T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
353.1 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Thu Apr 30 1987 17:41 | 12 |
| There are several other notes on the subject of dreaming. Many
people are of the opinion that we all dream every night, but often
we forget we've dreamed.
Some dreams may have a paranormal content; others needn't. I know
of one dream whose main ingredients came from two advertisements
that ran in an aerospace journal, which I'd read before going to
sleep.
Some dreams may be just cleaning the mental "clutter" from our heads.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
353.2 | News Stories | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | I haven't lost my mind - it's Backed-up on tape somewhere | Thu Apr 30 1987 22:31 | 12 |
| I too, frequently remember my dreams, which are also always in colour.
Some seem to have some paranormal content, some seem to be a different
way of solving problems (I have had dreams of solving calculus problems
that worked, dreams that showed me holes in software and ways to
plug the holes). A common way to affect my dreams is if there is
a news show on the radio while I'm sleeping, I will usually pick
one of the news stories and dream that I am there and participating
in the news story. Some are interesting, some are not very nice
at all (I don't like picking up on murders or other violent crimes).
Elizabeth
|
353.3 | | MLFS1::DALPE | | Fri May 01 1987 15:09 | 22 |
| I had an interesting dream last night. Myself and a couple of friends
of mine had discovered a means of time travel. We would use swings
or swing each other or even one of us had managed to figure out
the proccess without any mechanical means. How it worked was you
would start to swing, then a wall would appear in front of you.
you had to visualize the wall, but it was definitly real you just
had to know it was there and then you could see it. It was about ten
feet tall, made of solid stone and was one foot thick.
While swinging you would concentrate on the place and time you wanted
to be and at the right moment you would jump up and over the wall.
Then you would be there. If you didn't make it over it was quite
a fall but if you did you would land smoothly.
There was more to the dream, actually alot of adventures but it
would take quite a while to write them I figured I'd share the
concept with you so if anyone wanted to try it out in a dream state
and see how it works for you. Maybe you'll end up in the same places
I went to, now THAT would be interesting.
paul
|
353.4 | future dreaming | STAR::DICKINSON | | Fri May 01 1987 16:04 | 20 |
|
Anyone ever have a dream of an event that had not yet happened,
and then later the event occured ?
Sometime ago I had such a dream. I dreamt that myself and some friends
were at a place ( a place that in reality existed not far from where
I was living ). There was a party of some sort, and the place was
raided by the police, people were arrested for posession of pot.
I was not, I had snuck out or something, can't remember. Well a
few days later this really happened to the people who were in my
dream, only I wasn't there. *This really happened*
I had told some friends about the dream after I had it, and when
it really happened, some wondered I was an informer. It is hard
to just toss this up as a coincidental.
peter
|
353.5 | pointer | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Fri May 01 1987 16:35 | 5 |
| Re .4:
Try Notes 2, 28, 58, 97, and 263.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
353.6 | Other possibilities. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri May 01 1987 16:57 | 9 |
| RE: .4
Although I am fairly well convinced that some dreams really do fortell
the future, keep in mind that there are conventional mechanisms
other than coincidence which will deceptively give that appearance
(in this case I think we can agree to rule out one of them -- self
fulfilling prophecy).
Topher
|
353.7 | other possibilities | STAR::DICKINSON | | Fri May 01 1987 17:19 | 9 |
|
.6,
We can definitly rule out self fulfilling prophecy ! What other
conventional mechanisms did you have in mind ?
peter
|
353.8 | Elementary my dear peter! | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri May 01 1987 17:47 | 22 |
| RE: .7
The most likely here is what I sometimes refer to as the "subconscious
Sherlock Holmes". Each and every one of us has a subconscious which
notices many things which we *consciously* *don't* notice. It can
put these little facts together, along with things we do remember,
and come up with quite startleing deductions. In other words we
all have a mad genius riding along with us and seeing/hearing/feeling/
smelling/tasting/etc. everything we do, and paying more attention
than we do.
Just as a for-instance (there are many possibilities here) your
subconscious could have already figured out that some member of
your group of acquaintences was a narc informer. By noticing a
certain excitment on that persons part when the party was mentioned
it could have guessed that the party might be raided -- and given
you a warning, via the dream, to be extra sure not to be there.
Did this happen? I haven't the faintest idea. Could it have happened?
Yes, it most certainly could have.
Topher
|
353.9 | Possibilites | HBO::NEWFIELD | | Sun May 03 1987 04:05 | 7 |
|
Jane Roberts 'Seth' speakes of dreams as working out possible
realities,i.e, how shall i plan tomorrow; interact with John/Jane
Doe etc.
|
353.10 | a cynic speaks | NATASH::WEBBER | Caroline Webber | Tue May 05 1987 14:27 | 14 |
|
As a cynic, I would point out that a police raid is not a tremendously
farfetched event for a pot party, so the dream makes logical sense,
especially if your friends were holding it in an apartment building
or some other place where a neighbor could have complained about
the smell, noise, etc.
I'd be really interested in a dream that had something logically
unlikely happening which later came true.
Caroline
P.S. I do have a reasonably open mind about it or I wouldn't read
this notesfile!
|
353.11 | dreams come true?? | ANOVAX::WOOD | WHAT A PARTY... | Wed May 06 1987 14:03 | 25 |
| I dream every night. Some mornings I remember more than others.
I have had helpful dreams about work and such. One of the things
that amazes me is that I can wake up from a dream, go into the kitchen
for a drink return back to bed and continue with the same dream!!
Once I had a dream about a friend and in the dream he had been hurt.
I was telling this to a friend as we drove down the street. All
of a sudden she was pointing her finger and saying look. Sure enough
there he was with a bandaged arm and hand. Freaky!!
I think dreams are definitely the way your subconscious sends you
messages. Just recently I was thinking of breaking up with a steady
boyfriend of a year. I can't tell you how many nights I had dreams
of killing him for the most ridiculous reasons. Needless to say,
I broke things off with him!!
In the first few notes of this topic people mentioned dreaming in
color. Are such things possible?? I sometimes think I have dreams
in color but tend to think that my conscious mind fills in the color
for me when I recall the dream. For instance I had a dream of a
Ryder Truck (the kind you move furniture with). When thinking about
the dream I insisted that I knew it was a Ryder because of the "yellow"
color but I can't be sure.
lori
|
353.12 | | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed May 06 1987 14:51 | 15 |
| Re .11:
There's a whole note on this subject ("Do You dream In Colour?");
and a lot of people do. I _know_, for instance, that I dream in
color because color often plays an important part in my dreams [one
dream was on a complex optical train using dichroic/split beams
filtered to their primary colors in pure saturation; it would be
meaningless in monochrome]. Indeed, when there's no coloor is when
I'm dreaming I'm viewing a monochrome device (I was fooling around
with an idea for a big-screen stereoscopic television display, and
_that_ was monichrome, even though the cabinet it was in was wood-
colored). Outside of that sort of thing, my dreams are always in
color.
Steve Kallis, Jr
|
353.13 | dreams/colour/other senses | MIRFAK::TILLSON | | Thu May 07 1987 13:28 | 18 |
|
I also dream in colour most of the time. I have had dreams like
you describe, Steve, where I am in a room (coloured) and watching
a black-and-white (well, actually sepia, but let's not nit-pick)
movie on a TV. I am curious; does anyone else have dreams that
incorporate touch, taste, and smell? I get these effects in dreams
with some regularity. For example, in a recent dream, I was walking
barefoot on a paved road, and cut my right foot on a shard of glass.
I found it curious, because I felt the pavement, which was cool
(it was nighttime) and pebbles and sand under my feet, and wetness
from the blood on my foot, and saw the marks I had left on the road,
but I did not feel pain from the cut. I have also tasted food
(chocolate ice cream, of course;-)), smelled lemons, flowers, etc.
during dreams. Does this happen to anyone else?
Rita
|
353.14 | cynics most welcome | STAR::DICKINSON | | Fri May 08 1987 11:37 | 13 |
|
.10
It was not the fact that a police raid occured that I see as
significant,but the fact that the very people in my dream were
there, and were arrested just as in my dream.
BTW - This was not a noisy, smelly event. It was relativly quiet
in a house in the country.
The dream makes no *logical* sense to me.
peter
|
353.15 | | MANTIS::PARE | | Tue May 12 1987 09:59 | 9 |
| I agree with you Peter. I have dreams like that a lot too. I "saw"
both of my children in dreams and both dreams were about a year
before they were born. I tend to dream about people I don't know
about a year or two before they come into my life. I used to "talk"
to my sons in dreams...the boys would come into my room and wake
me up to continue the conversations when they were little. I think
that some dreams are just subconcious expressions of wishes and
fears, but other dreams seem to be our conciousness exploring aspects
of reality we have yet to recognize.
|
353.16 | 'air head?' | USAT02::CARLSON | death to BIMS!! | Wed May 20 1987 14:59 | 10 |
| re 13. I definitely remembering feeling things in my dreams, but
never pain. And I've had several babies, endured tornadoes, fires,
sensual encounters, etc. (in my dreams)
Had a funny one the other night...I went somewhere and got a brain,
that was in a tin. I took it to the hospital so they could put
it in...and I remember quibbling over how much hair they'd shave
off! (colored dream too-had bright orange hair!)
Theresa.
|
353.17 | RE 353.16 | EDEN::KLAES | The Universe is safe. | Wed May 20 1987 16:51 | 6 |
| Your real name isn't EYEgor by any chance, is it?? :^) :^)
(A pink cigar if you know what I'm referring to)
Larry
|
353.18 | future dream=Dejavu | MTBLUE::PUSHARD_MIKE | | Thu May 21 1987 02:14 | 8 |
|
It is my belief that part of our dreaming is of our future and that
is where we get the feeling of Dejavu,because we may dream of a
place or event and when it happens we feel we have been there before
or feel like an event had taken place before.
MIKE
|
353.19 | Other Senses in Dreams | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Thu May 21 1987 10:47 | 15 |
| I also have other senses activated when I dream. My dreams almost
always feature color, too. I have had dreams in which music was
composed and heard, dreams in which I ate, smelled and tasted food,
dreams in which I felt bodily sensations. Of the lot, the last
category has been the most disturbing for me, especially if they
resemble "the hag in the night"--dreams of being suffocated, unable
to breathe, pinched, crushed. The reason these dreams are so
profoundly disorienting is that while having them, if I concentrate,
I can sense the "true" state of my physical body--lying still,
breathing quietly and normally. In other dreams (not of the Hag
variety) when I've dreamed of physical discomfort, I've awakened to
find that that part of my body featured in the dream had gotten
into an uncomfortable position.
Marcia
|
353.20 | dejavu = past_dream | STAR::DICKINSON | | Tue May 26 1987 16:34 | 10 |
|
.18;
I have often thought about that myself. It really does start to
become a question of just what we really think reality is for starters,
not to mention the infinitude of other questions.
peter
|
353.21 | re: Lora; .11 & Color | VAX4::JOLLY_S | | Wed Jun 10 1987 18:43 | 14 |
| I always dream in color; the better or more vivid ones include
smell, taste, and sensations. However, the dreams that include
such vivid detail I feel border on the "paranormal"...Each one
comes complete with sound effects too! Those are the dreams I
often wish I had never dreamed. There was one dream that I had
where I woke up yelling and crying. I was quite out of breath;
and had been warned too...Supposedly, if I repeated any part of
some of these dreams, something bad was going to happen to me or
my family. Wierd, isn't it! The funniest one I've had was just
recently...I was cold and wet. There was no way to get warm or
dry, no place to go...my water bed leaked that nite!
Jean
|
353.22 | Keep on dreaming. | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Wed Jul 08 1987 02:01 | 5 |
| As I have talked of Lazaris, he has talked about dreams many
times. I have put hsi descriptions in 358.74.
Frederick
|
353.23 | Blindly dreaming | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Tue Jul 21 1987 22:03 | 6 |
| Does anyone know what blind people dream about? Or what "form"
the dreams occur in? Would they then also meditate the same way,
do you think?
Frederick
|
353.24 | Clairvoyant Dream | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Mon Dec 14 1987 12:11 | 25 |
353.25 | Only in stereo | POBOX::CROWE | I led the pigeons to the flag.. | Mon Apr 03 1989 17:29 | 20 |
| Reply to .23
The husband of a friend of mine is blind and she and I had this
discussion about what he dreams. She says that his dreams are those
of sounds, feelings and tangible touch. He's been blind since birth
so he doesn't `see' any forms in his dreams.
She once described to me a nightmare he had. Their son was crying
far in the distance and Darrell was trying to get to him. He was
surrounded by strange sounds and voices screaming at him from all
around. He would periodically trip and stumble over things trying
to get to his son Joseph whose cries he could only hear.
Made me think. It seems that people's usual dream state is their
current state. I've known deaf children whose dreams don't have
sound. But then I wonder, if someone used to have sight, but through
some accident or illness currently couldn't see, would their dreams
still have pictures? Same with sound?
-- Tracy
|
353.26 | | WRO8A::WARDFR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Apr 03 1989 17:56 | 6 |
| re: .25 Tracy
Interesting...food for thought. Thanks.
Frederick
|
353.27 | And in what language? | CECV03::US_ES_ADMIN | | Mon Apr 03 1989 19:18 | 10 |
|
RE: .25
Your reply reminded me of a question that was asked to a group of
people who spoke English as a second language. They were asked what
language they dreamed in. Many had been here a good portion of their
life and were very fluent in the English language. All responded that
they dreamed in their native language.
Joanne
|
353.28 | If you ask me.... | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Tue Apr 04 1989 06:48 | 17 |
| RE -1 (Joanne)
> ....... All responded that
> they dreamed in their native language.
Do I really dream in a language? I am not sure. I *do* remember I had nightmares
back in the time I was learning English, where everybody around me spoke
english, and I was stammering, couldn't make myself clear: aaarrghh!
(the same happened in the time I was learning Polish: now *that*'s a nightmare!)
:-)
But these are only dreams where language explicitly played its role. In the
"usual" dreams, I found out I can *recall* them in several languages, but how
hard I concentrate, I don't know which one, if any, was used in the dream.
So if you ask me, I would reply: "Do I dream in any language *at all*?"
Arie
|
353.29 | feelings... | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Tue Apr 04 1989 11:35 | 13 |
| I think, for the most part, our dreams "borrow" symbols from our waking
life and everything in the dream is an internal "feeling". We don't actually
see, feel or hear anything (except for those cases when outside events
influence our dreams, such as the alarm clock going off and dreaming that
the phone is ringing). When we dream in color, we don't see red,
rather we experience the "feeling" of red as it is stored in our minds from the
actual experience of red in waking life. For those with physical handicaps,
I susepect it's the same; their dreams use symbols from the collection of
feelings and emotions they have stored over the years. If one is blind,
their colletion doesn't contain "images" like one with normal sight might
contain in their collection.
Terry
|
353.30 | Past lives | AYOV18::BCOOK | Zaman, makan, ikhwan | Wed Apr 05 1989 08:30 | 8 |
| I heard (a long time ago) about people, blind from birth, who were
taken through 'past life recall' stuff (where they Could see) and
they ended up really screwed up 'cos now they knew what they were
missing....
Anyone else heard of this?
Brian
|
353.31 | Oui, Si, Yes...Uh?? | POBOX::CROWE | I led the pigeons to the flag.. | Wed Apr 05 1989 11:50 | 9 |
| Just another thought on the language topic, I had a friend who
was _fluent_ in Spanish, French, Greek and English (Father was French,
Mother was Spanish, spent 1st half of life in Greece, and remaining
in USA).
She could jump between languages in a snap. I asked her one day
what language she _thought_ in. She said she didn't think in any
language, she just thought. But whatever language was just how it
came out. I imagine that dreaming works the same way.
|
353.32 | Living & dreaming in 6 languages... | DRCS::ABEYA | Ines ABEYA @GEO - BACK FOR A WHILE | Wed Apr 19 1989 05:44 | 22 |
| Being myself a "mixed breed", and thus speeking fluently 6 languages,
I can confirm that my dreams can be in any of the languages, depending
upon the situation.
I got confirmation of this by the various boyfriends I had over
the years, because I usually talk during my
sleep.
Eg.: If I'm home (Geneva) I will dream in English if the
dream is about something at work, or in French if it's about something
else. But when I am on a trip to Italy (thus speak Italian at work
and after work), I will dream in Italian.
Same thing for thinking: I think in whatever the language of the
situation is. When I'm in Zurich, I'll think in Swiss-german.
Although, whenever I write myself a reminder on anything
(eg. shopping, things to do, etc) I mix french & english, picking
the most adequate/convenient words of each language for what I want
to say. It's not confusion, but convenience.
Ines
|
353.33 | | LEDS::BATES | Daughter of the Moon | Thu Apr 27 1989 16:33 | 24 |
|
I've just gone through the readjustment of thinking/dreaming in English
again after three months in Italy. For the first week or two that I was
there (a period which included a trip to Yugoslavia) I thought in
English and translated to Italian, and dreamed in English. Then one day
I started to talk to myself and did so in Italian - it was as 'natural'
as thinking and speaking in English had been. Similarly, when I
dreamed, conversations were in Italian, not English - regardless of
the location of the dream.
I returned last week, and was still writing notes to myself and talking
to myself in Italian until a few days ago, when English 'clicked in'
at last.
Interestingly, during the time I spent in Italy, when it was necessary
to speak another language (French, for example) I translated from
Italian to French, and only rarely invoked English.
But then I'm convinced that I was Italian (more specifically, from
Firenze) in an earlier life...
Gloria
|
353.34 | Dreaming in Music Language | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Apr 28 1989 13:52 | 10 |
| I was just thinking about the language dreams when I remembered that
back in my college days when I was studying piano, music theory &
composition, I started dreaming music. I didn't dreaming music that I
was familiar with or studying--it was all my own and it was all piano
music.
In the morning I always wanted to write it down, but I couldn't quite
grasp it. Well, I guess its the world's loss, not mine. :-(
Mary
|
353.35 | <DREAMS!!!!> | CSC32::T_SANDEFUR | | Wed Jun 27 1990 13:48 | 22 |
|
Hello everyone!
I need someone to help me interpet my dreams for the past 3 night.
Sun mon and tue night I have had different dream but the same
encounters. Sun night someone broke into our house and my husband and
this person began to fight, I reached for a gun and shot him. Mon
night I had a few things I had to run to the store to get and when I
got in my car someone put there hands around my neck and began to
strangle me. I managed to put my hand on the horn and my hubby came to
the rescue. Then tue night, My husband and I were riding our cycle and
out of no where a car tried to run us off the street, we went off of a
embankment and walked away with a few minor scratches.
DO NOT FORGET THESE ARE DREAMS. But I do need to know what they mean
and is someone trying to tell me something, or should I even be letting
the bother me.
All idea's and imput is greatly appreciated.
Tammy
|
353.36 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long strange trip its been... | Wed Jun 27 1990 16:02 | 4 |
|
Tammy... everyone I know is having wild dreams these days... many of
them involve escape from danger. The theme seems to be in the human
collective subconscious. There is danger afoot.
|
353.37 | imo | BTOVT::BEST_G | The unbearable likeness of beans | Thu Jun 28 1990 10:08 | 17 |
|
It's pretty common for women to have their husbands representing
their animus' in their dreams. If you want more info on the animus,
dig around in note 1043 (.12 or later).
You might want to look at your relationship with your husband to see
if these dreams are in some way symbolic of that situation. For
instance, the person that broke in and began to fight with your husband
could be an aspect of your own psyche. And as I said above, in the
dream your husband may actually represent your animus. So there could
be an inner battle of sorts going on. Granted there may be
manifestations of this inner situation in the physical world, but I
doubt you are in any real mortal danger.
Just my opinion,
guy
|
353.38 | <RE:Imo> | CSC32::T_SANDEFUR | | Thu Jun 28 1990 13:26 | 4 |
| Thanxs for your input Guy. It is greatly appreciated.
Tammy
|