Though an early night dream (like 1 or 2 a.m.) may
be precognitive, my experience suggest that these may not come to fruition
for years. The main exception to this is hypnogogic imagery that occurs as
you are drifting off to sleep; this can be telepathic.
If you keep a dream journal and discover that you
have had a precognitive dream, then read the other dreams of that night (and
the night before and after) to see if they carry precognitive information
regarding additional aspects of that event or another . I have noticed on
innumerable occasions that "precognitive dreams" seem to be herd-like, and
travel in packs. Sometimes, it appears that almost all of the dreams for
a certain period of days were precognitive; this may be followed by weeks
of no precognitive activity.
In many life endeavors, we learn to specialize in
areas that interest us or we feel a natural talent. Similarly, precognitive
dreamers often see that their precognitive dreams follow areas of specialization.
For example, they may have numerous precognitive dreams about career events,
or finances. Others may specialize in family events or relationships. Some
may specialize in "positive" precognitions while others only find "negative"
precognitions. Long term dream journalers may find that their area of specialization
expands or changes as the years or their interest changes.
After a "waking event" confirms a dream as precognitive,
go back through your dream journal and notice the dates of the dreams that
seem to refer to the precognitive event. You may notice that you dreamt of
the event precisely one year before, or one month before, or on the first
day of the month in which the dream occurred. Moreover, you may see that
the precognitive dreams tend to become more frequent as the event draws near,
or the dreams may have increasing urgency.
Frequently, I have precognitive dreams about people
or things with which I am curious. I do not incubate these dreams; they simply
happen. On a number of occasions, I have been introduced to people in the
dream state (for example, new friends) whom I have never met. Later in waking
life, I have met these people and they have been precisely as I saw them,
even to the point of wearing the same clothing as in the dream.
Curiosity seems to be a type of "intent" -- curiosity works.
9) Odd Man Out
This refers to an odd aspect of less significant precognitive dreams in which
the dreamer picks up the "odd" thing about a place or event. For example,
as a businessman, I travel quite a bit and stay at numerous hotels. Once
I dreamt that I was at a "hotel by a lake or ocean" (in reality I was later
invited to speak at the Holiday Inn By-the-Bay in San Diego) attending a
conference and the rooms had an extremely odd thing that looked liked a Buck
Rogers spaceship. In waking reality, I was soon invited to speak at a conference
at this hotel and when I went into the normal hotel room, I laughed at this
spaceship looking lamp that I had drawn from my dream months earlier! The
"odd man out" phenomenon suggests that our dreaming perception may recall
more easily or pay attention to the "odd" or unusual aspect of a future place
or event. The odd man (of the future) stands out.
10) If Lucid, Try Precognition
When you become lucid (or conscious of dreaming while dreaming), seek precognitive
information on a topic of interest by asking dream characters for it or suggesting
that the precognitive information will appear elsewhere - for example, when
you enter a room, or open a drawer or a book. In my lucid dreaming, the results
have been quite accurate. If you are a lucid dreamer and intend to seek precognitive
information, experience has taught me that the particular goal should be
set up while in the waking state.
Part II - Precognitive Pattern Process
- Filtering out Conflicts
11) Consider The Context - A Calm Life Leads to Clear Sight
The context of a dream must always be considered in light of the context
of one's life situation at the time of a dream. If you are getting a divorce
and then dream that your "hometown" is destroyed by a fire, your dream may
be providing vivid information about your sense of emotional loss. Therefore,
one must always consider the context of one's life before concluding that
a dream has precognitive elements.
In simple terms, precognitive dreams are much easier to see and be accurately
surmised, when the dreamer has achieved a relatively placid inner and outer
life, and a state of emotional well being. When one is in a state of depression
or emotional turmoil, there is likely an increased frequency of alarming
dreams and repeated dream symbols (which may mirror one's mood). Therefore,
if one's inner life is in turmoil, then normal precognitive annunciators
like repetition of dream symbols or unique emotive urgency patterns may give
false positives. Clear sight needs a calm life to be effective.
12) Consider Your Belief System
One's belief system influences one's perception, analysis, interpretation
and response. When it comes to precognitive dreams, if you believe that they
are very rare, you will decide it isn't worth your time to see if they may
be valid, and the resulting lack of feedback may indeed "prove" your belief.
Any dreamer/investigator into precognitive dreams needs to develop an open
and objective mind. For those who do not believe that dreaming provides information
on upcoming events, or believe that dreams are untrustworthy or impossible
to understand, then it is likely that their belief system will ignore or
misshape their dreams (or dream memory) containing valid precognitive elements.
In my discussions with long term dream journalers, most consider precognitive
dreaming a natural and occasional aspect of dreaming. A healthy "openness"
to investigate matters is all that is required.
PART III - Guidelines for Analysis, Investigation
and Prediction
13) Observer, Actor, Reactor --- Where are you?
By determining where the "dreamer" is in the apparently precognitive dream,
you may then have some guide as to your involvement in the drama suggested
by the dream. You may be simply an Observer of the action, and basically
untouched by the events in the dream and later waking event. You may be an
Actor with regard to the dream action, which strongly suggests that you will
find yourself directly involved in the later waking event. Finally, your
role in the precognitive dream may be better stated as a Reactor, in that
you react to events that are happening around you or happening to you. These
types of precognitive dreams suggest that the waking event will necessitate
a reaction on your part, but the waking event may not be directed towards
you. A number of precognitive dreams about my father's passing suggested
to me this sense of "reacting" to an event.
14) Follow the Feeling
Whenever interpreting a dream, precognitive or otherwise, it seems vitally
important to "follow the feeling" within the dream. Do not let your waking
self tell your dreaming mind what is the "correct" feeling for the dream.
Do not let societal convention and niceties censor or whitewash the actual
"feeling within the dream". By following the feeling that is within the dream,
only then do you have a chance at truly understanding that dream message.
(A corollary to this is that if your dream "interpretation" is not in accordance
with the feeling within the dream, then your interpretation is likely incorrect.)
For example, a dream about a cemetery that has a positive feeling may be
suggesting the death of a unhealthy relationship or negative belief system.
Follow the "feeling".
15) Investigate Your Possible Precognitions - Feedback
Leads to Mastery
Whenever possible, investigate your potentially precognitive dreaming in
a thoughtful and considerate manner. This may involve calling or writing
a friend with an open-ended question. Have you been thinking about changing
your hairstyle? How's your mom? Their response may help you understand if
the dream has any literal or symbolic precognitive aspects. In my experience,
symbolic aspects are the most common.
It may also show you that you "specialize" in a particular aspect of precognitive
dreaming (relationships, finances, careers, births/deaths, etc.). In any
case, feedback helps you to learn from your successes and failures, and make
appropriate changes in your analysis.
16) Predictions: Moving from Basic to Specific
When approaching a precognitive dream prediction, I suggest that you proceed
from the simplest observation to increasingly complex ones. Is the likely
event good or bad, positive or negative? To whom does it occur? When will
it occur? What does it regard - career, home, finances, health? If health,
then what part of the body? What is the issue there? What does it feel like?
Predictions have degrees of accuracy and validity. You may find that your
ability to interpret the information is very accurate to a certain degree,
but then falters. Repeated dreams may tell you that your sister is getting
a new job in marketing with a raise. The waking event may be that your sister
does get a new job, but it is in mail processing of marketing materials and
the raise refers to the new job being on a higher floor! Know what you know
- and stop there. As you get more feedback, you will learn which precognitive
pattern provides you the greatest accuracy and which are more basic.
A final note is that precognitive dreams range from tiny personal affairs
to large events. The Precognitive Pattern Process is geared to recognizing
larger events of personal, multi-personal, regional or national significance.
Small precognitions, while interesting and sometimes amusing, rarely meet
the annunciation criteria to fit into this process.
Separating the Wheat from the Chaff: Investigating
Non-Precognitive Dreams
In the final chapter of the book,
Dreamtime and Dreamwork: Decoding the
Language of the Night, edited by Stanley Krippner, professor Jon Tolaas
seeks to address common errors in labeling certain dreams as precognitive
or psychic. In the following points, I have sought to summarize his observations.
- Some apparently precognitive dreams are actually based on subtle,
verbal and nonverbal waking observations or interactions, he calls "fine
cueing". For instance, imagine meeting an old friend on the street and that
night dreaming he was sick in bed. A week later you learn that indeed your
old friend was sick and in bed. While it may seem like a precognitive dream,
the actual case may be that you subconsciously picked up subtle body language
or subtle characteristics from your waking interaction which indicated your
friend was in the process of becoming sick. The fine cues were the basis
for the dream.
- Similarly, some apparently precognitive dreams may be a form of "dream
sensing" in which we incorporate sensory clues from the environment into
our dreams. This dream sensing may also suggest a hyper-sensory aspect, such
that we become subconsciously aware of imperceptible sounds, changes in pressure,
earth movements, etc., and use this subconscious sensory data in the formation
of dreams. For example, if I dream of a house burglary in the neighborhood,
and in the morning find a neighbor's house burglarized, it may suggest that
my acute senses picked up common sounds of a burglary, e.g., breaking glass,
which I incorporated into the dream event.
- Another type of apparently precognitive dream may be based on subconscious
linkages. Here, the person's subconscious begins to notice a number of events
or trends that may soon come together to form a likely event. The subconscious
creatively links these trends and the outcome together in a dream, which
later seems to be precognitive. For example, five years ago, you read the
local dam is slated for repairs in the next 10 years. That winter is an unusually
heavy snowfall. Now in June, it has been abnormally hot and very rainy. You
suddenly dream that the dam begins to fail - is the later event proof of
your precognition or your ability to link numerous trends together subconsciously?
- Some "small" seemingly precognitive dreams involving one's self may
be actually a type of self fulfilling prophecy. In this case, one dreams
that one does something, like meets an old schoolmate. Then in waking life,
one subconsciously puts himself or herself in a position in which the dream
will come "true". For example, one spontaneously decides to have lunch at
a restaurant across town, which happens to be across the street from your
old schoolmate's office (though known, this is never consciously considered).
Then, at the restaurant, you are shocked to meet your old schoolmate - just
like in the dream! In some instances, the dream information is self fulfilled
by unconscious actions.
- The seemingly precognitive dream is determined to be so after the
event or retrospectively. In this case, is the dream's connection to the
event simply an exercise in perception, where one sees what one wants to
see?
- Lastly, (and Tolaas does not broach this issue) there is a criticism
that an event that seems to correlate with a seemingly precognitive dream
is simply a coincidence - nothing more than a random happening of two separate
events that have no connection.
Obviously one can find numerous examples of apparently precognitive dreams
that avoid any concerns about fine cueing, hyper sensory data reception,
dream sensing, self fulfilling actions or using trends and linkages subconsciously.
Similarly one can find examples of proactive or prospective uses of precognitive
dreams to respond to "retrospective" issues.
Final Comments: My hope is that by using a model like the Precognitive
Pattern Process, investigators (and dreamers) can begin to "capture" possible
precognitive dreams, and learn the ways of precognitive dreaming. Many of
us on the frontier of dreaming know that certain rare species of dreams exist.
By helping scientists learn about their elusive prey and the patterns they
follow, one can help them develop sophisticated scientific traps based on
the patterns, and finally "prove" that precognitive dreaming exists - much
like lucid dreams were caught years after some of us first started lucid
dreaming, when Keith Hearne and Stephen LaBerge realized a means to trap
a lucid dream for everyone to see. Precognitive dreams are fairly common.
They follow patterns. All we need now is a trap.