Dreams are the most common form of precognition, often containing more accurate future information than waking precognition. They are a combination of our own experience, interpretation, analysis, and reaction to a future event.
‣ Symbolic precognitive dreams replace important details with meaningful or random elements, yet still convey information from the future.
‣ Third-person precognitive dreams can contain both symbolic and literal information, such as dreaming of an accident and seeing it on the news the next day.
‣ Probabilistic precognitive dreams show future information, but may be inaccurate due to the choices a person makes from the moment the dream occurs.
‣ Literal and lucid precognitive dreams allow us to observe and interact with future elements in our dreams.
Distinguishing between precognitive dreams and regular ones can be difficult, but it is important to look for personal symbolism in dreams and eliminate other possibilities. After experiencing a precognitive dream in real life, individuals can rate the odds of it being a coincidence on a scale of 1 to 10. A rating of 1 indicates pure coincidence, while a rating of 10 implies strong evidence for precognition.