Man, sometimes dreams just stick with you, don’t they? Not the vague, fuzzy kind, but the ones that just slam into your brain and leave you feeling something real even after you’re wide awake. I’ve had my share of weird ones, sure, but one type that always gets me is the “almost getting hit by a car” dream. It’s not just a quick flash, it’s a whole scene, and the feeling, that jolt of adrenaline, it’s like you actually dodged something.
I remember the first time I really paid attention to one of these. It was a few years back. Woke up in a sweat, heart pounding like I’d just run a marathon. In the dream, I was just walking, totally minding my own business, maybe crossing the street, and outta nowhere, this car just comes tearing around the corner. No warning, no screeching brakes, just this massive hunk of metal heading straight for me. I didn’t even think, I just reacted, threw myself backward, tumbled to the ground. And then, silence. The car just sped off, didn’t even slow down. I was lying there on the pavement, winded, and then I snapped awake.
For a good chunk of that morning, that feeling stuck with me. That raw shock, the almost certainty of impact, and then the sudden relief, mixed with a healthy dose of confusion. Why that dream? What the hell was that about? My mind just kept replaying it, over and over, like a broken record. It wasn’t like I was worried about cars or anything in my waking life, so it felt really out of left field. But that intensity, that wasn’t random.
I started turning it over in my head, you know? Not in a “let’s google dream meanings” kind of way, but more like just letting it stew. What was “the car” in my life right then? What was heading straight for me without warning? I thought about work, about some personal stuff, about everything that was making me feel a bit… well, a bit on edge. Nothing immediately jumped out as a perfect match, which was frustrating.
But the feeling itself, that’s what I kept coming back to. That feeling of being totally unprepared, of something huge and powerful almost wiping me out. And the near miss. That was key. I wasn’t hit, but it was damn close. It felt like a warning, not a prophecy. Like my brain was screaming, “Hey! Watch out! Something big is coming and you need to be aware!”
Connecting the Dots
It wasn’t until a couple of days later that it kinda clicked. I was deep in a work project, one that had been building for weeks. Lots of moving parts, tight deadlines, a new client. I was trying to juggle everything, feeling stretched thin, but also trying to convince myself I had it all under control. But in reality, I felt like I was constantly racing against the clock, constantly one step behind. And that’s when it hit me. That project was the car.
Think about it. It was this massive, unstoppable force in my life at that moment. It was demanding my full attention, threatening to overwhelm me if I wasn’t careful. And the feeling of being “almost hit” by it? That was exactly how I felt about the project. Like I was barely keeping my head above water, constantly just dodging a complete disaster, a missed deadline, a screw-up. I was pushing myself so hard, trying to meet every expectation, that I was ignoring the signs of burnout, of being completely swamped.
The dream wasn’t about a literal car, or an accident. It was about my own internal state, projected onto a really vivid scenario. My subconscious was telling me, in the most dramatic way possible, that I was on a collision course with something big, and I needed to acknowledge it. The fact that I “dodged” it in the dream wasn’t a sign of safety, but a nudge to actually deal with the situation in my waking life before it actually ran me over.
What I Did Next
Once I made that connection, it was like a lightbulb went off. I realized I couldn’t just keep dodging; I had to actually address the “car” head-on, but on my terms. So, I started:
- Really looking at my workload: I actually sat down, listed everything out, and got real about what was achievable and what wasn’t.
- Setting boundaries: I started saying no to extra tasks, even small ones, that would push me further over the edge.
- Talking to my team/boss: I laid out my concerns, explained where I felt things were getting tight, and we worked together to reprioritize some tasks. It wasn’t easy, admitting I was struggling a bit, but it was necessary.
- Taking breaks: I forced myself to step away, even for just 15 minutes, to clear my head and get some perspective.
It was all about taking back some control, rather than letting the “car” dictate my every move. And you know what? As I started to manage that project better, as I started to feel more in control of my time and my energy, those “almost hit by a car” dreams? They just stopped. Poof. Gone. My brain clearly got the message that I was finally paying attention.
So, when someone tells me about a dream like that, I don’t give them some generic answer. I tell them to really dig into that feeling. That moment of impact, that feeling of dread, that sudden swerve. What in their life feels like that? What big, powerful force is bearing down on them? What are they trying to avoid or ignore? Because usually, the dream isn’t about the car at all. It’s about what the car represents in their own damn life, and what they need to do to avoid getting run over.