English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

25 answers

SOMETIMES BAD DREAMS ARE STRENGTH

2006-08-26 22:04:40 · answer #1 · answered by domazina 3 · 0 1

I have several times dreamt an entire day in advance,
with frightening accuracy. I've even seen a few movies, years before they came out. I didn't really care for them though. Like "B-movie clairvoyance"
Precognitive dreams feel a lot different than normal ones.
Like you're further aback than normal. If your dream felt more than just bad but, very different somehow. Like
listening to music with the bass turned off sounds different than normal music.

2006-08-27 09:36:27 · answer #2 · answered by Paklo 2 · 0 0

No but 2 months ago I had this rucurring nightmare where this guy was walking down the street to get his mail and then suddenly his blood turns to sulfuric acid (not the kind you snort, the kind that melts you.) First, his innards dissolved, while he screamed in agony, just before he died. Then his bones dissolved, leaving his skin a rubbery blob on the sidewalk, until that finally melted. It was freaky. But after talking with my sciance teacher, I learned the only way that could happen is if you inject acid into your blood vessels. That reminds me Kids don't do drugs there bad for you!

2006-08-27 05:12:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

90% of the time love a dream is just exactly that, a dream. There is about 10% of people in the world that have dreams that actually happen.
usually a disturbing dream is one that is just to make us face up to something in our lives.
I suggest you get a dream book if you're really curious about it.
http://www.barnesandnoble.com
is a good place to start.
But i have dreams that wake me up all sorts of weird hours. So you shouldn't worry yourself too much about it.

2006-08-27 14:30:57 · answer #4 · answered by warm_champaign 3 · 0 0

No,

Dreams ......are trips to your subconscious !!

They are indicators !

Psychologists and psychoanalysts such as Freud and Jung use dreams to delve into the deepest essence of a person.

FOR EXAMPLE :
Being chased in my dreams was my mind’s way of telling me that I was taking on a great deal of stress and anxiety, and that deep down I felt like I needed to get away. This kind of dream is a way of coping with the fears and stresses of the real world.

SIMPLY RELAX .......understand your subconscious wants you to know something .

2006-08-27 06:00:28 · answer #5 · answered by KNOWLEDZ 1 · 1 0

chill friend........at 1 time i 2 used 2 believe in that......had 2 pay 4 it heavily!!!.......s far s i can tell dreams r signals frm ur subconscious mind indicatin stuff which dont necessarily mean any gud or bad depending upon if u like the dream or not......any psychologist cud answer u better s they investigate this stuff.........or maybe u r tensed about something.......chill friend coz life comes just 1ce.........its not worth being wasted over little stuff like that!

2006-08-28 03:41:50 · answer #6 · answered by Candy 3 · 0 0

No. Dreams are your thoughts and perceptions being processed in your brain while you sleep. Sometimes dreams are symbolic of things that are going on in your life, things that you're worried about, or whatever.

When you have a nightmare, it's generally about something that's worrying you, or something you're avoiding dealing with. I used to have nightmares about my bosses trying to kill me at work, and later I discovered that the dreams had to do with my abusive step-father and my fear of him. By analyzing the dreams and figuring out the symbols (and what they meant to me), I was able to piece together what was really bugging me. Then I dealt with the issue (my fear of my step-father, and -- as a result of his abuse -- authority figures in general), and the dreams went away.

Your best bet is to write your dream down. Pay particular attention to your word choice (your choice of words in describing things and events in the dream will often give away much of the true meaning -- writing it down, you'll have a lot of AHA! moments). Think about the things in the dream and what they might represent for you OTHER than what they appear to be. When you hit on the right connection, you'll know it. It'll feel "right."

For instance: If Brad Pitt appears in a dream, then think about what he represents to you. And what he represents to you is generally going to be some overarching feeling that you have about him when you think about him in daily life. So, for example: He COULD be representing himself (usually not, though). Or he could represent the idea of "movie star" or "celebrity." He might represent "privileged people." Or "wealthy people." Or a wished-for lifestyle. If you have a cousin that reminds you of Brad Pitt, then Brad could represent your cousin. It all comes down to what connections you make to Brad Pitt in your waking life. Your sleeping brain will make similar connections (though often choosing the more abstract connections rather than the obvious surface ones). And he may mean different things in different dreams. It depends on the context, which is why you have to analyze as much of it as you can remember. Leave no detail out.

By taking apart the symbols of the dream -- and the meanings and connections will be personal to you; don't use a "dream dictionary" or any of that nonsense -- you'll discover what your dream is telling you about what's percolating in the back of your mind and bugging your subconscious so much that it's bubbling up when you sleep. Once you do that, you can deal with whatever the issue is.

Another option: Try lucid dreaming (do a search on the net for more info). Lucid dreaming is when you're dreaming but you know that you're dreaming and can control yourself as if you were awake. Through practice, you can actually cause yourself to achieve lucidity in dreams fairly often.

I once had a nightmare about Freddy Krueger (the knife-fingered villain of the Nightmare on Elm Street series). He was chasing me near my old best friend's house. I was running scared, and then I suddenly realized that I was dreaming. I stopped, turned, went into my friend's bedroom, and picked up a backpack from his closet. Then, knowing that it was a dream and I could do anything I wanted, I morphed the backpack into a gun. Then I went out hunting for Freddy... I woke up not long after, but I turned the nightmare around. I took control of it and the scariness was over.

Anyway, dreams are not prophetic in that way. They put your thoughts in a weird context that, if analyzed, allows you to peer a little further into your head, but it's all stuff that's in your head already.

2006-08-27 05:30:52 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

For some people dreams come exact opposite. For example if I dreamt that I failed the exam, in real life I would come up tops in that exam!!

2006-08-27 08:11:25 · answer #8 · answered by Kishor K 2 · 0 0

I don't think it will come true. The best is to do to convince yourself that the dream wouldn't come true is by not believing it.

2006-08-27 09:48:32 · answer #9 · answered by Agalyah K 1 · 0 0

That all depends on what kind of bad dream your are having.
Most dreams are you subconcious mind tell you something. Most dream interpretations say that the opposite usually happen.

2006-08-27 06:10:27 · answer #10 · answered by de_dark_angel71 3 · 0 1

no. a dream usually is your sub-conscience dealing with a totally different issue than the one you dreamed about.for instance it is said a dream where you are running from something(no matter what)means there is something going on in your life that is extremely troubling that you are having a hard time dealing with.

2006-08-27 05:11:54 · answer #11 · answered by she-girl 2 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers