Why do almost all of their dreams come true?

Hi, I think this question is a bit unusual, but it's something that's been on my mind for a long time. It's about a friend of mine. Every time she tells us about her dreams, they come true a few days later. I don't mean ordinary things, like what grade she got.

The most recent example is how she told us that in her dream, her orthodontist, whom she liked, died. She was almost worried that the dream would actually come true. We reassured her because it was incredibly unlikely. Two days later, she received a call from her practice saying that the same orthodontist had died unexpectedly in a car accident that evening.

There have been several such incidents so far, so this isn't an isolated incident. I'm neither superstitious nor believe in God or anything supernatural. I usually believe there's a reasonable explanation for everything. This does surprise me, though. 😅 With things like a volcanic eruption, there's always the possibility that the news had already made predictions days in advance. But how would her brain know, for example, that her orthodontist would suddenly die in a car accident?

Such unexplained dreams that come true are not isolated cases, and I find it a bit strange… Do you have any ideas or explanations? I'd appreciate any responses!

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Doktormythos2
9 months ago

Well, you might take 1% of your environment, and the rest comes to subconsciousness. And through dreams, subconscious mechanisms are processed and you can then perceive them. There’s so much we hide and don’t perceive because it’s too much. It can be concluded that your brain can calculate this.

Doktormythos2
9 months ago
Reply to  Tarkia

Yes the brain is crater than you think :D. I mean you can sharpen your senses so much that you can’t imagine.

Chili663
6 months ago

I feel the same! Premonitions and visions! I’m glad you didn’t kill her. I am now convinced that there are just such people. I never wanted to see it with me. But now I’m T40 and I know what to do with it. It is fascinating and creepy at the same time. But I keep it for me, very few know. But it’s nice if you take it seriously and don’t get rid of as a spider. Maybe we just have a special gift.

SimpleHuman
6 months ago
Reply to  Chili663

I know under the word, true self-prohecies…

Kwalliteht
9 months ago

Because she can always remember this after the truth… oh no, we let it.

Susannya123
8 months ago

Dear Tarkia!

Did you know the paediatrician yourself? Or are you trying to call in practice to check the deaths that your friend allegedly foreseen in a dream, including the date itself?

Some people are light-sighted, that’s true. But just because someone “counts” something, I would never believe it so easily. Even if he is otherwise extremely trustworthy, there is the phenomenon of unconscious self-deception.

What do you think of the idea of examining the alleged death penalty dream in the above-mentioned ways? If the thing was to persist (and only then), you could think about what was going on.

For example, I’d rather not think that the doctor came to death because on the highway out of the blue sky, a ghost driver jumped in frontally. (What should be found, if you really want to proceed scientifically). Rather, I would believe that the doctor could have been severely suicidal – so that it should have been what your girlfriend might have been with at least intuitively preconsciously during her last visit to the woman. As indicated in the previous post.

If that were the case, DANN would not be a special surprise to the dream itself, nor would we have to be surprised if the police were to read in the death accident report that the car, including the doctor, would race against a tree or concrete pillar without any brake track. Is that understandable for you?