7 March 2022
Today’s post is a continuation of my previous article about how to recognise some of the signs of precognitive dreams. I am writing this today because I had another precognitive dream last night.
As I mentioned in my most recent post about precognitive dreams, this post does not include an exhaustive list of the ways to identify premonitions in dreams. For now, I am sharing some of the traits of precognition that I’ve identified in recent dreams. The psychically predictive traits I noticed in last night’s dream include reality, specificity, continuity, and empathy.
Dream Description: Two Walls of Water While Vacationing in Summer
In my dream last night, I was on vacation with a friend. We were relaxing on a beach which is not a beach I’ve been to in real life, but one I have visited many times in my dreams. It is normally a place of comfort for me, although I have also come to this beach to grieve the loss of loved ones who meet me there. In other words, the reappearance of this beach can be an ominous sign in a dream for me because it warns of death, even as it sometimes reunited me with loved ones in the afterlife.
In this dream, I notice a roaring sound of rising water that precedes what looks like a tsunami. However, this is not like any tsunami I have seen before.
1a) Experiential Reality: Sensing the Senses
The visual sensation is that this wave is extremely wide, very high, and looks like a wall of water with a white wave on top. The secondary sound is of people talking hurriedly about the incoming wave. Some are checking their phones for updates, too stunned to move. I check my phone and distinctly feel my fingers tapping on the screen. The battery is at about 71%. The time indicates that it is afternoon. I can smell the ocean water and sand on the beach while I look back and forth between the rising wave and news on my phone. It is suddenly cold, perhaps from the wave blocking the sun, and I shiver.
1b) Emotional Realism
I feel realistic reactions to the tsunami, such as dread, a loss of control, the impulse to fight for my life, and confusion. Suddenly and without warning, the wave retreats. My emotions change to relief, hope, and annoyance that I didn’t bring my charger.
2) Specificity
The battery on my phone in my dream is now at 56%. The time on my phone has moved forward about 45 minutes from when I was at the beach, a realistic period of time considering that I had my phone on a yellow “Low Power Mode” in the dream. Gravity works in this dream as it would in real life. The conversation with my friend is about mundane things related to our vacation and the news of the day, which is incidentally is related to climate events—and not just this wave. Multiple climate events are occuring simultaneously and it makes me worried about what this wave means for rising water levels. It feels like everything is happening so quickly and there isn’t enough time to prepare for the immensity and frequency of what is about to come in the form of an ocean that rises not gradually over the period of a century, but virtually overnight.
I check my phone again and look around. Almost no one has left since the first wave, which makes me feel we might be safe. Still, I keep checking my phone for weather reports. There are wind and wave warnings but I mostly ignore them as it is a lovely day and I came here to vacation, not read the news. I see an article on my phone that says 2022 or 2023 but I am not sure as I do not check the date on my phone. If this was a lucid dream, I might think to check the date but I was not aware I was dreaming in this dream. However, the weather feels like July. The same strangers I saw 45 minutes ago are still on the beach, which is another detail that places this dream in a context that is similar to real life.
I hear a sound of gasps coming from some of these strangers and when I look up, a second wave wall has appeared. This wave is just as big as if not bigger than before. This time, I run, but not before checking my phone again. I know I’m going to make it out if I just keep pushing, don’t stop running, and make it to town. Unlike the banking dream about a mass shooting that I recently posted and where I was also rushing to get away, no one was frozen in this dream. Everyone was running for their lives.
3) Continuity: Reality of Time and the Unedited Nature of Predictive Dreams
I make it into town where others are seeking shelter from that wave by dashing up to the highest possible level of warehouses. This dream demonstrated continuity of space because I ran from one place to another as I would in real life, and I saw every detail, from ground to sky, as I moved. I could feel the coolness of temperature caused by my riunning but also the heat on my forehead from moving so quickly. Contrastingly, in a dream with purposes other than premonition, I might instead jump from one space to another. In this dream, time was also realistic as everything took place during one afternoon and in the space of hours. In other words, I experienced this prediction as if I was existing in actual time and finite space.
I arrive at a warehouse where the door is open. I notice that the clothes I wore at the beach are the same ones I have on, and they remain throughout the rest of the dream. There is a consistency of details in this dream that matches what would be possible in reality. In other words, nothing so far in this dream defies the laws of physics that govern waking life.
I don’t know if I am in a Target, Walmart, or Amazon supply warehouse, but I am aware that it is a huge building and owned by a large corporation. Despite the impending disaster, workers have been ordered to continue with scheduling protocols and business carries on as usual. This strikes me as an insane policy but also seems like a realistic reaction to the climate emergency based on how many leaders and corporations have responded to climate issues with inaction. I definitely felt like I was in America.
In the warehouse, I find myself trying to escape from impending flooding that I anticipate will be caused by the second tsunami. I get on a large green forklift to elevate myself above the ground but soon discover I cannot navigate the machine as I have never been on one before in real life and my forklift mistakenly attempts to grab a refrigerator. I get on what looks like a metal escape stairwell towards the top of the warehouse and make my way through a corridor which leads to a room of other people who escaped from the beach. The floods have not reached this room. I see three volunteers from an organisation like Red Cross who are giving meals to those who are trapped. There are about ten of us sitting at what looks like a school lunch table with benches. I ask if anyone has a charger.
4) Empathy: Seeing Other Points of View While Living Your Own Experience
In this dream, as in previous dreams that turned out to be precognitive, I was able to know some of the thoughts and feelings of other people around me even while sensing (through sight, sound, smell, taste, and/or touch) my environment through my own experiences.
Conclusion: How Reality, Specifity, Continuity, and Empathy Can Indicate Predictive Dreams
In this dream, the realism of experiencing multiple senses, emotional reactions that were appropriate to the circumstances, specificity of realistic details, realistic timing, unified space, and empathy for consistent characters made for an occurence that matches the laws of physics. In my own experience, I have found that realistic dreams tend to be more precognitive for me than non-realistic dream adventures.
For years, I have been blogging about precognitive dreams of living on cruise ships and docking in ports at water towns as well as living in the sky and in space. While these dreams are removed from our present reality of mostly living on land, they exhibited some or all of the traits that can mirror reality while we are in a dream state: displays of physical and emotional reality, specificity of detail, continuity of time and space, and empathy or connection with other living beings.
Can multiple dreams in a night qualify as premonitions? In other words, can you have one precognitive dream after another, each taking pace in a different time and space, and all of them might come true? In my experience, the answer is yes, as I can testify that I have had more than one predictive dream in a night. However, each of these dreams took place in different locations and involved dissimilar characters and stories. In other words, there was no discontinuity of space and time in a singular plotline so these dreams were able to be analysed as unconnected predictions.
In order to help differentiate between predictive and non-predictive dreams, I will be sharing future dreams (that are not about the future) so we can explore not only what potentially makes a dream a predictive, but also what doesn’t. Other dreams serve other purposes, but clearly some dreams are meant to bring us future moments before they even occur.
Please share some of your predictive dreams in the comments below, noting if you recognised any of the precognitive elements (such as realism, specificity, continuity, or empathy) that I shared about in this post or my most recent article on precognitive dreams. You can also ask questions about predictive dreams in the comments section.
History of the Work and Acknowledgments of Ancestors
These and other visionary techniques were passed down from my father, my paternal grandmother, and other ancestors before them through the spiritual practise of Jewish shamanism which has existed for thousands of years.
Future Posts About the Future
I will be posting more about how you can recognise and utilise predictive dreams as a form of service, in addition to information on the history of premonitions. Thanks for reading, and I’ll see you again in the future!
For more posts on the history of spirituality, precognitive dreams, tarot card readings, and channeled Q & A, please visit https://www.kyraoser.com/blog/
Kyra. Thanks for writing this article, it will help me going forward. Psychic abilities are often difficult to explain or understand, even to those of us who have them.
I have zero dream recall in every day life. When I do have recall, this lets me know that something is up and the key to this personally, is to get the details down asap.
For YEARS I’ve tried keeping a dream journal only to find that as soon as my eyes open, the details fade and I am left with only the emotional experiences.
Identifying reality, specificity, continuity and empathy as factors of predictive dreams helps me tremendously.
Thank you again for such a great article.
Tara
I know I've had many realistic dreams in the past and I don't know if I have any kind of predictive dreams or not, but I've certainly wondered. I do sometimes have sort of daydreams/memories that seemed to be oddly coincidental. I was watching a movie with my husband one night and I got up during a break and was washing my hands or looking in the bathroom mirror and I had this intense memory of a puff back that occurred in my home as a child. I thought to myself, wow that was such a difficult time. I had not thought about it in probably 15 or 20 years maybe more. About an hour later I look on facebook and I see that my cousin posted on facebook about an hour prior (perhaps when or shortly after I was having this little daydream memory) that her family just experienced a terrible puff back from their furnace. I don't know what to make of these experiences. Maybe it's just a coincidence, but obviously I'm here so I have some suspicions. In regards to real dreams while sleeping.. If I review the dream immediately in my head and go over the details and especially if I talk about it I can recall more specific details. I have often taken note of what senses I was using etc but at this moment I can't really recall any at all. I wrote a few down in journals growing up but don't remember them now. Reading this has made me want to start a specific dream journal and be more intentional about it.