No I'm not...Just give me a chance...This article has something to teach and does have a point.
Anyway...I woke up this morning and I asked my husband "So, why do they call you Paladin?". My dream was so convoluted that I woke up with a sense of wonder as well as confusion. To make a long story short, I dreamed that I was on a trip, lost my suitcase, needed a prescription, had to check into the airport after a long ride on a Greyhound bus, needed a snack and was given plastic spoons and bread ties which turned out to be spun sugar and chocalate respectively, saw my husband being catered to by other women and being called "Mr. Paladin" and My mother was whisked through the airport to the VIP gate.
This dream led me to do a little "research" into dreaming . All of which gave me theories which could not really be proved or disproved. Terms like neoro-transmitter, mental schemes, emotional selection and dissociated imagination danced in my head. And incidentally, gave me a headache. So, is it biology or psychology?
One theorist described dreaming as simply "thinking in a different biochemical state". People continue to work on all the same problems—personal and objective—in that state. The research found that anything—math, musical composition, business dilemmas—may get solved during dreaming, but the two areas especially likely to help are 1) anything where vivid visualization contributed to the solution, whether in artistic design or invention of 3-D technological devices and 2) problems where the solution lies in "thinking outside the box"—i.e. the person is stuck because conventional wisdom on how to approach the problem is wrong.