Dreaming of jumping for no apparent reason may mean that you have enough energy, capacity and enthusiasm to succeed in the things youre handling and thus, you will achieve prosperity and have a comfortable life. Dreaming of jumping obstacles with some degree of difficulty implies that you have the ability to triumph over the problems that are appearing. However, if you fall on the ground when you jump, it indicates risks. Dreaming of jumping from a high place can mean that you will lose something if you take a risk. When a woman dreams of jumping from a high place, or jumping a difficult obstacle, it may mean that she will succeed in the things shes working on.
Dream dictionary: jumping from a high place dream meanings
…To jump from one place into another out of fear or with haste in a dream represents accusations, blasphemy, or disturbing news surrounding one’s name. To jump down from a high altitude in a dream means separation, or changing of one’s conditions from convenience to discomfort. An ascending rapid jump in a dream means rising in station and a plummeting jump in a dream means deterioration of one’s status. (Also see Jumping)…
To see in the heaven a moderate fire, pure and luminous danger to your life or to some high place in your mind. See the heaven being very blaze an attack upon the nation, plague, famine, desolation. Make sure you pay attention to the fact from the side this fire falls will come the enemies or aggressors. If this fire jumping and about to extend or descend, the evil nature of the sign is magnified. The heaven that is seen with flowers means discovery of the truth. To ascend to the heaven, overwhelming honor will be received. (See Stars, etc.)
…that was alternately jumping up and down, and rearing up, first on one end and then on the other, after the manner of a shying horse. The jumps eventually getting higher and higher, the engine at last jumped so high that it jumped out of sight, whereupon passengers and officials, with agonised shrieks and wails, climbed out of the doors and windows of the train, and, rushing across the fields, plunged all together into a muddy, roaring river. I now found myself the only passenger in a train that, without either engine or officials, was stranded in one of the wildest and weirdest spots imagination could conceive. Ghastly as was the appearance of the muddy, turbulent river, that of the hedges separating the railroad from the fields was even more so, for although at first sight they seemed ordinary enough, on closer inspection they proved to be no hedges at…