you need to find out the meaning of it and find out if its something related that is playing on your mind!
2007-04-08 09:54:43
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answer #1
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answered by SARAH D 3
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You need to understand dreams:
Dreams don't mean that something is wrong. Dreams are the garbage of your mind. If something comes up, and you don't have time to process it, it comes back to haunt you, so to speak, in your dreams.
That said, the state of your life will determine the kind of dreams you have, like A bad dream be caused by choice of diet and also drinking bad wine or other alchohol drinks. For example, fat and greasy meats and pastry are bad foods.
If you don't exercise you are not promoting the digestion of food and nor preventing flatulence.
If your job is rather sedentary, after you eat, you might not want to be totally sedentry. sometimes, going to bed before the your usual bedtime could cause night-mares, and also if you sleep too long or lie long awake in the night.
Passing a whole night or part of a night without rest can cause bad dreams. Indulging in sleep too late in the morning could do it too.
If you consider that what you dream of has to do with what you were thinking that day, what you saw, what you didn't process, and the time you go to sleep, what you eat, your energy level, and those determine with how you process the dream, then you must have a lot of consistency in your life, and that is obsessing your subconsiciou.
Try to learn to lucid dream, then you can ask your subconscious questions about what is going on, and why you are dreaming that, and control your dreams.
2007-04-08 10:01:29
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answer #2
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answered by t 6
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Most dreams contain messages that serve to teach us something about ourselves. Unfortunately many a times we forget what we dream about as we go about our daily routine. With recurring dreams, the message may be so important and/or powerful that it just will not go away. The frequent repetition of such dreams forces you to pay attention and confront the dream. The dream is trying desperately to tell you something. Such dreams are often nightmarish or frightening in their content, which also helps you to take notice and pay attention to them.
Recurring dreams are quite common and are often triggered by a certain life situation or a problem that keeps coming back again and again. These dreams may recur daily, once a week, or once a month, but whatever the frequency, there is little variation in the dream content itself. It usually points to a personal weakness, fear, or your inability to cope with something in your life - past or present.
The repetitive patterns in your dream can reveal some of the most valuable information on yourself. It may point to a conflict, situation or matter in your waking life that remains unresolved or unsettled. Or some urgent underlying message in your unconscious is demanding to be understood.
Following are some tips in overcoming your recurring dreams.
1. In understanding your recurring dream, you must be willing to accept some sort of change or undergo a transformation.
2. You must be willing to look within yourself and confront whatever you may find no matter how difficult it my be.
3. You must be able to look at the dream from an objective point of view. Try to get pass the emotional and reactive elements of the dream and get down to the symbolic images. Many times dreams are masked by elements that are disturbing preventing you to delve any deeper. This is a defense mechanism that your unconscious may be putting up.
4. Be patient. Do not get discourage if these dreams still recur even after you thought you have come to understand them.
5. Learn to accept yourself truly and fully.
Often times, once you discover what your recurring dream is trying to tell you, these dreams will change or altogether disappear.
2007-04-08 13:33:43
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answer #3
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answered by Freckles 3
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There is obviously some greater point of the dream that you need to discover. Try getting a book on dream analysis and discover the meaning to it. Be sure to write the dream out in full detail so you don't miss anything. Have fun discovering what your dreams mean to you. It could be something that you haven't finished or started that needs to be done... it could be some hidden message to change something about your reality...
2007-04-08 10:04:25
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Good question, and my answer, i suffer these myself and mine are the past life, my childhood and the answer i have is that someone is trying to get a message across or sub mind is troubling you when the book cannot be closed on this part of life. Work on those dreams and find the answer if possible
2007-04-08 21:16:55
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answer #5
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answered by SAMANTHA H 3
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I have asked before about a dream that i've had since childhood and the majority of answers given explained that they often play on a fear or a belief.
2007-04-08 09:56:38
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answer #6
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answered by gemheinz 3
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Dream is a function of our reality, objective and subjective. But reality changes, so completely identical dreams must be result of brain malfunctioning, when it produces exactly the same output twice or more...
2007-04-08 10:08:54
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answer #7
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answered by Catherine R 2
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1- problems you still have after dream 1
2-thinking about the dream before you go to sleep
2007-04-08 10:21:33
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Does this take place to you in actual existence? Like do you attempt to do issues that are important to you, yet each little thing else in the international is retaining you up? or you place each little thing else in front of what you truly desire to do? in basic terms throwin' some suggestions accessible.
2016-10-02 09:23:28
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answer #9
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answered by ? 4
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You have to give your brain new information to work with. Go out and see new places, new people, hear new voices, sounds, songs, read new books, stroll a museum or garden.
2007-04-08 10:44:05
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answer #10
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answered by Hot Coco Puff 7
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