What We Really Know About Dream Lag

According to Medical News Today, most people can recall a time where events, faces, or places from their waking life creep into their dreams. But unlike the day-residue effect, which replicates recent events like a hectic workday only a few hours later, dream lag can show up a week later after someone’s first experienced it. That’s because it can take a couple of days for some experiences to be processed by the brain and filed away into your long-term memory.

Once it’s there, bits and pieces of the memory can work their way into your dream, leading to a déjà vu effect that almost feels like the real thing. The chances of this happening are even more likely considering that 65% of all dreams are based on daily occurrences in our lives, according to a 2019 Sage Journal study. Not to mention that depending on the quality of your snooze session, it can even bring on a lighter stage of sleep where these dreams can happen.

Tom Kucher

For as long as Tom can remember, he has understood the reality around him through the tinted glasses of works of fiction, be it books, films, TV shows, or anime. An English graduate, he wrote articles on a wide array of topics for several years, from entertainment and pop culture to history and literature. Before that, he was an educator and a roleplay game writer and developer. It is his deeply-rooted love for performing arts and visual media that led him to become a part of the DC team in 2020.

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Tom Kucher