 Originally Posted by System
The way we experience, respond to, attach, and internalize these precognitive events is what determines the experience we have in the physical reality. So our subconscious desires/fears can present themselves in reality, the same way they do in the dream. The same thing goes for something that intrigues or perplexes us, we will create something mysterious or "odd" in order for our brains to process and pick apart the event.
Does this make sense?
It makes absolute sense to me. Last night is a great example. Here's an excerpt from my DJ that goes along with your explanation...
"Now I am packing my sound gear and guitar, with the help of my kids, into a van. My kids disappear, and so does my gear, and I am now in one of my company vehicles. A team leader, Mike, [whom I had fired earlier in the year in waking life], is driving. I ask why he is there. I don't discern the answer, but I am alarmed that I have lost control of this team.
I see another one of my vans pulling out of a parking lot. An uninsured employee is driving. I ask one of the other employees why he is driving that van. It turns out, after I had fired one of the female employees, two others quit, and all three are working for a competitor. And they are still using one of my vans to get their work done. The betrayal is confusing to me, but I feel helpless. I am tangled up in an abnormally long seat belt. Out the passenger window I see a gnarled mess of metal and concrete at a nearby construction site. There has been an accident. Someone drove their car straight into the tangled heap.
I dreamed that I would be journaling this morning, and the name came in my sleep: Song of spilled blood.
I woke up confused by the name. But then it dawned on me. My last dream fragment reveals my unconscious concern over my job at work. I am responsible for the marketing in a large region, and sometimes it feels like I focus on one market at the detriment of another. I can't be in more places than one at a time. When I finally go and check on another market, my team seems to have changed without my approval or knowledge.
I liken the feeling to a warrior chief who goes away to hunt for food. When he returns, the landscape has changed. He is no longer chief of the tribe. His tents have been pillaged, his women raped, his crops scorched, and his elders massacred."
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