We dream in color, but we often remember them in black and white, like when you paint a picture with bright crayons, but later just say it was gray.
Imagine your brain is like a big TV that plays movies all night long. These movies are usually full of colors, like the red of a balloon or the blue of the sky. But when morning comes and you try to remember what happened in your dream, it's like watching a black-and-white photo of that colorful movie.
Why We Remember Black and White
Your brain has two parts working together: one that makes dreams (like a colorful artist) and another that remembers them (like a photographer who only uses black and white film). The photographer doesn’t know the colors, it just knows shapes and shades. So even though your dream was full of color, you remember it like a gray day.
Sometimes, if your brain feels extra busy or tired, it might even forget some parts of the story, like when you lose one of your crayons in the middle of drawing! We dream in color, but we often remember them in black and white, like when you paint a picture with bright crayons, but later just say it was gray.
Imagine your brain is like a big TV that plays movies all night long. These movies are usually full of colors, like the red of a balloon or the blue of the sky. But when morning comes and you try to remember what happened in your dream, it's like watching a black-and-white photo of that colorful movie.
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See also
- Why Do People Feel ‘Anxious’ in Crowded Places?
- Why Do People Often Believe in Conspiracy Theories?
- Why Do We Yawn When We're Tired?
- Why Do Some People Hear Music in Their Heads?
- Why Do People Get Stressed Out by the Same Things Over and Over?