So for my son, this was a terrible shock, and he started having appalling nightmares. |
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However, some dreams are nightmares and when you're having a nightmare they seem to go on and on and on. |
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So we see that most of these children and young men continue to have bad dreams and nightmares sometimes as often as two or three times a week. |
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I can hardly believe I slept so well, no dreams, nightmares or visions to contemplate this morning. |
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He suggests this, for example, in the many places where he speaks of waking up out of our dreams or nightmares. |
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Could it have something to do with his dreams and nightmares about when he was a child? |
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Cody was one of those that dreams nightmares and her nightmare was beginning to unfold right before her eyes. |
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Casey sleeps deeply, for once having good dreams and not the nightmares that she is accustomed to. |
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With a degree in psychology behind him, he now practises psychotherapy in Colorado with an inside track on dreams and nightmares. |
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They had to watch their children having nightmares, being frightened of being alone and being scared of coming into an empty house. |
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Also, we are able to utilise him straight away to prevent simple situations from developing into nightmares. |
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Walter's repeated nightmares also make the point about how offenders can be traumatised by their own offences. |
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At the other end of the spectrum, there are some shockers, horrors and a couple of real nightmares. |
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They all were having nightmares and the mental sound of moans and groans rang out in everyone's mind. |
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Her body twisted and turned as nightmares filled her head and haunted her rest. |
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They never came to her as a trance or a blinding flash of light, only in nightmares and dreams. |
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His health nightmares began when a German surgeon bungled a routine operation to unblock his arteries eight years ago. |
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Aboriginal people said that they still can't escape from nightmares relating to earthquakes, mudslides and collapsed land. |
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Improvement had been slow but sure, although she was still vomiting and having bad nightmares regularly. |
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At night, this normally meek youth disturbed his fellow novices with violent ravings in his nightmares. |
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I found him hunkered with his nightmares in the soupily humid town of Bangor, in the American State of Maine. |
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This was not the jitters one would get before a battle, or even the childish night terrors she got when one of her nightmares hit her. |
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Many parents have experienced the world of nightmares, night terrors and sleep paralysis with at least one of their children. |
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The problems began after the woman was admitted to a medical ward in a local hospital suffering from fits and nightmares. |
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When modern professors of oenology see this in their nightmares, they wake up screaming. |
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Although they have already succeeded beyond our worst nightmares, we must beware that we don't unwittingly strengthen their hand. |
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The trauma of their past has scarred them deeply, leading to nightmares and neuroses, even though outwardly they are fully functioning adults. |
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For symptoms such as insomnia, amnesia, nightmares, rapid heart palpitations and night sweats. |
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Police are hunting a thief who left a little girl suffering nightmares after he stole a model reindeer from her the front garden. |
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I've gone through several long periods of near constant nightmares, most involving dying, which gave me an understandable case of hypnophobia. |
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He offers his assistance as a hypnotist to regress the amnesiac back to the point of her nightmares, hopefully sparking her memory. |
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Allied to the professional and vocational dreams are fatidic nightmares and menacing riddles. |
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In stories which give travellers nightmares, intercity trips usually take much longer than the official estimate. |
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Talking of nightmares, this shelf unit for my new 42-in plasma TV has got me at my wits' end. |
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The symptoms that responded to treatment were insomnia, nightmares, flashbacks, anxiety and depressed mood. |
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If you have PTSD, you may have vivid nightmares, flashbacks, and bad memories. |
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He still loves her but he's bothered by her strange ramblings particularly the freaky nightmares. |
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She has nightmares of refrigerators crushing innocent children, with radiators and doorknobs capable of even worse. |
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Oddly, my nightmares weren't about fugu, they were about Todai, an all-you-can-eat sushi restaurant. |
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From the great white shark to the deadly funnel-web spider, the show is the stuff of nightmares for the sensitive visitor. |
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How many of our daydreams would darken into nightmares, were there any danger of their coming true. |
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For some brides, prenuptial nightmares are a normal part of the wedding preparation. |
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Even the piano is decorated with gold and white, and the huge canopied bed has enough gilt to give your nightmares. |
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A great flick to take the wee ones to, especially when current paranoia practically begs both parents and kids to have their nightmares defanged. |
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Some of the children became prone to violent outbursts, irritability, nightmares, and insomnia. |
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A psychoanalytic reading suggests that horror movies play on our individual nightmares, and specifically our fear of death and dissolution. |
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The crucial thing for an historian about nightmares and dreams more generally is that they are a form of social enaction. |
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At night she would wake up with nightmares and her shrieks were gut-wrenching. |
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A political explosion happened this weekend in New York, and it may be the big one that gives some in the government nightmares. |
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I believe that an artist should not exude his agonies and nightmares to his viewers. |
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And, for the first time in the last thirteen years, he does sleep, without any dreams, or nightmares, to wake him up. |
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Alice once had a week of nightmares, which she healed with her own dreamcatcher. |
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His nightmares, insomnia, poor memory, fatigue, and irascibility became worse, and he developed headaches, musculoskeletal aches, and dyspepsia. |
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There is a lot of people that dislike the federal government, but, he just went into action beyond anyone's wildest nightmares. |
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Now he goes to bed late because he is frightened of nightmares when he sleeps. |
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It's a book that gave me nightmares as a kid, and fired the imaginations of thousands, if not gazillions of children and adults alike. |
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For years, he has suffered the nightmares and the agonies that, by all rights, should be ours too. |
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Problems with vivid dreams, nightmares and rebound insomnia have also been reported. |
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As unnerving as they may be, Fischer says nightmares are a useful and healthy response to trauma, as they reconnect us to our emotions. |
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He refers to her suffering from frequent and recurrent nightmares precipitated by abuse. |
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For a few minutes, without her waking, we rebuked the source of the nightmares, praising God for the redeeming blood. |
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Get in debt with your mortgage and before you know it, your nightmares will have spiralled out of control. |
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This single incident alone would be enough to give him nightmares for a couple weeks. |
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The idea of those two landlubbers sloshing off in that old wreck gave him nightmares. |
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Or are these visions of the coming order consigned to replay moribund nightmares of the past. |
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As long as their budget and authority is carved out of IT, this will continue to be a report card that gives the public nightmares. |
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His stories were dreams of technological utopias in which nightmares of personal and political dystopia were played out. |
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Only the happy trip to Morocco in 1832 appeased the artist and freed him momentarily from his nightmares. |
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It had happened a long time ago and there was nothing he could do about it except learn to live with the nightmares. |
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When you're dealing with the idea of time, you run into all kinds of logistical nightmares. |
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However, I believe nightmares are a gift of our subconscious to our conscious minds. |
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There are rules if you want to find the car of your dreams rather than of your nightmares. |
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Everything slowly began to drift away but this time, instead of the nightmares the mysterious stranger that haunted my dreams greeted me. |
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Winged creatures borne of nightmares circled above them like vultures, snapping their beak-like mouths. |
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What we do know is that he or she bore a dreadful burden, the stuff of every parent's nightmares. |
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It doesn't bear thinking about, unless you happen to be the supremely gifted chronicler of all our worst nightmares. |
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My sister Jill was having nightmares about bugs and beasties and snakes on my behalf. |
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Beta blockers such as metoprolol or propranolol, for example, may cause nightmares. |
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When I finally fell asleep, it was restless, and filled with uneasy dreams and nightmares. |
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Meanwhile this guy is having nightmares here, dreaming that alligators and lions are chasing him. |
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Sleep was something she might not get because her dreams can become nightmares. |
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The nightmares had overrun his dreams again, leaving a sour ache in his soul, and he'd gone and taken it out on her. |
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He couldn't quite remember that face, the same face that was so vivid and clear in dreams and nightmares. |
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It is interesting that she has nightmares rather than sweet dreams in Chinese. |
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You know this is a Mother and Wife's worst nightmare ever, and both nightmares came to life in one single day. |
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The prospect of mass tourism ranks at the top of her list of nightmares. |
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It's advisable to get paid up front, because these dream teams are often nightmares. |
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Symptoms during the early stages include detachment and aggression as well as insomnia, bed-wetting, and nightmares. |
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But I always feel that making the film is the catharsis that stops the nightmares, if you will. |
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In one of my common recurring nightmares as a child, I was riding with my family on a train that went off the end of an unfinished trestle bridge. |
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A study of cryptozoology gave me nightmares for weeks when I was younger. |
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As a child I used to dream horrific nightmares about nuclear war. |
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Tell me about the dreams, the nightmares that you had for awhile. |
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Did anyone else have bad dreams and nightmares about airplane crashes? |
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Theoretically the occupance of nightmares is not entirely surprising. |
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I believe that in a free market without a competition law your worst nightmares would come true, that everything would be monopolised or cartelised. |
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Francisco de Goya foresaw the nightmares born of the Enlightenment. |
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In a further similarity to an ad break, my short bursts of sleep were filled with countless little dreams and nightmares, most of which I remember. |
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The defendant has further submitted that the claimant cannot recover for upset, nightmares or flashbacks as these do not amount to psychological injury. |
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She becomes a nervous wreck and suffers from ghastly nightmares. |
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A stickler for etiquette and social niceties, this is the sign more than any other that is likely to have nightmares over the phrasing of invitations! |
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I don't dream a lot but when I do the dreams are often nightmares. |
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In my nightmares, I hid in an icebox, but they found me anyway. |
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For years I had recurring nightmares of giant, bucktoothed avengers chasing me over endless fields pitted with gopher holes the size of bomb craters. |
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Now they have told us, after exhaustively doing whatever it is they do, something which we could never have imagined in our wildest dreams, or nightmares. |
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Toasted cheese was even more indigestible and apt to cause nightmares. |
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I stretched out in the den, pillowed my head on my arm and suffered through the long long night, wet, cold, aching, hungry, wretched, dreaming claustrophobic nightmares. |
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Outdated non-computerised files will lead to compliance nightmares. |
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It's like one of Martin Parr's photographic nightmares, a neon shanty town of amusement arcades, chip shops and crumbling holiday camps that look like gulags. |
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I still have nightmares about timekeeping, think to myself I haven't done a time sheet for a while, then remember it is nearly ten years since I had to! |
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The fear of public places and buses, the recurring nightmares and bed-wetting, the incessant crying for no apparent reason, the inability to function normally anymore. |
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A RECENT INNOVATION popularized by Steve Spurrier has been giving defensive coaches nightmares from the pros on down to the high schools. |
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In the European Middle Ages, the herb was placed beneath pillows to aid sleep and ward off nightmares. |
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However, it is said that animals did not feed on him and his body produced no odor, and that the corpse caused fear and nightmares in the people. |
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However, they soon fall asleep and have terrible nightmares, and after they awake, they experience guilt and shame for the first time. |
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I'm 54 and the evil twin bogeymen of IS and Ebola are giving me nightmares. |
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His discovery of a box of snuff movies plunges his own family into a world of nightmares. |
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Watch for symptoms of stress, including clinginess, stomachaches, headaches, nightmares, trouble eating or sleeping, or changes in behavior. |
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The children's mother was worried that the spine-chilling ghost film would give them nightmares. |
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Wee Fergie, Barry Boy, Bazza is, by all accounts set to return to Rangers, leaving his injury nightmares and Deadwood Park behind. |
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He still has nightmares resulting from the treatment he received from his captors. |
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Although nightmares and obstructive sleep apnea were less common, those with nightmares or parasomnias were more likely to have mental disorders. |
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The next few weeks will see the release of two movies that are the stuffof every acrophobia sufferer's worst nightmares. |
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The worrywart Oscar-winning star also confessed to having recurring nightmares where he cannot remember his lines. |
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I still get the heebie-jeebies about the face-hugging larval alien and actually had nightmares about it for some time. |
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Her Calvinism and folk beliefs were an early source of nightmares for the child, and he showed a precocious concern for religion. |
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On the downside, it rewards them with fodder for nightmares. |
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Haunted by nightmares of the crucifixion, he is eventually led to his own conversion. |
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An author from Lake Oswego, Oregon, introduces island homes with comments on how attitudes toward islands have shifted from shipwreck nightmares to paradisial fantasies. |
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She had shared his sheets, and, in nightmares of remorse, he had shared her body, waking with drastic regret, feeling as soiled and soilsome as the city itself. |
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Further north, up the coast from Rauma, the much larger town of Pori is, quite frankly, one of the ugliest concrete nightmares I have ever had the displeasure of visiting. |
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But a day or two to hang out on a pal's set, eat craft service and bask in the schadenfreude of their best friend's production nightmares? Who wouldn't want to do that? |
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Fortunately this production has risen to the challenge to provide a gripping and claustrophobically realistic depiction of many people's worst nightmares. |
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As he prepares the meal, he has to contend with various nightmares, while his troublesome children get covered in chocolate and his wife Elaine starts hitting the bottle. |
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The first time I watched Chucky, I had nightmares for weeks. |
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The cold was a foreboder of the nightmares of the winter that lay ahead. |
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