I am very glad we have this thread. Dreams are the other four thirds of our life.
Jay has a friend who is good at lucid dreaming. He once had a dream that he kept himself in for around twenty days, and woke up the same night he went to sleep.
Go to dreamveiws.com, the homepage has a very good and helpful explanation of lucid dreaming
Evening L. Aspen wrote:
My craziest dream was a "version" of a Bible story. I wonder if that kind of dream is considered sacrilegious.
I have had dreams of that sort, and I do not believe they are at all sacrilegious, unless you purposely do something sacrilegious in a lucid dream.
One of the most important ideas in Christianity is:
No one can be held responsible for something he could consciously predict and avoid.
Vanya Katerina Jaynin wrote:
 In order to not pollute another thread...
Have you ever dreamed something that later happened?
Have you ever had the same dream?
Have you ever based a story off of a dream?
Add questions as needed. 

Not until I read this thread. I thought Why do I not dream about the future? And I realized that I do not wonder about the future, or think about it in that way.
So I thought about it a little before I went to sleep, and that night I dreamed about eating beans and tortillas, and the day after the next we ate beans and tortillas.
once a long time ago I dreamed two nights in a row about red thorns growing out of various things, but they were not the same dreams. I think I often dream about the same things in very different dreams. But it is hard to tell whether or not I am simply confused.
Here is a dream I had when I was much younger. It is like a story.
A hollow in a land of everlasting sunset; a dust road comes down through it.
At the bottom of the hollow were four, cubicle, simple, wooden houses, two on each side of the road, which ran from north to south.
Up the north side of the hill on the west of the road was a fish pond with as many fishes as there was water, but it was still hard to catch them.
In the houses lived a weasel, a rabbit, a mole, and a badger, who caught the fish, and made stew for the others in his pot.
The badger had a tree that never had leaves. Once they saw something bright in it, and one by one they tried to climb up to it, but only the weasel was able to climb so high. It was a honeycomb, and the bees had come from the land of midday. The weasel asked for some honey, and brought it down. When they had all tasted the honey they wanted to explore, because the bees were from the land of midday.
They went up the west side of the hollow, and came to a rock with a hole in the middle of its side. They climbed through the hole. Inside was a cave, dimly lighted as if by lamps, but there were no lamps. It had a floor that sloped up to the roof, which arched gently over. Down the middle ran a path, and from the path up to the roof on each side was a dark pine forest.
Then they came to a cave lit with a light like moonlight. Here the cave was wider, and higher, and without a single growing thing; it was all gravel, and large stones, and rabbits that hid when you looked at them. Here the path, which was still made of dust, wandered about with many corners.
Then the path went straight on through a pine forest as before, but the cave was not lit anymore. The only light came from a large opening, and it was bright sunlight, but none of it fell in the cave, which now looked very black. Great, round eyes, as large as walnuts, began to appear in great numbers behind them, and chased them very fast (the eyes really belonged to very thin creatures around a foot high, which ran on their hind legs, but the four explorers did not know this).
They reached the opening and ran out. They saw a grassy bank, with a blue, wooden door in it. But before it there was a pond and a bridge of planks. The badger missed the bridge, and fell in the pond, and swam to the other side.
I have not changed the dream, or added anything, though I have probably missed some things that I do not remember now.
I had an onlookers point of view up to when they went into the cave. After that I saw things from their perspective (they all but vanished from my mind until they began to run). As they ran I had an onlookers perspective for a little, and then had the badgers perspective at the end, and woke up curious about who lived behind the blue door, and very happy that I had swam across the pond.