Today, Vienna's Rathausplatz turned into an ice dream, as a huge ice rink was once again built through the park, which will delight until March 9.
How babies sleep and what they dream is an eternal puzzle for all parents. Children's dreams are mostly pleasant and babies do not experience fear or nightmares until the age of three. Since toddlers don't speak yet, their dreams most often feature images. Thus, we will never really know the true answer to what happens to babies during rest. Below, take a look at the tender photos of the little ones and their living dreams.
Paul Bischof is a student of the University of Graz, who with his unusual talent and hobby has earned a position as an engineer in the F1 team - Red Bull Racing. His story can be an inspiration to everyone, that everything is possible if there is a dream.
Scenes from horror movies like to scare us long after the lights come on in the cinemas or when we turn off the TV. On top of that, they love to haunt us even in our dreams. So why have pillows that are painted with motifs of horror characters? They say that wedge with wedge and you may be saved from the plague. Fears must be faced.
Let's stop daydreaming and actively step on the path to our dreams.
How far would you go to make your dreams come true? They usually require serious courage and many people tuck their tails between their legs. Even 25-year-old Mike Hudson could, but he left his job as a systems engineer, bought a van on eBay, turned it into a camper and started living his dream - traveling.
The most common dream? Aren't dreams unique? Not really. We like to say that we feel like we are in a dream, or that something is like a dream, but dreams, despite their dreaminess, are not always so dreamlike. And they're also much more uniform than you'd expect, although everyone thinks theirs are offbeat, weird, and generally unique. If that were true, then how come we share so many dreams? Read the true meaning of the most common dreams so that you can make sense of them in real life.
A dream. Mysterious, strange, eye-opening and also a real nightmare: dreams are all these and much more. Here are some amazing facts about dreams that you might not know.
Dreams are an important and necessary process that protects us from the development of psychological problems. The famous psychiatrist Sigmund Freud called dreams the "royal road to the unconscious", yet his ideas about dreams and their relationship with the subconscious remain controversial. He believed that strange images from dreams can be interpreted as symbols that represent certain conflicts in our lives, most often of a sexual nature.
Do you know why we dream? Have you ever wondered how dreams affect your life? Just as the eyes are the mirror of the soul, dreams are the mirror of our subconscious. But despite a lot of research, scientists are still pretty much in the dark, which is why there are as many theories about dreams as there are scientists. Have we finally made a breakthrough? Amy Adkins will tell more about this and why we dream.
What if you could control your dreams? Would you fly like Superman, maybe philosophize with Plato? Now you can! The iBand+ is a wireless EEG headband (allows for the measurement of the brain's electrical activity with electrodes) that you can use to trigger lucid dreams and improve your sleep. No more tossing, sweating, nightmares and dreams where you run away or can't move!
If you asked Freud about their meaning after a night of strange dreams (the kind that make you wonder how your head could have made something like this up), he would probably be able to quickly explain which sexual desire you suppressed. Despite his theory of repressed desires being expressed through dreams, dreams today are still an area where there are more questions than answers. If you are interested in what your dreams really mean, read how the 10 most common dreams among people are interpreted by dream books and researchers and psychologists from this mysterious field.