Entities: Dreamer

  • Dreamlike Encounter With a Teaching Entity About Reality as Dream

    Dreamlike Encounter With a Teaching Entity About Reality as Dream

    In a dream described by Rekshan, a teaching entity conveys that reality is fundamentally dreamlike. The message reframes waking life as intertwined with symbolic realms. The dreamer experiences clarity and calm.

    The entity states that interactions are real in the sense of dreams, not merely imagination. The environment glows softly, highlighting the shift in understanding. The dream blends philosophy with contact.

    This encounter reinforces the author’s view that ET/NHI contact is best understood through dreamwork paradigms.

  • Dream-Initiated Discovery of a Body Mark

    Dream-Initiated Discovery of a Body Mark

    Rekshan recounts a dream in which he experiences symbolic interaction with an entity before discovering a body mark the next day. The dream involves gestures, brightness, or geometric impressions. The dreamer feels that something touched him.

    Upon waking, he notices a mark that cannot be explained conventionally. The dream feels connected to the discovery, forming a symbolic chain. Emotional resonance strengthens the association.

    This case supports the view that body marks arise through dreamlike interaction rather than literal procedures.

  • Dream of Being Observed by Nonhuman Intelligence

    Dream of Being Observed by Nonhuman Intelligence

    The author describes a dreamlike moment during missing time where he senses an intelligence observing him. The sensation is not visual but intuitive. It conveys empathy rather than threat.

    The presence communicates through emotional tone rather than language. The dreamer feels that the intelligence is assessing readiness or trust. The environment becomes still.

    This encounter suggests that observation itself can be a form of dream-contact.

  • Encounter with Geometric Visions During Dream Incubation

    Encounter with Geometric Visions During Dream Incubation

    Rekshan explains that dream incubation often leads to visions of geometric forms. In one dream, the dreamer draws Euclidean constructions while a subtle presence guides attention. The shapes feel intentional, as though part of a message.

    The dream environment shifts according to the geometry being drawn. Some forms resemble crop circles or UAP formations. The dreamer senses that intuition is being activated.

    These geometric visions support the idea that ET/NHI communication may occur through dream geometry.

  • Dream Telepathy and Symbolic Messages

    Dream Telepathy and Symbolic Messages

    In Missing Time Found, the author explores dreams that feel telepathic, delivering messages not traceable to personal memory. These dreams include symbolic geometry, intuitive guidance, or warnings. The source feels external yet dreamlike.

    The dreamer notices that the message arrives fully formed without narration. Meaning is immediate. Sensations accompany the telepathic moment, such as pressure or brightness.

    Rekshan uses these dreams to discuss tests for authentic ET/NHI dream telepathy, including new information beyond the dreamer’s knowledge.

  • Dreamlike Missing Time During an Encounter

    Dreamlike Missing Time During an Encounter

    The author describes missing time as occurring in a manner similar to a dream. Ordinary perception dissolves and is replaced by a symbolic shift with no physical continuity. The loss of memory resembles falling into a dream and reawakening without narrative connection.

    The event feels multidimensional, with senses muted and time suspended. Emotions are heightened yet unclear. The dreamlike nature challenges literal interpretation.

    Rekshan argues that missing time should be read as dream testimony, not historical record, echoing shamanic dream-sharing traditions.

  • Dream Validation Through Body-Mark Geometry

    Dream Validation Through Body-Mark Geometry

    Rekshan reports a dream in which the tall grey offers validation of a geometric body mark by linking it to intelligence outside the personal psyche. The dreamer experiences the moment as both symbolic and literal. The dream figure emphasizes that the mark was given intentionally.

    This moment blends intuition and teaching, providing a strong emotional charge. The dream suggests that body marks can be messages rather than wounds. The emphasis is on dream reality as a form of communication.

    The author interprets the encounter as dreamlike yet significant, illustrating how dreamwork reframes missing time and physical anomalies.

  • Dream Encounter with the Tall Grey Instructor

    Dream Encounter with the Tall Grey Instructor

    In Rekshan’s Missing Time Found, the author describes recurring dreams in which a tall grey intelligence appears as a teacher. This being delivers lessons on geometry, intuition, and anomalous body marks. The dream environment feels both symbolic and real, merging personal imagination with a transpersonal presence.

    The tall grey demonstrates shapes, numbers, or diagrams that the dreamer understands only after waking. Its guidance includes reassurance that the experiences are real in a dreamlike sense. These dreams shape the author’s interpretation of missing time events.

    Rekshan presents the tall grey as a consistent dream instructor whose teachings connect body marks, geometry, and ET/NHI contact.

  • Dream Fragment Becoming a Future Synchronicity Trigger

    Dream Fragment Becoming a Future Synchronicity Trigger

    Wargo explains that dream fragments can become triggers for later synchronicity. A dream may include a small symbolic element—an animal, number, shape, or phrase. At the time, it seems trivial.

    Later, that exact element appears in waking life, initiating a chain of meaningful coincidences that reveal the dream’s retrocausal function. The emotional impact binds the moments together.

    Wargo argues that dreams prepare the psyche for future meaningful events through these symbolic triggers.

  • Dream of Future Writing or Creative Work

    Dream of Future Writing or Creative Work

    Wargo highlights cases in which writers, artists, or researchers dream of creative ideas before consciously generating them. The dream may include scenes of writing, diagrams, or partially formed concepts.

    Later, the dreamer finds themselves producing work identical to the dream imagery. The correspondence feels guided, as if the future creative act inspired the dream.

    Wargo interprets this as retrocausal creativity, with the dream borrowing from future output.