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Post by MikeNL on Jan 10, 2008 18:01:04 GMT -5
Hello again yesterday i dreamt that Faul died... we were off on a boat.. when we got back to the shore i got off and everyone got off... when faul tried to, he fell into the water i saw he was eaten by some anymall next thing i knew i was at some sort of big building and in it was a TV set and it said paul was dead pretty bizar was it.. and when i awoke, i REALLY thought he was dead! i looked it up on my laptop very quick.. then i realized it was a dream
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Post by Mellow Yellow on Jan 10, 2008 18:12:43 GMT -5
Heh, I was having a really weird dream today when my alarm clock interrupted it.
In it, somebody from the future came back to the past and was talking to me, and it was showing like film footage of the future. I don't remember much of what he said other than
"In the future, scientists will discover more about the chemical "sei*i forgot the rest of the name*" and then the world will find out just how self-abhorrent this earth is..... We are merely a part of its dying outer husk"
It was really creepy, and then I woke up.
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Post by MikeNL on Jan 10, 2008 20:42:33 GMT -5
i understand where you're coming from...
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Post by iameye on Jan 10, 2008 20:54:43 GMT -5
self-abhorrent?
good dream word
Tiber! Tiber! let thy torrent Show even Nature 's self abhorrent. Let each breathing heart dilated Turn, as doth the lion baited! Rome be crushed to one wide tomb, But be still the Roman's Rome!
byron, lord
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Post by MikeNL on Jan 10, 2008 21:02:35 GMT -5
self-abhorrent? good dream word Tiber! Tiber! let thy torrent Show even Nature 's self abhorrent. Let each breathing heart dilated Turn, as doth the lion baited! Rome be crushed to one wide tomb, But be still the Roman's Rome!byron, lord i totally understand...
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Post by LOVELYRITA on Jan 10, 2008 22:51:38 GMT -5
That's creepy...the dream....I hate waking up and thinking, "Man, that was so realistic"
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Post by Doc on Jan 11, 2008 0:25:36 GMT -5
Wow. Dreams are so enigmatic. Good examples, all.
I did not understand the quote--was that Shakespeare? Hate to show even more of my ignorance, but I want to learn something.
Intuitively, I feel that "Faul" will be with us in the natural world in years to come. I think 10 years ahead, and I see him still here, still Sir Paul. Maybe a few million £ lighter due to the Mills woman, but plenty rich enough and still eating tofu burgers and sprouts.
You know, I would TRY to be a vegetarian if I thought I could do it, temporarily, but I know my carnivorous ways TOO well. Give me COW!!!
Someone recently told me that William at one time FIRED a musician from the band because he was a meat eater. I thought that was a tish draconian, but it's his band, you know, his sandbox to invite others to, so that's his perogative, but geepers, are we meat lovers that detestable to him?
I'll take mine medium well please, slight pink, no blood. On second thought, well. Burn it black.
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Post by iameye on Jan 11, 2008 8:46:53 GMT -5
ok Doc, Are you in your student's chair with hands folded and mind open? Then we shall begin class.....is that GUM in your mouth, young man? The quote is from George Gordon, Lord Byron. The deformed transformed The main character in the play is "born deformed and of obscure origin. His mother addresses him with words like ‘hedgehog’ (I. 1. 20) or ‘incubus’ (I. 1. 2), which put him on a sub-human level. From Arnold’s point of view, the tragedy of his situation is not so much his deformity itself, but the fact that he is convinced he is unable to be loved. Arnold sees his status as an outcast as a direct result of his multiple disabilities. When he sees his mirror-image in a spring, he ‘starts back’ (stage direction after I. 1. 46) and admits that ‘They are right’ (I. 1. 46) to despise him. He does not question a society which excludes him from any community with other people because he accepts the notion of being ‘Other’ and therefore necessarily excluded. In connection to Burke’s concept of the Beautiful and the Sublime, it is interesting to see that Arnold, in his own body, is convinced he could be admired and feared, but not loved. Thus, people would react to him as to a sublime presence, and the qualities that make a person lovable are outside him. " www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc12_n01.htmlLord George Gordon Byron (1788-1824) was as famous in his lifetime for his personality cult as for his poetry. He created the concept of the 'Byronic hero' - a defiant, melancholy young man, brooding on some mysterious, unforgivable event in his past. www.online-literature.com/byron/
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Post by mommybird on Jan 11, 2008 10:51:04 GMT -5
I dreamt about Faul the other day also. Actually, I had two dreams about him in a row. I don't remember many details. Linda was in one of them & she was not happy. They are always young in my dreams, maybe in their 30's. In one of the dreams I told Faul that I thought that he was just as talented as Paul. For the life of me, I cannot see me saying something like that. Where that came from, I have NO idea. ;D
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Post by LOVELYRITA on Jan 11, 2008 16:44:53 GMT -5
Wow. Dreams are so enigmatic. Good examples, all. I did not understand the quote--was that Shakespeare? Hate to show even more of my ignorance, but I want to learn something. Intuitively, I feel that "Faul" will be with us in the natural world in years to come. I think 10 years ahead, and I see him still here, still Sir Paul. Maybe a few million £ lighter due to the Mills woman, but plenty rich enough and still eating tofu burgers and sprouts. You know, I would TRY to be a vegetarian if I thought I could do it, temporarily, but I know my carnivorous ways TOO well. Give me COW!!! Someone recently told me that William at one time FIRED a musician from the band because he was a meat eater. I thought that was a tish draconian, but it's his band, you know, his sandbox to invite others to, so that's his perogative, but geepers, are we meat lovers that detestable to him? I'll take mine medium well please, slight pink, no blood. On second thought, well. Burn it black. Well, Doc, Doritos are made from CORN...so that could be considered a vegetable??? Carrot cake contains carrot, thus it's vegetable... Watermelon is actually considered a vegetable...so you could eat that... Zucchini bread....etc... You catch my drift...
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Post by LOVELYRITA on Jan 11, 2008 16:47:15 GMT -5
ok Doc, Are you in your student's chair with hands folded and mind open? Then we shall begin class.....is that GUM in your mouth, young man? The quote is from George Gordon, Lord Byron. The deformed transformed The main character in the play is "born deformed and of obscure origin. His mother addresses him with words like ‘hedgehog’ (I. 1. 20) or ‘incubus’ (I. 1. 2), which put him on a sub-human level. From Arnold’s point of view, the tragedy of his situation is not so much his deformity itself, but the fact that he is convinced he is unable to be loved. Arnold sees his status as an outcast as a direct result of his multiple disabilities. When he sees his mirror-image in a spring, he ‘starts back’ (stage direction after I. 1. 46) and admits that ‘They are right’ (I. 1. 46) to despise him. He does not question a society which excludes him from any community with other people because he accepts the notion of being ‘Other’ and therefore necessarily excluded. In connection to Burke’s concept of the Beautiful and the Sublime, it is interesting to see that Arnold, in his own body, is convinced he could be admired and feared, but not loved. Thus, people would react to him as to a sublime presence, and the qualities that make a person lovable are outside him. " www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc12_n01.htmlLord George Gordon Byron (1788-1824) was as famous in his lifetime for his personality cult as for his poetry. He created the concept of the 'Byronic hero' - a defiant, melancholy young man, brooding on some mysterious, unforgivable event in his past. www.online-literature.com/byron/Ah...but when you're an "outcast" by society, doesn't that make those "outcasts" deformed? I must contemplate my multiple disabilities as I nibble on my Doritos... Us "outcasts" or transformed deformed beings get hungry for snacks..
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Post by jerriwillmore on Jan 11, 2008 18:28:47 GMT -5
I had a dream I heard on the news he died freaked me out.
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Post by Jai Guru Deva on Jan 12, 2008 0:59:41 GMT -5
I'm not sure I want to bring this up, but since we're on the subject...
A couple years ago I was messing around with Gematria (Hebrew numerology) and plugging in various words related to PID, Faul, and the Beatles. Anyway. words such as "stroke" and "heart attack" in relation to Faul cross-referenced with other words or phrases. Think I wrote something like"Stella at dad's funeral" which had some connection with the aforementioned terms. It was really freaky!
I don't have all the notes anymore, but I did find one piece of paper I still had that I can show as an example. In all of these the letters of the words added up to 1044 in the Gematria: Francie Schwartz / Johnny Hallyday / McCartney's Grave.
So make of that what you will.
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Post by LOVELYRITA on Jan 12, 2008 8:17:47 GMT -5
1044? unless you add 10+4+4= 18 which is 6+6+6 = 18
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Phantomfan
For Sale
Struck by Maxwell's silver Hammer
Posts: 128
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Post by Phantomfan on Feb 8, 2008 20:57:38 GMT -5
wow......
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Post by B on Feb 8, 2008 21:15:45 GMT -5
Iameye wrote: "Lord George Gordon Byron (1788-1824) was as famous in his lifetime for his personality cult as for his poetry. He created the concept of the 'Byronic hero' - a defiant, melancholy young man, brooding on some mysterious, unforgivable event in his past. "
Oh, you mean like "a rebel without a cause" or Billy Joel's "Angry Young Man", or "a catcher in the rye". Mmm-hmmm.
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Post by mommybird on Feb 8, 2008 22:33:03 GMT -5
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Post by LOVELYRITA on Feb 9, 2008 21:31:49 GMT -5
Makes one wonder who will meet Bill on the "other side"
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Post by mommybird on Feb 10, 2008 19:27:10 GMT -5
I'm not touching that one. ;D
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