmare in some way. So you write a slightly new script or you know, change something so it's not so scary or make yourself more powerful. And it's a dream, so you can do whatever you want really.

And then you before sleep you visualize this new, more pleasant or more satisfying dream. Visualize that for ten to twenty minutes um before sleep each night. And over time this It decreases nightmare frequency, it makes people feel less distressed by their nightmares, and it uh improves symptoms overall. Um this is the sleep engineering you were talking about, right? Like trying to do things to affect your dreams. Um

I I I have had personal experiences where I feel like I can alter things within my dream. Is that is that normal? Have you studied that as well?

Yeah, that's definitely very common and that that moves a little bit into what's called lucid dreaming, which is where you become aware of the fact that you're dreaming while you're still asleep. So of course If you're fully aware that you're in a dream, you can control yourself and your own actions, but you can even potentially change the dream environment. The scenery.

Yeah, exactly. You can change things around you. But one thing that I find really interesting is even when you're not fully elucid, like even if you even if you just start to have more agency in your dreams. That can be beneficial. So kind of like you said, maybe you don't realize it's a dream, but you you have this thought like, oh maybe I don't need to be afraid of this thing that's chasing me. Or oh maybe I can just

change the scene or like move into a different room or something. You start to have essentially just just more of this And uh awareness, more awareness in your dream. One of the final chapters of you your book you talk about like exciting new technologies and methods to to study dreams. Can you give us some of those highlights of these new technologies?

Yeah, I mean there's already of course a lot of like apps and ways to just record your dreams and follow like maybe different visualizations you can practice before sleep to influence dreams. Uh but in our lab we're we're pretty interested in new wearable EEG technologies. So these are like wearable headbands that you can use during sleep. They're getting better at being able to detect

uh sleep stages in real time. And this means that we would be able to not only measure someone's sleep at home, but potentially use these types of wearable headbands to actually potentially influence sleep as it's occurring using different types of sensory stimulus. Like to shake you out of a a nightmare or to like soothe you?

Mm-hmm. Yeah, there is one, I think app and wearable technology that that's designed to maybe detect when you're Basically when you're showing signs of arousal during sleep, which they're using as kind of a proxy for maybe you're experiencing a nightmare. And when they detect this state of arousal, they might uh present a vibration stimulus which a awakens you a little bit and it interrupts the nightmare as it's occurring in theory.

You've made me think about my dreams even more. So thank you, Michelle, for talking to us today. Yes, thank you for having me. It's a pleasure. If you liked this episode, you might want to check out our episode on melatonin and avoiding jet lag. We'll link to them in our episode notes.

This episode was produced by Rachel Carlson and edited by our showrunner Rebecca Ramirez. Tyler Jones checked the facts and Quasey Lee was the audio engineer. I'm Regina Barber. Thank you for listening to Shortwave from NPR.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android