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What To Do About Nightmares?

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Malcolm

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What is there to do about nightmares of the past? No I don't take meds and don't believe in taking the drugs pharmaceutical companies push.
 
Hi Malcolm & welcome to the forum.

For me the only answer was to talk, talk, talk with a trauma specialist. Continually reliving your trauma night after night as you will know puts you on a slippery slope to exhaustion. Talking through your trauma & nightmares will help you to understand them & take away the fears they create. I also found winding down for an hour before bed a great help, I used meditation which gave me chance to explore what i was feeling so that i didnt take it into my sleep.

You will find a great deal of support & information here Malcolm. I hope in time it will help you too.
 
Nightmares are just intrusive thoughts and feelings passing in the night. As with any passing intrusive thoughts and feelings (daydreams, flashbacks, nightmares, and so on) there are three things we need to do.

First, when we become aware intrusive thoughts and feelings are passing, we need to ground ourself and assure ourselves we are in fact safe. So when I wake up about to scream (become aware) I look through the image in front of me (the intrusive image) at the physical reality of my bedroom; the bed, the pillows, the windows, my spouse, everything in no particular order. I remind myself I am not in the combat zone (or other traumatic setting real or imagined), that I am warm and dry and safe in my comfortable bed. I remind myself it was just the passing intrusive thoughts and feelings that woke me, old stuff, not a real threat in my current situation.

Secondly, I focus on my behavior in my current situation. At night my current need is to sleep. I return to my favorite sleep position, refocus on the physical comfort of my bed and (hopefully) drift back to sleep. If my focus won't shift, if the intrusive thoughts and feelings are racing, I settle for the next best thing. I remain in my favorite sleep position and take deep, abdominal breaths while the intrusive thoughts and feelings whirl around, letting my body rest.

And third I share the intrusive thoughts and feelings (those I remember) with my therapist in individual sessions, exploring them and beginning the process of reframing them and pursuing the therapeutic process of understanding and deintensifying that particular set of intrusive thoughts and feelings. The act of deciding to make that set of intrusive thoughts and feelings a topic at my next regularly scheduled therapy session gives me the feeling I am in control of them, rather than the feeling they are in control of me. If the set persist in intruding, I make notes for the next therapy session.

Ted
 
Ted- that is so helpful/ useful.

Like you said, (also), if I wake up terrified (or within a moment within the day etc), along with the grounding (and recognizing what realities "are not or no longer 'so' "), I also try to reinforce how thankful I am for anythng 'good' that 'is' so.
 
I'm struggling with this also. In fact, I have taken medication so that I can sleep for nearly 8 months now. When I miss a dose, I have major issues.
 
I find keep a busy schedule so I am so totally exhausted and my mind is full of chores and things to do stops the nightmares. If I am on vacation or am not at work, I find they come back. The night terrors. If my brain has been overloaded during the day with new information and I am exhausted it stops me from having nightmares.

I really hope you can find a way to stop the night terrors. I found worse is taking a nap during the day. Sometimes I have to nap when I am exhausted, but then I experience paralysis as well when being half awake and asleep.
 
Nightmares are often caused by unresolved trauma that is less protected against when you are asleep.THe REM bit of sleep is when we process things and when you run into something that exceeds the emotional coping mechanism of your brain, it wakes you in a protective way - mid REM therefore mid physiological and psychological arousal. They are a sort of flashback... initially mine had no visual or comprehensible component, just fear and physical symptoms and a sort of other reality to them that was familiar but that i couldn't get hold of. I had the same one over and over. One day it developed a visual component which we processed in EMDR and brought up some abuse that I had been completely unaware of.

I read somewhere that nightmares become flashbacks become memories as you process the trauma, so it is good when the nightmares start to become more memorable or intrude into waking hours, even if that is weird or unpleasant. Recurrent dreams also signify something that the brain is trying to process and not finding a way out of.

EMDR therapy uses dreams a lot as a way into trauma.

They are a sign that things are moving, and therefore a sign of progress, frightening though they are. I regularly wake up convinced I'm about to die. But I know it means my brain is trying to find a way out....
 
Nightmares seem to come after a trigger. Sometimes they even start out as pleasant dreams then suddenly turn terrifying. I swear I'll tell my therapist about it then fifteen minutes after being awake I can't remember details only that I woke up scared scat less. This also happened 40 years ago after my Mom died and my college roommate would wake me up because I was screaming in my sleep. I remember one time the floor supervisor was standing in the doorway of the room quite concerned because my night screams were so loud it woke him up more than several doors down. Apparently it was bad enough that my roommate moved out and into another room when it became available after another student left.

I could never remember a single thing about any of those dreams but obviously I was having them.

Good luck y'all.

LBear
 
What is there to do about nightmares of the past? No i dont take meds and dont believe in taking the drugs pharmaceutical companies push.
Hi I am new on here but have been having therapy and EMDR treatment for PTSD and know that nightmares and dreams do sometimes get worse whist recovering. Good luck and stay strong x
 
Thanks timetorecover and welcome.

I've heard from others and have experienced it myself, especially on the pain meds, the psychological and pain meds can actually cause nightmares.

I've started dreaming in a faded form of color. My dreams have become very vivid and 'animated'. The thing with my dreams now seem to be more about the fears that he and I had previously discussed of my deceased best friend than of my own.

Malcolm: I also want to get off the meds but I'm going to give myself a little more time and follow my doctors council.

LBear
 
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