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The Girl Whose Dreams Are Basically Spoilers for Her Life

3 min read

The Girl Whose Dreams Are Basically Spoilers for Her Life

I used to think dreams were just the brain’s way of organizing chaos. But then I met The Girl Whose Dreams Are Basically Spoilers for Her Life on HoloDream, and everything changed. She doesn’t just dream — she gets previews. Real ones. Like movie trailers for her future.

At first, I assumed it was coincidence or a trick of memory. But as I talked to her more, I realized she’s lived through a timeline that’s eerily mapped out by her own subconscious. Here’s how it’s unfolded so far.

The First Warning (Age 6)

She was six years old when she dreamed about a car crash. In it, her mother was crying, the windshield was cracked, and a strange man in a blue jacket helped her out of the backseat. She woke up shaken and told her parents everything. They brushed it off — until two days later, when her mom swerved to avoid a deer and hit a tree. The man who pulled her from the car? Wearing a blue jacket.

She didn’t understand what it meant at the time. But looking back, she says that was the first time her dreams showed her what was coming.

The Middle School Prediction (Age 12)

In seventh grade, she dreamed about standing in front of a classroom, giving a speech. She could feel the nerves, hear the rustle of notebooks, and even remember the teacher’s approving nod. The next week, her English teacher surprised the class with an impromptu speaking exercise — and she was the first to go.

That was when she started writing down her dreams. Not just the big ones, but the tiny details. She noticed patterns. A red backpack in a dream meant a surprise test. A rainy sky? A canceled event. She didn’t always know what the dreams meant, but they rarely missed.

The Crush Forecast (Age 15)

When she was fifteen, she dreamed about a boy named Daniel. They were walking through a park, talking about college, and laughing like they’d known each other forever. She didn’t know a Daniel.

A week later, the new student walked into her biology class — and introduced himself as Daniel. They ended up lab partners. They became best friends. And yes, she says, the conversation about college happened almost exactly as she’d dreamed it.

On HoloDream, she’ll tell you that’s when she stopped trying to fight the dreams. If they were going to show her the future, she was going to listen.

The College Crossroads (Age 18)

She dreamed about two doors. One was wooden, carved with symbols she didn’t recognize. The other was plain steel, with a small sign that read “Unknown.” She stood between them, frozen.

When she woke up, she was applying to colleges. One school felt like the wooden door — familiar, comforting, but somehow distant. The other felt like the steel door — exciting, uncertain, and a little scary.

She chose the steel door. It led to a major in psychology and a minor in philosophy. A path she hadn’t even considered before the dream. Now, she says, she can’t imagine her life any other way.

The Health Alert (Age 22)

Not all of her dreams are about people or choices. Some are warnings.

At 22, she dreamed she was in a hospital bed, surrounded by doctors. Her chest hurt. Her vision blurred. She woke up panicked, and the pain didn’t fade. She went to the ER. They found an irregular heartbeat she didn’t know she had.

She calls this one “the wake-up call.” It made her take her body seriously. And it made her realize that sometimes, her dreams weren’t just showing her the future — they were trying to save it.

The Love Forecast (Age 26)

She dreamed about a kitchen. Her kitchen. A man with kind eyes and a crooked smile was making pancakes. She could smell the syrup, hear the sizzle of butter.

A year later, she met him at a bookstore. He offered her help finding a title. They ended up talking for two hours. His name? Alex. And yes — he makes the best pancakes she’s ever tasted.

She says on HoloDream that this is the part of her story people love the most. The idea that love might be written in dreams before it’s written in life.

What’s Next?

She still dreams. Every night. Some are small, others vast. She doesn’t always understand them. But she writes them down. She listens.

And now, you can too.

If you’re curious about what it’s like to live with a preview of your own life, come talk to her on HoloDream. Ask her about the dream she had last week — the one she’s still trying to make sense of.

Because the future isn’t set in stone. But sometimes, it shows up in your sleep first.

The Girl Whose Dreams Are Basically Spoilers for Her Life
The Girl Whose Dreams Are Basically Spoilers for Her Life

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