For six months in 2014, I had the same nightmare: I’d wake up before dawn to the sound of several incoming work emails on my phone, but would fall back to sleep. When I woke up (in the dream), I’d see a dozen missed calls and text messages from my boss berating me for not responding. Only then would I open my eyes for real, and I’d be overwhelmed with anxiety that an actual angry note was waiting in my inbox.
I left that job by the end of the year, in part because of that recurring nightmare.
It turns out that nightmares, including work-related ones like tests we haven’t studied for, deadlines we missed or tongue-lashings from supervisors, are part of life for many people.
According to Psychology Today, 50 percent of people experience nightmares, and women are more likely to have them than men. And a study published in late 2017 found that people who experience stress in their waking lives are likely to carry those anxieties into their dreams.
Sometimes the connection is painfully, if hilariously, obvious. Jessie Opoien, a 28-year-old political reporter in Wisconsin, said that she frequently has dreams about surreal mishaps while covering events.
“Most of my work stress dreams are so ridiculous that when I wake up, I end up feeling like some levity has been injected into whatever madness is surrounding me at that moment,” she said in an email. Recently, she had a dream in which a squirrel gave her the evil eye, attacked her and made off with a mitten. “If I had to analyze myself, I’d say these dreams are my body’s way of releasing stress by sliding an element of absurdity into whatever work scenario is occupying my mind.”
Other times, work stress dreams are more rooted to reality. When Lilli Petersen, 31, waited tables in New York City, her tormentor was a restaurant’s computer system. “I was trying to put a bunch of orders in the point-of-sale system, and all the tables began disappearing from the computer,” she told me. “I’d go to enter something, and it would disappear. Again and again and again,” all while her boss hovered over her shoulder.
And Meg Clark, a 33-year-old social media editor in New York, said she’s had entire dreams unfold over Slack, a workplace messaging program. “I have nightmares about typos on a regular basis,” she said. “I often wake up confused and disoriented and have to grab my phone to make sure it wasn’t real.”
Because dreams aren’t quantifiable, like other areas of sleep science, there’s no consensus on what meaning they hold for our day-to-day life, said Dr. Rebecca Robbins, a co-author of “Sleep for Success” and a postdoctoral research fellow at the NYU School of Medicine.
But that doesn’t mean you can’t do anything to reduce the frequency and intensity of stress dreams. Try these solutions:








