Five Steps to Conquering Nightmares
New research uncovers the link between daytime emotions and nighttime terror.
Posted November 16, 2013 | Reviewed by Jessica Schrader
Having an occasional nightmare can be distressing, but the remnants of the dream tend to pass quickly after you awaken. By the time the day is over, you may have forgotten the nightmare entirely. For some people, though, nightmares are a chronic problem. Tortuous dreams interfere with their quality of sleep, and the feelings that remain after waking continue for hours or longer.
There is surprisingly little scientific research on nightmares. One obvious problem in conducting research on nightmares (and in dream research in general) is that people forget the specifics of their dreams after they awaken. Moreover, all the data is by definition self-reported, so it’s not possible to know exactly what transpired in the actual dream itself.
As part of a larger research project on emotional dysregulation—the ability to control emotions— Rutgers University psychologist Edward Selby and his Florida State University collaborators Thomas Joiner, Jr. and Jessica Ribeiro examined the theory that people with certain personality qualities would be more prone to nightmares. Specifically, according to previous studies, people with borderline personality disorder have more nightmares.
Selby and his collaborators believed that this association could be explained by what they called the Emotional Cascade Model. In this model, negative emotional experiences during the day can contribute to nightmares made worse by two processes. First is rumination , or going over things again and again in your mind. Rumination keeps the pain of those negative experiences fresh.
The second process is catastrophizing , in which you imagine the worst possible outcome from a negative experience. As you do, the magnitude of the experience skyrockets beyond its original negative impact. People with borderline personality disorder may experience more nightmares than others because they engage more frequently in these two reactions to emotionally upsetting events. Anyone can experience emotional cascades, but people with borderline personality disorder do so to a greater extent because they have greater difficulty regulating negative emotions.
In general, the Emotional Cascade Model predicts that nightmares reflect a spillover (or emotional cascade) of worries from the day that you carry over into your sleep. When bad things happen to you during the day, you have more trouble falling asleep. You remain mentally aroused, and these emotions become the basis of your nightmares. Making matters worse, you may awaken briefly from your sleep, still worried, and experience a “waking nightmare” in which you are actually awake but think you are sleeping .
In a 2013 publication in the journal Dreaming , Selby and his team decided to test their predictions about emotional cascades and borderline personality disorder (BPD) by comparing the dreams of people who fit the criteria for this diagnosis with a comparison group who did not. However, they needed to control for the likelihood that those with BPD might actually engage in more problematic behaviors than those without this diagnosis. Therefore, they recruited people who self-reported that they frequently engaged in dysregulated (out of control) behaviors such as binge eating, reckless driving, impulsive shopping, self-injury , alcohol and marijuana use, physical fighting and verbal aggression . Both groups, then, engaged in behaviors that may provoke negative emotions.
To test the role of rumination and catastrophizing, Selby and his collaborators asked people in both groups to complete scales testing these tendencies. They measured rumination with items such as, “I am preoccupied with what I think and feel about what I have experienced,” and catastrophizing with items such as, “I keep thinking about how terrible it is what I have experienced.” If their theory about BPD and nightmares was correct, both of these tendencies should predict frequency of nightmares, but the relationship should be stronger for those with BPD, who are particularly prone to these tendencies.
After measuring these personality tendencies, Selby and his coauthors asked the 47 participants in the study—16 of whom had been diagnosed with BPD—to keep daily records of their negative emotions, rumination tendencies, and nightmares at different points each day over a two-week period.
The BPD participants had more nightmares than the non-BPD group and also slept fewer hours, though their sleep quality was no worse than the comparison group. Those with the BPD diagnosis who tended to ruminate and also reported more negative emotions during the day had significantly more nightmares than any of the other groups.
The story doesn’t stop there: The more nightmares people had, the more likely they were to experience negative emotions the next day and to ruminate about those emotions. Those with BPD who had nightmares tended to experience more negative emotions the subsequent day, but not more rumination tendencies.
Whether or not you have BPD, if you’re prone to experiencing negative emotions, thinking about those emotions, and worrying that things will only get worse, your emotional state can cascade into your dream life. People with BPD, sleep disorders, or both should seek professional treatment. However, if you don't have either of these diagnoses, but still find that your nightmares bother you, there are steps you can follow to reduce your own emotional cascades:
Freud proposed that dreams are the “royal road to the unconscious ,” but the road doesn't have to lead to emotional distress. By understanding how your daytime feelings spill over to your nighttime experiences, you can improve your emotional states while awake and asleep.
Copyright Susan Krauss Whitbourne, Ph.D. 2013.
Selby, E. A., Ribeiro, J. D., & Joiner, T. r. (2013). What dreams may come: Emotional cascades and nightmares in borderline personality disorder. Dreaming, 23(2), 126-144. doi:10.1037/a0032208
Share this post Facebook Bluesky Linkedin Email
There was a problem adding your email address. Please try again.
By submitting your information you agree to the Psychology Today Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy
Susan Krauss Whitbourne, Ph.D. , is a Professor Emerita of Psychological and Brain Sciences at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Her latest book is The Search for Fulfillment.
Get the help you need from a therapist near you–a FREE service from Psychology Today.
This article is part of the Bringwise Psychology Journal — daily insights on human behavior, mental health, and personal growth.