Hi Daisy, Belinda and Shalie21,
My precognitive dreams always have meaning on many levels, applying in symbolic terms to my personal life as well as in literal terms to the unfolding of future events in my life.
The results of my research suggest that this is so, and that this is also applicable to other people. (Research published in "The Shape of Things to Come".)
At the same time, no matter how destined the future can seem to be when these kind of dreams are experienced and then waking life follows accordingly, there is always room for change to some extent, if not totally, of the outcome.
Our dreams help us to know ourselves and our thinking (conscious and unconscious) more clearly. Our waking world reflects such thoughts ... it reflects ourself .. it IS ourself, symbolically.
So if some action is taken on such dreams, or if some shift occurs, so the waking life picture shifts too.
Of course, on many occasions, we are so close to the event that there seems little time to change the course of the apparently inevitable. I also believe this to be the case. When I have a series of precognitive events (i.e. leading up to the actual event, in whole or in part), the accuracy of the dream details is higher as the event approaches. It's as if the ink is almost set .. too late for a rewrite.
Experiencing precognitive dreams, for me, gives me a sense of total awe and empowerment, quite contrary to the feeling people might expect, a feeling perhaps of disempowerment and being unable to alter the future.
Precognition puts you in touch with your own astounding powers of manifestation and meaning.
So, Daisy, I would look at your dream symbolically as well as considering its precognitive content.
Also I'd say that as the time span was long (?? you suggest), the event may be significantly different if/when it occurs.
Church/ hallway ... symbols of spirituality and rebirth. (Hallways often appear in dreams as birth canals, suggesting transition from one place to another, just as hallways link us from one room to another, or from a room to a door, or a door to a room ...)
What does everyone else think on this?
Jane Anderson |