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She Dreamed the Lottery Numbers and Then Won
9th April 2026 • Lottery, Dreams and Fortune with Timothy Schultz • Timothy Schultz, produced by Bullhead Entertainment, LLC
00:00:00 00:29:57

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Timothy Schultz:

Welcome to Lottery, Dreams and Fortune. I am so excited to be joined here right now with Ya Ya for this short testimonial. She has a really incredible story. She won a $50,000 lottery prize, but get this. She dreamt the exact numbers, played them, and then they came up and she won on multiple tickets. It's an incredible story. Ya Ya, how are you doing today?

Ya Ya:

Good, and how are you?

Timothy Schultz:

Good. Thank you so much for being here. You dreamt of lottery numbers and then you played them and won $50,000. Which state or which game was this, and how did this happen?

Ya Ya:

It was a Cash 4 in Tennessee. I had been meditating with a particular deity and that helped me dream. Actually, I won more than the $50,000. About a month and a half beforehand, I was meditating. While awake, I was shown an actual scratch-off ticket I was going to win on. I went down and bought the ticket, and I won $500 on that ticket. Then I bought all the other lottery tickets and I won small amounts on all the rest, but I won over $550 in total. Then time went by and I tried it again. I was like, "$550 is great. I want more," so I did it again. Then I was awake during the meditation. Nothing came through and I said, "Okay, I'm going to take a nap now. Perhaps you'll show me in the dream state what the numbers are." I laid down to take a nap. In the dream, there's the place where I go to buy lottery tickets. I don't buy on a regular basis. I really don't. Once every couple of years, I get a bug for a little bit and I'll play and then I stop for a couple of years. He showed me the gas station that I go to which was right down the road from my apartment, and he showed me that this particular cashier was leaving. The last time I had bought tickets from her, as soon as I saw her, I said, "I'm not going to win anything if I buy these tickets with her." I didn't have time to come back so I just bought the tickets, and sure enough, they were all losers.

Ya Ya:

ger side, and he says to me, ":

Timothy Schultz:

These 30 tickets, you were inspired by this other lottery winner in the US state of Virginia.

Ya Ya:

Yes.

Timothy Schultz:

She played the same numbers on 30 tickets and ended up winning big.

Ya Ya:

She bought 20 tickets, left that place, and was told to buy 10 more. I didn't even know you could buy more than one ticket for a game. I never knew that until I saw her. She was my inspiration for that. I wanted to say, "Thank you ma'am so much, because without you, I maybe would have won $5,000 instead of $50,000. Thank you."

Timothy Schultz:

You won $5,000 on each ticket and you bought 10 tickets. This was inspired by the dream. You put some of the numbers. There's one number that you weren't quite sure about.

Ya Ya:

I mixed up the numbers driving to the gas station. I couldn't remember, and to make matters worse, in the dream a man came. I get to the gas station. There's one cashier and it's a young girl and it's a long line. I'm letting people go ahead of me because I'm like, "I think I need to wait for the man to come. It's going to be a male cashier." Sure enough, the line got so long. She goes on the loudspeaker, "Bruce, come help with the line." I ran over to the other side just because I was like, "Bruce is the one." He rang up 20 tickets with a completely different number and had to cancel those. Then I gave him the first number which was wrong, and then the third number which was right. He did the 20 tickets, had to cancel them. Then he made 20 tickets more which I kept, and then the 10 tickets, and I won on the 10. Crazy story.

Timothy Schultz:

When you win $50,000 and you win $5,000 on 10 different tickets like you did, how do you claim this? You probably can't take it into a gas station or something.

Ya Ya:

I was only living in Tennessee a few years. When I first moved there, I relocated from New York. I'm a New Yorker born and raised. When I'm driving to my new apartment from work, I saw the lottery office which was close to my home, like a two-minute drive from my house. I stopped and I photographed it on my cell phone and I was like, "I'll be back," because I knew I was going to win. I didn't know when and how. It took me three years. I was like, "I'm coming back here. You're so close to me. I'm here for a reason. I know I'm this close to this office for a reason." You had to go into the office and you had to fill out one form for each ticket. You had to fill out 10 forms. Then they give you 10 checks and then you do what you want. I still have my checks too, all except one. The other checks I deposited electronically, so I got to keep the originals. The other one, I had to put in a bank account so I can't get the original back, but I have a copy of it. I'm going to make a piece of artwork out of it.

Timothy Schultz:

So you are legitimately a multiple time lottery winner. That is the truth. With this latest $50,000, you had dreamt about it before, you played these numbers, all these things happened and then it really happened in this reality. Was that surreal? How did that feel?

Ya Ya:

to say starting in the early:

Ya Ya:

Like I said, I've seen other lottery tickets in the dream. I woke myself up to get a pen and paper to write down the number and completely lost the numbers. The $2 billion lottery that that one man won in California, the lottery ticket was floating towards me, but as it got closer, the numbers began to fade. By the time it got within my eyesight where I could see what game it was, what ticket it was, the whole thing, the numbers were all smeared and then the ticket went like this and was gone, so I said, "Okay, I wasn't supposed to be a part of that win." I knew it was another person, and I knew it was a man. I said to the universe, "I'm happy to share it." He got it. Congratulations to him, but the numbers are out there. You can tap into it if you choose to try. Not everybody will, but some might. You never know.

Timothy Schultz:

How do you tap into it if you're intentionally trying to do that?

Ya Ya:

First thing is you've got to believe that it's possible, because if you don't believe it's possible, you're wasting your time. If you don't think you can see those numbers or dream those numbers or see the actual winning ticket, you're not going to. It just won't happen. You have to believe. It takes just as much energy to believe as it takes to disbelieve, so why not believe? Why not believe I'm a winner? That's where it starts.

Ya Ya:

I've learned that there is a current of energy that flows through the planet, and you can tap in. I tap in with that by listening to an audio one of my spiritual teachers made years ago. There's certain gods and goddesses and angels you can pray to, or your ancestors that you can pray to for help. I definitely tap them on the regular, prayers and chants and all of that. I'm like, "Hey, sister needs some help here. Thank you. I need this, I need that, the other," and things happen. Even small things happen. It may not necessarily be millions of dollars. It could be something small, somebody giving you some money out of nowhere, a stranger, whatever, you never know, extra money in your bank account for no reason. Little things happen, but you've got to believe. That's where it all begins. You've got to believe. If you go to sleep at night and say, "I'm going to dream the numbers," have that pen and paper right beside the bed knowing that when it comes, you can write it down, unless you get an actual photo, like I said, of the scratch-off ticket. It didn't show me the name, but it showed me that it was a big, wide gold card. I was like, "But how do I know which game it is?" As soon as I got there, I saw the big, white gold card. It was huge, and I was like, "That's the one." It's different for everybody how you choose to do it, who you choose to pray to, talk to, or just believe in yourself, whatever.

Timothy Schultz:

There's definitely a lot of power in belief. When you pray or when you listen to the audio, what type of audio are you listening to or what type of feeling are you feeling?

Ya Ya:

I don't have any feelings whatsoever because I just let the sound, the vibration wash over me. You just listen to it. Half the time, I put in my earplugs and I play it while I'm sleeping. I find for me personally it's better because when we're awake, our conscious mind says, "Oh no, that's not possible," but our subconscious is much more susceptible and open to the vibration coming in and doing what it's supposed to do. You don't interfere. Your conscious mind doesn't interfere. That always has worked for me, and saying mantras and stuff like the Indian gods and goddesses. I'm also a believer in Jesus and the angels. I call them on the regular and I call on my ancestors. I'm like, "Hey, mom and dad," who both passed over.

Ya Ya:

I forgot to tell you, my mother was in that dream. That was the beginning part of the dream. My mother had passed away two years prior to. In the first part of the dream, I was talking to her. I was like, "Oh mom, you got a new dog," and she was mad. She wouldn't talk to me. I'm just talking chit-chat, chit-chat, and she gets up. She takes her key in her wallet. She walks out the door and then she comes back in the door. Somehow in my mind, I knew she had gone to the bank and come back in a second. I don't know how I knew that. Then fast forward, I'm in the gas station in my car and the man gets in the car and gives me the number. I thank my mom for that too. Somehow she also blessed me and helped open that way for it to come through. I believe that. There are certain songs that I was told, and I believe it's true because I've had the experience, that when you listen to certain songs, if you just meditate on the space in between the notes, you can get messages too.

Ya Ya:

The one deity I was praying to, he has shown me different ways that I was resisting a big jackpot. I was awake during that meditation when he showed me which card to play. Then I meditated again. In that second meditation, one hand up to this point from here down was all white. It was a white sleeve and a white hand with long white nails covered in diamonds, and a pile of diamonds underneath the hand laying on a pool table. The other hand was a black arm from here to here, black hand, black everything with a gun, and he put the gun down. I said, "Yes, you're right" because I had a big fear of oh my God, how would I protect myself? Winning a million dollars, a billion dollars, whatever, I was afraid that people were going to try to steal it from me. All the diamonds, all the wealth, all of that is there for you, but you're afraid to receive it. The gun was there because you think someone's going to take it from you, and I said, "Okay, I've got to deal with that issue and release it and know that it's a good thing and it'll all be okay." Luckily, like I said, then the other dream came through.

Ya Ya:

Another lady, she does a meditation where she teaches you how to become friends with money. Then I did that. Put a dollar bill in between your palms. She said the larger the bill, of course, the better, and you just meditate on it. She said, "First thing is I want you to feel it," and you feel the heat, a warmth for money. Money has warmth. She says, "Money is alive. It's part of Mother Earth, so you're feeling the Earth when you feel your money." She said, "Now think about what scares you about money. What are your blockages with money?" I realized as a little child, I had swallowed some coins, quarter, nickel, dime, choked and died. Six minutes I was gone. My mother was screaming my name. I think I was six years old. I was floating above looking at my mother holding me in her arm as she's screaming my name over and over again, and then all of a sudden, my spirit went back into my body. I woke up and I coughed out the coin. I had been dead for six minutes.

Timothy Schultz:

Oh my gosh.

Ya Ya:

I realized and I said, "Money almost killed me." That's why I'm afraid of money. I have to deal with the fears because that also prevents me from winning more frequently and on a bigger level.

Timothy Schultz:

Wow. I had no idea about the near-death experience. I knew about your lottery story.

Ya Ya:

I've got a lot of little lottery stories, but these are the winners.

Timothy Schultz:

I have to ask because you just mentioned that your body was dead for six minutes, you said. Did you still have consciousness? What did you see?

Ya Ya:

My spirit was just hovering over me and my mom. I was just looking at her because she wouldn't let me go. She was screaming my name. She was not going to let me go. If she had not done that, if she had just maybe cried over me or whatever, I might have just floated off. I don't know. I didn't look up. I only saw her holding me, screaming my name, and then eventually I went back into my body.

Timothy Schultz:

Were you forced to go back or did you will yourself to do that?

Ya Ya:

Forced, because she was calling me back. She wouldn't let me go. She would not let me go. I have a friend who did that with her own mother. Her mother had dementia, a much elderly lady. The first time she went out, she just kept screaming, "Mom, mom, mom," and I said, "You realize you pulled her back, right?" She said, "I can't be around her when she passes because I scream." I said, "Let her go, okay?" She had dementia and stuff. I'm like, "This is not a good quality of life. Let her go." She says, "I just can't be around when it happens to her because I freak out and I scream." She knew she had that power that she kept pulling her mother's spirit back into the body.

Timothy Schultz:

Some people that have had near-death experiences seem like they become more intuitive or spiritual and that sort of thing after these events happen. Was that the case for you? I know you were a little kid.

Ya Ya:

Again, little children are more open, but I wouldn't say that because I really didn't even start pursuing spirituality till I got into my late 20s, early 30s. Thumbs up to Barnes & Noble. I read every occult book they had. Thank you because their collection grew, and so did my knowledge and experience and stuff like that grow with it. That was a huge education for me. I read so many books from that store, bought so many books from that store. It was crazy. Prior to that, no, it wasn't, because spirituality was never talked about in my family at all. We knew about Jesus. That was it. My parents weren't particularly religious at all. I only got to go to church on the holidays, if that, not even every year. In my late 20s, 27, 28, around there, I just said, "You know what? I want to know all about this stuff."

Timothy Schultz:

I want to get back to these dreams real quick. When you have dreamt about things before they've happened like you did with this lottery dream, this latest one, for example, when that's happening and you're experiencing this dream, does that just feel like an ordinary dream or does that feel more real or visceral? When that happens to me, it feels different. That's why I'm asking.

Ya Ya:

I've been a lucid dreamer for so many years. That's why it didn't feel different in that respect, because I dream lucidly more often than not. I wake up still talking to people and stuff like that. I'm just like "You know you're awake." It was funny because I live alone. At first I would stop myself from talking, even though I know I'm awake and I was having this conversation. I was like "You live alone. You can keep talking. There's no one here that's going to freak out. If you want to just finish your sentence, go right ahead." You're still kind of tethered. Even if you are awake, you're still kind of tethered to that dimension you were just in. I was just like, "Whatever. I can be weird all by myself."

Timothy Schultz:

It's all relative. I don't think it's weird.

Ya Ya:

Thank you.

Timothy Schultz:

For anyone that's watching or listening to this, what advice would you give them if they're hoping to get in touch with whether it's your higher self or whatever word you want to use, God or the universe, into this higher intelligence, the superconscious, and get information, whether it's lottery or something else? Always play responsibly. If you play the lottery, never spend more than you can afford to lose. It's very true, and have fun. I'm not encouraging people to play, but if you are and if you are trying to tap into this sort of thing, what advice would you give someone?

Ya Ya:

First thing, you've got to believe you're a winner. You have to believe. Second of all, if you can dream it, if you go to sleep seeing yourself holding the check or putting that money in the bank or whatever you're going to do with it, buy the million dollar lottery dream house -- the guy takes the lottery winners out and shows them housing. They buy houses. I watch that religiously too, you and him. That's my Friday night, Timothy and David on Friday nights. Friday is also Venus day. Today is Jupiter day. I wanted to do it during the Jupiter hour, do it on Jupiter day. You're so tapped in, you don't even know. You picked the day and the general time, and then I went a little deeper on it. Prosperity is everywhere. If you're happy about it and you believe it, it's going to come your way. You can go deeper. There's 50 million ways to meditate. Who do you want to learn from? Buy a book. I have my creative visualization, Shakti Gawain. She was the one that helped me in the 20s.

Ya Ya:

I forgot to tell you, that 1, 2, 3 lottery that I woke up and didn't get the rest of the numbers, at that time I was working with two other people in my department. The three of us would buy lottery tickets here and there, and we all wanted to be millionaires. One guy's a young Indian dude. I cannot remember his name because that was back in the 80s. He moved on, got another job elsewhere. Two years after he moved, he called us back at the office and said, "Hey, I moved to Canada with my family and I just won 2 million in the lottery." That was back in the 80s when the three of us were doing it together, so that was his blessing. I was like, "Oh my God, he won. I can too," but I didn't put any real effort into it at that time. I was like, "Okay, whatever. If it happens, it happens." As I'm older now and have a few more tricks in my pocket, I'm like, "Now I need to get serious about this. Let's see what this is going to manifest."

Timothy Schultz:

You certainly have 50,000 reasons to celebrate with the latest.

Ya Ya:

50,550 something. Thank you, yes. All fives.

Timothy Schultz:

The lucky fives. Congratulations again. It's such a inspiring and interesting story. I really appreciate your time. Is there anything else you want to say today about your story?

Ya Ya:

Just have fun with it. Like you said, don't spend more than you can afford. Don't go crazy over it. Another thing. When money's coming my way, my hands tingle and sometimes my feet tingle. Sometimes my hands and my feet tingle. I'm just saying, when you get that vibe. I was in another place and I was steadily doing mantras to the Hindu goddess, Laxmi. I had a friend in Canada and we would say them on the phone together. I'm in New York, she's in Canada, and we would say the mantras over the phone. I'm tingling all over. I'm walking towards this little grocery store close to where I was living, and as I got closer, the vibration was all over me and the store kind of was lit up. I said, "Oh my God. Let me go in there." There were three older men in there. I still think to this day they were angels, but I messed up. My mistake. I wanted to play Mega Million but the game had shut off. I missed the cutoff time. I said, "Just give me one of every other ticket," and that's all I had enough for. The cashier yells out, "Mega Million," and I say, "No. I want the Powerball, the lottery, this, that." As he runs the next ticket, he goes "Mega Million." I say to myself, "Is he losing his mind?" He's not looking at me. He's not talking directly to me. He's yelling at me, but he's not looking like "You need to buy." I just said, "No. Give me this, that, the other," and he said it a third time. I said, "That's it. You're crazy." I did not buy it. Should have bought the ticket, because I believe that I missed an opportunity to win the Mega Million. I believe that to this day. I just walked out.

Ya Ya:

Sometimes strangers tell you things. Pay attention. I had enough money to buy the Mega Million ticket, but the draw wouldn't have been for two more days. I was like, "No." I wanted to make a million today, and I missed it. I want hopefully the Powerball to win tomorrow. You never know. I go back to the store and the man looks at me like he'd never seen me before. It was something coming through him. Those three men in the store, they were older guys. I had seen them in the store one time before, the three of them together, and I said, "These dudes must play the numbers together." All three of them were in that store with me that day when the store was vibrating like nobody's business, and my body and the light. I was just like, "Wow." I still was too stupid to hear the message, "Buy the Mega Million ticket." I could have bought the Powerball the next day because it wasn't running till the next night anyway, but I didn't listen. Pay attention, people. You ask for help, you get it, but pay attention.

Timothy Schultz:

Listen to your inner voice. Listen to the vibration and the tingles.

Ya Ya:

Yes.

Timothy Schultz:

Thank you very much.

Ya Ya:

Thank you, Timothy.

Timothy Schultz:

I really appreciate it. It's very inspiring and I really appreciate your time. Thank you.

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