Dreams and hallucinations are like your brain telling stories when you're not looking.
When You're Asleep
When You're Awake
Hallucinations happen when your brain is still telling stories, but you're awake. It might see things that aren't really there, like shapes on the wall or voices in your head. This can feel strange, like someone is playing a game with your eyes and ears while you’re trying to focus.
Why It Happens
Your brain uses memories and feelings from the day to make these stories. Sometimes it mixes them up, which is why dreams can be silly or scary, just like when you mix red paint with blue and get purple!
It's all your brain doing something fun and creative, whether you're asleep or wide awake.
Examples
- A child sees a dragon in the closet during a nap, that's a dream.
- Someone hears voices when they're alone at night, that's a hallucination.
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See also
- How Does Memories in the Dreaming Brain | Erin Wamsley | TEDxGreenville Work?
- How Does Dreams Are Weird. Here’s Why. Work?
- How Does Vivid Dreams Work?
- How the Brain Paints Your Dreams?
- How much of what you see is a hallucination? - Elizabeth Cox?