rosalba shahidi
@rosa active 7 years, 6 months ago-
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I thought I was the only one who had dreams like that. After dreaming about having an abundance of food around me and can’t get any of it, I wake up very hungry.
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LOL. I think what really annoyed is me that my husband was supposed to be helping and he ducked out and then showed back when it had already become a disaster. 🙂
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Did you not feel happy to realise that it was only a dream? I get dreams too that get me into jitters but when I wake up I feel so happy that it was only a dream.
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Precisely. That’s why I ended the post with “I woke up!” 🙂 I was so glad to get myself out of that mess. 🙂
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I have heard dream come true if the intention is clear and heart be full of honesty otherwise dreams come not true in real life but dreaming is not good but useful for health because it keeps human mind and heart up twenty four hours.
Why we dream is still one of the behavioral sciences’ greatest unanswered questions. Researchers have offered many theories—memory consolidation, emotional regulation, threat simulation—but a unified one remains, well, a pipe dream. Nevertheless, people continue mining their nighttime reveries for clues to their inner lives, for creative insight, and even for premonitions.
Some people underestimate the significance of dreams by totally disregarding them. They refer to them as legends, and reject it simply because it is part of the unseen. On the opposite spectrum, there are people who totally rely on their dreams to such an extent that they let their dreams control their lives.
They base their life decisions, and in fact even derive laws & legislation (such as what is considered as halal &haram) according to their dreams. For instance, there was a man who dreamt that his wife had adultery and so when he woke up he divorced her.
But I have seen that dreams are real and have meaning in life.
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