44 lines
2.6 KiB
Plaintext
44 lines
2.6 KiB
Plaintext
. This following is an excerpt from "Psi Notes", prepared by William Braud,
|
||
Ph.D., of the Mind Science Foundation in San Antonio, Texas.
|
||
|
||
Question: What percentage of a person's dreams are precognitive (foretell the
|
||
future) and how can we recognize the difference between a precognitive dream
|
||
and an ordinary dream?
|
||
|
||
Answer: A large proportion of precognitive experiences occur during dreams.
|
||
One survey indicates that as many as 65 percent of precognitive experiences
|
||
occurred during sleep. Precognitive dreams also seem to provide more complete
|
||
and more accurate information than do waking psychic experiences.
|
||
|
||
. There's no way to know with certainty what percentage of our dreams are
|
||
precognitive. The content of the majority of our dreams is probably quite
|
||
mundane, involving replays of experiences of the day, perhaps some wish
|
||
fulfillment, and maybe even "random" content. But now and then, dreamers do
|
||
have accurate glimpses of the future as they sleep.
|
||
|
||
. The only way to know with certainty which dreams are precognitive and which
|
||
are not is to keep a dream diary of all dreams and check to see which come true
|
||
and which don't. Some persons are able to associate certain feelings of
|
||
confidence in connection with psychic dreams - but these are very subtle
|
||
feelings which are difficult to put into words and which may differ from person
|
||
to person.
|
||
|
||
. Let me describe a program of research in which we are more certain about
|
||
what's going on. This research program was initiated by a New York
|
||
psychiatrist, Dr. Montague Ullman, as a result of his observation that he and
|
||
his patients were sharing telepathic dreams in the context of psychotherapy. A
|
||
dream laboratory was set up at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn. Ullman,
|
||
along with his associates Stanley Krippner and Charles Honorton, designed
|
||
experiments in which persons spent the night in the dream lab. They were
|
||
monitored electro-physiologically in order to detect physiological indications
|
||
of dreaming - these indications include: an activated EEG, rapid eye
|
||
movements, and reduced muscle tension. When these indications of dreaming
|
||
occurred, the sleeper was awakened and asked to describe his dream. These
|
||
descriptions were tape-recorded and later transcribed. The next day, a target
|
||
experience was randomly selected and the subject then went through some waking
|
||
sensory experience. What was discovered was that the sleeper was able to have
|
||
accurate dreams about events of which no one was as yet aware at the time of
|
||
the dream, but which were randomly selected the next day.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|