jromanid1
Apr 17 2008, 12:37 AM
A couple months ago i had this dream where i was at work and i was helping this lady with dark hair and two kids (she comes in every other week or so) and my friend was handing me the concessions.
then maybe two weeks ago the same situation came up in real life.
Then about a month or two ago i had a dream that i was on a balcony with a lot of people at some place on the river.
then this last weekend again it all happened. the place ended up being templins and i was at my prom.
I tend to do this alot.
the dreams dont really tell me anything, and are normally very vague.
Ebonykrow
Apr 17 2008, 02:38 AM
Deja vu situations like this can usually be attributed to misfirings in the brain, that cause you to think it was a memory even if you've never experienced it before. It happens to me a lot, too, I've had up to three deja vus in one day, each one I immediately remembered dreaming at some point or another, but I couldn't recall ever remembering the dream before now. Usually, if you can't remember the dream until the deja vu happens, it's probably a false alarm; I mean, three in one day? I was either drunk, psychic, or my brain was having a big malfunctioning party.
But! If you can remember it vividly as a dream before it happens, recalling it other times before it actually happened in real life, then maybe something interesting is happening.
(I remember once, a few good years ago, I had a dream that lasted for, literally, a split second before I was jerked awake. It was about a man getting stuck between a car and a truck, from the waist down, and I woke up from this horrible scream--in the dream. When I woke up, I went downstairs and told my mom, and she said that that had just happened to a police man on the news, and they had just been watching it. I was on the other end of the house at that precise moment, incapable of hearing televisions or conversations, let alone knowing what was going on half way around the state. That's the only time I ever dreamed like that, and half of me wants to attribute it to a coincidence, because it didn't affect directly, or anyone I knew.)