6/6/12. This is the projected end-times. Somehow your subconscious knows about it. You must be one of the chosen ones. I'd look for signs if I were you.
2006-12-08 17:10:16
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answer #1
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answered by Titan 2
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2016-12-24 22:37:50
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Sometimes dreams can be a form of premonitions (as crazy as it sounds). I might interpret that something significant will happen on said day. Possibly a death. To see an owl in your dream, symbolizes wisdom, insight and virtue. The owl is also synonymous with death and darkness. To see a clock in your dream, signifies the importance of time or that time is running out. You may be feeling some anxiety of not being on top of things. Your mind may be preoccupied with a deadline that you have to meet or some other time-sensitive issue. It is time for you to tread on and speed up your actions. Alternatively, clocks are representative of death, especially if the clock has stopped. This is a common theme for the terminally ill or the dying. A clock seen in your dream may also symbolize the ticking of the human heart and thus is indicative of the emotional side of your life.
2016-03-29 00:32:18
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Knowledge the character of any social condition and being able to bend and change the specific situation for your own personel end use is something that you dream on the you can be in complete get a handle on of any condition applying Black Ops Hypnosis you will discover here https://tr.im/Ha45c .
With this specific plan you'll experience pleasure, peace and serenity. Relating with a established cases, with support from a scientific hypnotherapist, it is straightforward to stimulate that feeling in a person anytime and the very best plan to discover that is Black Ops Hypnosis.
2016-04-21 09:28:26
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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Mind is a tricky thing. Sometimes, our subconscious mind tells us something we may not understand. Things could come across randomly and the dates, songs, words may lurk into our mind for no reason. However, this item comes into your mind may be triggered by several things.
For example, you saw date June in the calendar one day, and 6 may be something you pay for and 2012 could be a election year. Your mind may blend them together and let you dream about it. In that case, that date is meaningless
2006-12-09 02:40:39
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answer #5
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answered by YourDreamDoc 7
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TO be honest I think it is something to keep in mind because it probably has some sort of significance in your life. Just remember that until it reveils full significance it is neither good or bad.
2006-12-08 17:29:52
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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that date is the 68th anniversary of the normandy invasion
of europe. this is probably when we will invade europe which
has gone totally over to islam. the u.s.a. will do it.
like in world war 2.
2006-12-08 17:04:23
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answer #7
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answered by joe snidegrass 1
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its either sucess or death.
live well wisely
2006-12-08 17:01:57
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answer #8
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answered by Thrills 5
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this might be helpful
http://spirita.blogspot.com/
2006-12-10 02:22:36
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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[edit] Understanding dreams
[edit] The expectation fulfilment theory of dreams
'''Psychologist Joe Griffin, one of the founders of human givens psychology, has proposed the expectation fulfilment theory of dreaming. On the basis of a 12-year study, Griffin claims that dreams are expressed in the form of sensory metaphors'.[1] [2] In a New Scientist interview, Griffin stated that "...ordinarily dream sleep does a great housekeeping job for us [,] bring[ing] down our autonomic arousal level." Griffin's expectation fulfilment theory of dreams states that dreams are metaphorical translations of waking expectations. Expectations which cause emotional arousal that is not acted upon during the day to quell the arousal, become dreams during sleep. Finally, he holds that dreaming deactivates that emotional arousal by completing the expectation pattern metaphorically, freeing the brain to respond afresh to each new day.(New Scientist. April 12th pp44-47)
Michel Jouvet's research has suggested that instinctive behaviours are programmed during the REM state in the fetus and the neonate. This is necessarily in the form of incomplete templates for which the animal later identifies analogous sensory components in the real world. These analogical templates give animals the ability to respond to the environment in a flexible way and generate the ability to learn, rather than just react.[3]
[edit] Using dreams in therapy
The expectation fulfillment theory of dreams has introduced a more practical way of using dream metaphors in therapy. Human givens therapists know that dream metaphors that clients bring to therapy have therapeutic value because they can often grasp through the metaphor what is worrying their patient. They can then help clients to see more objectively what is troubling them. Depressed people dream more intensely than non-depressed people, and the expectation fulfillment theory explains why Griffin also proposed that hypnosis is most usefully defined as a direct route to activating the REM state, and that all hypnotic phenomena can be explained with this insight. Since trance and suggestion play such an important role in psychotherapy, this fact is of great significance to psychotherapists and counsellors.
Embodied Imagination is a therapeutic and creative form of working with dreams and memories pioneered by Robert Bosnak and based on principles first developed by Carl Jung, especially in his work on alchemy, and on the work of James Hillman, who focused on soul as a simultaneous multiplicity of autonomous states. From the point of view of the dreaming state of mind, dreams are real events in real environments. Based on this notion, one can “re-enter” the landscape of a dream and flashback to the images, whether it is a memory from waking life or from dreaming. One enters a hypnagogic state—a state of consciousness between waking and sleeping--and then, through the process of questioning, images are explored through the perspective of feelings and sensations manifested in the body, enabling new awareness to develop.
[edit] Supernatural interpretations of dreams
Oneiromancy, prediction of the future through the interpretation of dreams, holds great credence in ancient Judeo-Christianity: in the Tanakh, Jacob, Joseph and Daniel are given the ability to interpret dreams by Yahweh; in the New Testament, divine inspiration comes as a dream to Saint Joseph, the husband of Mary, when the Angel Gabriel spoke to him in a dream and told him that the baby Mary was carrying was the Son of God. After the visit of the Three Wise Men to them in Bethlehem, an angel appeared to him and told him to take Mary and Jesus to Egypt for their safety. The angel appeared again in a dream to tell him when it was safe to return to Israel. The story of Saint Patrick and his conversion of the people of Ireland also features dreaming. When Patrick was enslaved in Antrim he was told by God in a dream that there was a boat waiting in Wicklow to bring him back to his homeland.
In Islam, good dreams are considered to be from God and bad dreams from Satan [1].
Western philosophers of a sceptical bent (notably René Descartes, although he was in fact attempting to disprove scepticism in his meditations) have pointed out that dream experiences are indistinguishable from "real" events from the viewpoint of the dreamer, and so no objective basis exists for determining whether one is dreaming or awake at any given instant. One must, they argue, accept the reality of the waking world on the basis of faith.
Scientific evidence on lucid dreaming provides a counter-argument to this theory as in the 1980s lucid dreamers were able to demonstrate to researchers that they were consciously aware of being in a dream state by using eye movement signals[2][3].
[edit] Psychodynamic interpretation of dreams
Main article: Dream interpretation
Both Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung identify dreams as an interaction between the unconscious and the conscious. They also assert together that the unconscious is the dominant force of the dream, and in dreams it conveys its own mental activity to the perceptive faculty. While Freud felt that there was an active censorship against the unconscious even during sleep, Jung argued that the dream's bizarre quality is an efficient language, comparable to poetry and uniquely capable of revealing the underlying meaning. Fritz Perls presented his theory of dreams following the holistic nature of gestalt therapy. Dreams are seen as being projections of parts of oneself. Often these are parts that have been ignored, rejected or even suppressed. One aim of gestalt dream analysis is to accept and reintegrate these. The dream needs to be accepted in its own right - not broken down and analysed out of existence.
[edit] Neurology of dreams
There is no universally agreed-upon biological definition of dreaming. The dogma states that dreams are associated with REM sleep but the evidence for this is not strong. REM sleep is the state of sleep in which brain activity is most like wakefulness, which is why many researchers believe this is when dreams are strongest but it could also mean that this is a state from which dreams are most easily remembered. During a typical lifetime a person spends about 6 years dreaming[4] (which is about 2 hours each night[5]). It is unknown where in the brain dreams originate — if there is such a single location — or why dreams occur at all.
Eugen Tarnow suggests that dreams are ever present excitations of long term memory, even during waking life. The strangeness of dreams is due to the format of long-term memory, reminiscent of the Penfield & Rasmussen’s findings that electrical excitations of the cortex give rise to experiences similar to dreams. During waking life an executive function interprets long term memory consistent with reality checking. Tarnow's theory is a reworking of Freud's theory of dreams in which Freud's Unconscious is replaced with the long term memory system and Freud's “Dream Work” describes the structure of long term memory.[6]
The activation synthesis theory developed by Allan Hobson and Robert McCarley asserts that the sensory experiences are fabricated by the cortex as a means of interpreting random signals from the pons. They propose that in REM sleep, the ascending cholinergic PGO (ponto-geniculo-occipital) waves stimulate higher midbrain and forebrain cortical structures, producing rapid eye movements. The activated forebrain then synthesizes the dream out of this internally generated information. They assume that the same structures that induce REM sleep also generate sensory information.[7] Memory, attention and the other features lacking in the dream state are taken to depend on the neurotransmitters, norepinephrine and serotonin, which are present in reduced concentrations during REM sleep. This chemical change is hypothesized to produce a psychotic state, as well as a lack of orientation. On the other hand, research by Mark Solms suggests that dreams are generated in the forebrain, and that REM sleep and dreaming are not directly related.[8]
Combining Hobson's activation synthesis hypothesis with Solms's findings, the continual-activation theory of dreaming presented by Jie Zhang proposes that dreaming is a result of brain activation and synthesis, and at the same time, dreaming and REM sleep are controlled by different brain mechanisms. Zhang hypothesizes that the function of sleep is to process, encode and transfer the data from the temporary memory to the long-term memory, though there is not much evidence backing up the "consolidation". NREM sleep processes the conscious related memory (declarative memory); and REM sleep processes the non-conscious related memory (procedural memory).
Zhang assumes that during REM sleep, the non-conscious part of brain is busy to process the procedural memory; in the meanwhile, the level of activation in the conscious part of brain will descend to a very low level as the inputs from the sensory are basically disconnected. This will trigger the continual-activation mechanism to generate a data stream from the memory stores to flow through the conscious part of brain. Zhang suggests that this pulse-like brain activation is the inducer of each dream. He proposes that, with the involvement of brain associative thinking system, dreaming is, thereafter, self maintained with dreamer's own thinking until the next pulse of memory insertion. This explains why dreams have both characteristics of continuity (within a dream) and sudden scene changes (between two dreams).[9][10]
wikipedia.com
2006-12-08 17:09:25
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answer #10
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answered by Lewis M 3
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