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I have the ability to fly, hover, whatever and don't start out flying but can leap and rise. In a warehouse setting (where i've pretty much worked all my life) and I see my best friend so I show off my hovering capability and go real high. I told him I told you so (as if i had told him I had the ability before). We sat down at a table where pancakes were being served for dinner with chunks of tomatoes. We were talking and he and his girlfriend began smooching....he stated "speaking of which" and reached in his pocket as if to be a proposal. She basically rejected him because of his drinking problem. Until he could get that under control. Another piece of this is the girl is just a random girl who I knew from high school but he wouldn't have ever known. and end dream.

2007-03-02 04:33:50 · 5 answers · asked by phoozball 4 in Social Science Psychology

5 answers

Sounds like you and this friend of yours have known each other quite a while and have bonded but created some type of jealousy or on going competition with each other. The flying on your part is trying to prove something to a person that doesn't believe you have ability. You must respect this friend greatly to want his approval for anything.

On the other hand he might be jealous and not admitting it. The deal with the engagement is him trying to "up one on you" and her rejection could be confirmation that he doesn't have anything on you concerning your talents.

Best wishes.

2007-03-02 05:26:19 · answer #1 · answered by rggiggles 3 · 0 0

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 stem continues to fire and the cortex remains active. The thoughts that have been most active during waking hours—perceptions, experiences, thoughts and feelings, processed consciously or unconsciously—are still “peaked” and they associate with other images already linked in your cortex. In other words, the brain references this content, but not in a rational way, not using input from the external real world as in waking hours. So the story connectedness isn’t like everyday experience, but rather a strange flow from one image to the next. Therefore, dreams aren’t magical messages to guide our life, but sequences of associated images taken from everyday experiences - thoughts and feelings that matter a lot to us during our waking life. So it’s a mistake to apply one-size-fits-all symbols, such as Freudian meanings or standard “dreammoods” formulas. All you need to do is think about what kind of imagery it is and how it relates to your daily life.

Flying dreams are common. Flying represents the ability to do something that maybe few if any people can do, so they see it as amazing. It is a sign that you feel competent and confident. This is the main significance of your dream.

The second part is about relationships, not necessarily about yours (since your friend is shown). Your feeling is that intimate relationships have to be solid all around in order to succeed...you wouldn't jump into tone. Maybe you've been thinking about romantic relationships recently.

2007-03-02 13:14:49 · answer #2 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

The best way to interpret a dream is to compare it to your life. Seek connections to what's going on for you now.

2007-03-02 13:20:52 · answer #3 · answered by Shaman 7 · 0 0

flying in a dream does not mean death. i have those dreams all the time. in your dream if your afraid while you flying, well its not good, your stressed in your life. but if your liking it, then your at a good time, and just enjoying things in life.

2007-03-02 12:42:29 · answer #4 · answered by angeleyes_0613 4 · 0 0

flying is a sign of death be very careful

2007-03-02 12:38:42 · answer #5 · answered by charles h 4 · 0 0

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