Why do we dream, and what is their purpose for our minds?

Dreams are like little movies your brain makes while you're asleep to help it learn and remember things better.

What Dreams Are Like

Imagine you have a toy box full of different toys, cars, blocks, stuffed animals. Your brain is like a kid who plays with all these toys every day. When you sleep, your brain keeps playing with them in its own special way. That’s what dreaming feels like!

Dreams help your brain sort out the day's events and decide which ones are important. It's like when you clean up your toy box, you put the favorite toys in one corner and leave the less-used ones for later.

Why We Need Dreams

Your brain uses dreams to practice what it learned during the day, just like you might practice riding a bike or solving a puzzle. This helps you remember things better and be ready for new challenges tomorrow.

Sometimes your brain even makes up fun stories while you're dreaming, imagine if your toy box had a secret adventure every night! That’s how dreams can feel exciting and strange at the same time.

Take the quiz →

Examples

  1. A child dreams about flying after watching a superhero movie.
  2. An adult has vivid dreams of being chased by monsters during a stressful week.
  3. People often remember happy dreams more than sad ones.

Ask a question

See also

Discussion

Recent activity

Categories: Psychology · dreams· mind· psychology· sleep