Don't worry, part of normal experience for some people.
Robert Moss knows all about them. Go to his site and e-mail him
http://www.mossdreams.com/
2007-01-22 09:17:35
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answer #1
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answered by franc 5
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I dreamt the future once, years ago, and very clearly... I mean, sometimes I have a half feeling that when I feel as if I've seen something in a dream, it's just confusion, but that time I doubt it was. Sadly, though my experience of reality matched the dream pretty perfectly for about thirty seconds, it was a pretty mundance thirty seconds, nothing special happening, and nothing special I could do during that time... and I never had another as clear again...
I think the first thing is not to panic. If they get really scary, talk in person to someone who'll understand. Like that psychoanalysty person says above, it could just be your mind playing tricks on you, or a sign of imbalance in other parts of your life? Good luck!
2007-01-22 09:38:17
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answer #2
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answered by Buzzard 7
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each and each of the solutions thus far were mind-blowing and properly reasoned, My answer isn't any affirmation bias won't be able to be used to disprove precognitive desires, technological expertise does no longer actual disprove something, for instance tries to locate God interior the picture voltaic device and under no circumstances looking God isn't disproving the existence of God. technological expertise checks hypothesis and both unearths evidence in help of the hypothesis or fails to locate evidence in help of the hypothesis. That reported affirmation bias must be utilized instead clarification (or hypothesis) to describe doubtless precognitive desires. that is person-friendly to work out the position generic circumstances must be defined in this type. it will be somewhat harder to describe the dreaming (and recording on the time of dream) a series of numbers that become determined later through a random variety generator that matched the numbers interior the precognitive dream. In real existence circumstances issues do get more suitable complicated and that i agree that element of specifics would a minimum of more suitable strongly propose precognition instead of affirmation bias a minimum of at the same time as primary sensible guesses in accordance with primary thoughts are eradicated. back, my answer is that affirmation bias must be yet another clarification at the same time as apparently to larger in good structure the circumstances. Psiexploration
2016-10-15 23:03:19
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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I have had them for as long as I can remember, I dream the future. Some of it is rather worrying and some of it is very nice. When it comes true the feeling one gets of it in dreams is not the same as in reality. But the situation is the same tho.
2007-01-22 10:12:33
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I had a dream recently in which my daughter slipped on the ice and broke her ankle. It was so realistic that I called her and asked her to be careful walking on the snow and ice. Within the next two weeks, her boyfriend sprained his ankle and their house guest broke his ankle in a car accident. Coincidence? Probably. But, it was kind of weird. ---I wish I'd have a dream come true that involved winning power ball numbers or something like that :-).
2007-01-22 09:26:47
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answer #5
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answered by ms_quiltsalot 2
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There's nothing wrong with you. Dreams and your conscious life are definitely connected, but not in a paranormal woo-woo way.
To understand a dream, it’s helpful to keep in mind why and how we dream. When we sleep, the body and perception systems are shut down, but the brain remains active. The brain thinks about what has recently been most active during waking hours—experiences, thoughts and feelings accessed recently whether consciously or not. The brain is still active, so it works on this content, but not in a familiar, rational way. During sleep, this material is not related using input from the external real world, but rather by the brain connections already established in the cortex. So the story connectedness isn’t like everyday experience, but rather a strange, circuitous flow from one image to the next. So dreams aren’t magical messages to guide our life, but dream imagery is taken from everyday experiences, thoughts and feelings that matter most to us during our waking life. So it’s a mistake to apply standard symbol definitions, such as Freudian meanings. All you need to do is think about what kind of imagery it is and how it relates to your daily life.
So what happens is that dream imagery and conscious life imagery are often similar. Plus if you remember the dream, your decision-making could be affected by it. So it might seem like the dream is somehow foreshadowing your life, though this is not really what's going on.
2007-01-22 09:16:07
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answer #6
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answered by ? 7
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what u mean ? dreams that repaet themselfs, or ones that happen in real life or ones that continue over?? if so i have all 3 more the ones that happen in real life
2007-01-22 09:16:41
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answer #7
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answered by vicky s 3
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no, sorry never have. I don't think it's likely there is anything wrong with you. try not to worry
2007-01-22 12:14:53
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answer #8
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answered by rose_merrick 7
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you need 2 use this as a gift. dont be scared.x
2007-01-22 09:18:15
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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yes..no I have them
2007-01-22 09:12:13
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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