As a person who has been having dreams for 21 years now, I had to learn how to interpret my dreams on my own. I am in my late 20's right now and have begun the journey of learning the meaning of my own dreams. The "technique" that I use is one that I learned on my own, so I am confident in all that my dreams may come, mean, say, and show me. I must tell you when I first began learning how to interpret my dreams was one of the hardest things I ever had to learn how to do because I was on my own in all shapes and sizes. Especially, with not knowing anykind of meaning of what could be behind my dreams. The only thing I knew about my dreams was; They all come true. No matter what I do, what direction I decide to go in my life, whether I speak about them, or how much I actually remembered from my dreams. Dreams are quite fun. I still have a lot to learn, but I am not in no rush to know it all right now. I am enjoying my learning journey.
2007-10-07 20:06:58
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answer #1
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answered by white_painted_lady 5
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I had heard of people have those "foretelling" dreams but never believed it could happen to me. I had one dream about a job I was supposed to have. I'd forgotten about the dream until that exact same job came available. I applied for it & got turned down. If I had not had that dream, I would have let that be the end. But something inside made me keep going back to be rejected. The person in charge of hiring was even getting mad with me. After other prospects kept turning this job down, they reluctantly gave it to me. It was the job that skyrocketed my career. It would have never happened had that dream not taken such a hold of me. Bowel interception is a very dangerous ailment. Even the operation to correct it is dangerous. Even if the doctor only called the ambulance to calm a worried mother, it was still fortunate that in looking, they found this life risky condition. Sometimes we just have to trust our gut instinct. I've heard of doctors who say they have to listen to these things b/c mothers will pick up information about their children w/o even knowing what they notice different. Even though they can't explain WHY something is not right, a parent is still the first to know SOMETHING is not right & their concerns should be listened to. It's good to have a doctor that looked further instead of dismissing your concern.
2016-05-21 06:20:33
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Dreams seem like a foreign language. The syntax is funky and not always linear. If that weren't enough, each person's symbolism is personal, so things that are seemingly similar could be entirely different.
I put a link below if you are interested. I haven't read the book, but I've heard the author speak, and she has some very keen insights.
2007-10-06 17:24:30
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Psychology. if it's your own dream, you base it on your past experiences, your thoughts, or whatever it is that you think it is about you that might relate to your dream. If it's somebody else's dream, well, you have to know them really well. Or at least ask them stuff about themselves while you try to interpret their dreams. It's all about psychology really.
2007-10-04 22:51:46
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answer #4
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answered by weswrongwithlovingyou 3
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keep a dream diary and keep record of the real events in your life. also check out http://www.dreammoods.com
2007-10-04 22:54:45
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answer #5
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answered by catsclaw 6
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