Get a good night's sleep
Nightmares and Dreams
By Kathy Jackson
A new shooter often found herself fighting off recurring nightmares and
vivid dreams about guns and self-defense. Night after night, she battled
shadowy bad guys, reaching for her gun only to find it missing. Or she
drew the gun, and it would not fire no matter how hard she pulled the
trigger. A masked intruder entered her dreams, and she stood frozen, unable
to lift the gun to fire at him even as he reached for one of her children.
The dreams made her feel puzzled, powerless and angry. She was frustrated
about her interrupted sleep, and worried that the dreams meant something
was really wrong with her.
This isn't an uncommon tale. A fairly high percentage of those who venture
into the self-defense world as adults will experience some level of sleep
disruption as the subconscious mind struggles to integrate new thought
patterns and organize the new information. Our brains are wired to process
new information all the time, not merely when we are awake. The more fundamental
the new information, the more the brain struggles to integrate it with
what is already there.
Learning to cope with these active dreams can be an ongoing challenge,
but it is possible to tap into such dreams and make them work for you.
Here's how.
- Find a comfortable place. This can
be your own bed, immediately after you awaken from the dream, or it can
be an easy chair or a comfortable couch the next morning.
- Relax. Consciously slow your breathing
as you deliberately let go of muscle tension.
- Visualize. Once you have relaxed, allow
the dream to replay itself as a movie in your mind. Visualize each small
detail, every bit of it, and don't shy away from anything. Accept the
dream and the fear contained within it.
- Take control. As your reverie reaches
the climax of your dream, the part that woke you up, take control, changing
key details. Rather than visualizing being frozen in fear, visualize yourself
reacting with calm confidence. Picture yourself calmly reaching for your
firearm and drawing it smoothly, doing what is necessary to stop the imminent
attack. Consciously feel capable and strong; hear your steady voice command
the attacker to stop. If necessary, visualize pulling the trigger smoothly
with the front sight centered on the attacker's chest, and visualize the
gun responding as it should.
- Fix what you need to. As you allow
the changed storyline to play out in your mind, you may discover that
you do not know what to do in the event that an attacker does some specific
thing (enters from the dining-room window, perhaps). This is your opportunity
to spot holes in your defensive plans that your conscious mind may not
yet be aware of. If necessary, figure out what you will do to patch these
holes and then visualize yourself doing that thing.
Visualization really works both to erase the immediate sting of the nightmare,
and to reprogram your mind to fight and win if you must. Together with
sensible safety precautions to allay your conscious fears, careful visualization
can help put your nightmares to sleep for good.
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Except where otherwise noted, all articles and images on
this web site © 2006-2008 by Kathy Jackson. For permission to quote, please
contact author.
This article originally published in
Concealed Carry Magazine.
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