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- Newsgroups: alt.dreams
- Path: sparky!uunet!tcsi.com!hermes!miket
- From: miket@hermes.tcs.com (Michael Turner nmscore Assoc.)
- Subject: Re: side-effect dreams
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.032509.8299@tcsi.com>
- Sender: news@tcsi.com
- Organization: Teknekron Communications Inc.
- References: <By3DFq.x8@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 03:25:09 GMT
- Lines: 23
-
- In article <By3DFq.x8@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu> dmorton@silver.ucs.indiana.edu (daniel dean morton) writes:
- >
- >unbelivably intense dreams/visions...
- > [....]
- > Has anyone elso had experiences where medication has influenced
- >their dreams? If so, I would like to hear of them. Dream the
- >impossible...
-
- Well, this is impossibly mundane after your story, but when I was growing
- up, I got headaches a lot. When I took aspirin around bedtime, I noticed
- that my dreams were more vivid. I don't notice this effect now, but I
- take smaller doses now, I'm larger, and my dreams are getting less vivid
- with age anyway, I suppose.
-
- The major drug companies run some of the major sleep labs, in part because
- side-effect studies usually cover sleep disturbances.
-
- I wouldn't be surprised if there's some on-line database where you can
- do key-word search on drug side-effects to get some clues on what
- medications might have dream-amplifying effects.
- ---
- Michael Turner
- miket@tcs.com
-