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Introduction
The Dream Oracle
Scientific Paper
Evaluation
Further Evaluation
The Authors
Research

 

On Sunday 25th October 1998, The Sunday Mirror (a leading British national newspaper) submitted The Dream Oracle to an independent test, because it claims to decode dreams automatically. In doing so, it also claims to demonstrate that certain dreams do indeed bear messages from the unconscious to the conscious mind - a world first! So how did The Dream Oracle fair?

 The Sunday Mirror gave a copy each to five of its readers to study - two males and three females - asked them to concentrate on a problem in their lives, then ask for a dream for The Dream Oracle to decode. All five had Dream Oracle coded dreams on the first night's trial. In itself, in psychology, this represents amazingly significant statistics.

 

Interestingly, the three female participants admitted a high degree of accuracy and relevance, while the men tended to adopt a more sceptical stance. However, even they had to admit that they did indeed have dreams which featured the Dream Oracle's coded system. They just weren't sure if it was their own unconscious minds communicating with them - an understandable reaction, considering the implications of The Dream Oracle.

 

One of the participants, Sunday Mirror reader, Laura Conolly, 32, designer from London, said, "Incredibly, the advice I got from The Dream Oracle sounds like it's come from someone who knows me very well - spooky!"

 

On the other side of the coin, one of the male sceptics, John Curran, 26 between jobs, admitted having a coded Dream Oracle dream and said, "The Dream Oracle seems to have an answer that can always reflect your situation."

 Myra Farnesi, 39, shop manager, and Sunday Mirror participant, said, "Everyone's looking for answers, but The Dream Oracle has really worked for me. I'm going to pass it on to my friends so that it can help them too."