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Dream Dictionary Egyptian | A Wisdom Archive on Dream Dictionary Egyptian |  | Dream Dictionary Egyptian A selection of articles related to Dream Dictionary Egyptian |  |
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Dream Dictionary Egyptian |  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Egyptian: Dream Interpretation
Dictionary - Egyptian
Egyptian: 1. Dreaming of living in ancient Egypt might actually be a past-life memory. Be sure to write the dream down immediately upon awakening, as an issue from that past life could be coming to the surface of your unconscious mind. Something in the dream probably relates to a concern in the present, and the dream may be giving you important insights. 2. Egypt is a land of mystery, and therefore if you dream of Egypt or things Egyptian there is probably some mystery in your life that you'd like to have resolved. Look to other symbols in the dream to discern what it is and what you should do about it. 3. Egypt is a land where a lot of secrets are being dug out of the ground. What secrets are you hiding? Or are others around you keeping things from you that you really need to know? If the other symbols in the dream support this idea, honest communication with those involved is definitely called for.
Source: Astrocenter, http://astrocenter.astrology.msn.com/msn/DreamDictionary.aspx
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Egyptian , Meaning of Dreams about Egyptian ,
Dream Interpretation Egyptian )
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Mysticism
Magick Dictionary
on
EGYPT
EGYPT It is in Egypt that we encounter the roots of the entire Western tradition, including the Hermetic arts. If you would unravel the mystery of alchemy and qabalah, dedicate yourself to Egyptian studies. In Egypt we also find the roots of Greek philosophy and science. The Egyptians held that life was a miracle and they rightly worshiped creation as a product of magic. They drew no lines of difference (other than focus) in the degree or quality of consciousness between man, animal and god. Similarly, every member of Kamite society, from peasant to king, though not interchangeable, was of importance. Nor did they make the slightest division between religion, science, art and magic. The Gods were entities to be understood, so that their powers could be used to alter or maintain the natural course of things. (The Gods are actually forces of nature). An initiate, or magician, was simply a man of superior intelligence and will who had lined up his goals to parallel and augment those of the Gods. 20th Century America has been compared to Egypt in its predilection for building huge things and its materialistic philosophy. But America's psychotic compulsion to change everything as rapidly as possible, its lust for technological gimmicks and its attempt to control, counter and even destroy Nature, would have seemed blasphemous and meaningless to the Egyptians.
(See
also: EGYPT , Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind
and Soul,)
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Egyptian: Reflections on the Dream Traditions of IslamMeaning of Dreams in Islam
Few Western dream researchers have any familiarity with the rich dream traditions of Islam. The Muslim faith first emerged in seventh
century B.C.E. Arabia as a profound revisioning of early Jewish and Christian
beliefs and practices. One theme the Prophet Muhammed (pbuh) drew from the
scriptures of those two religions was a reverence for dreaming. In the Quran,
as in the Jewish Torah and the Christian New Testament, dreams serve as a vital
medium by which God communicates with humans. Dreams offer divine guidance and
comfort, warn people of impending danger, and offer prophetic glimpses of the
future. Although the three religions drastically differ on many other topics,
they find substantial agreement on this particular point: dreaming is a
valuable source of wisdom, understanding, and inspiration. Indeed, as I will
propose in this brief essay, Islam has historically shown greater interest in
dreams than either of the other two traditions, and has done more to weave
dreaming into the daily lives of its members. From the first revelatory visions
of Muhammed to the myriad dream practices of present-day Muslims, Islam has developed and sustained a complex, multifaceted tradition of
active engagement with the dreaming imagination.
Read more here: » Meaning of Dreams in Islam: Reflections on the Dream Traditions of Islam |
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Flying : Dream Interpretation Dictionary - Flying
FLYING DREAM You first start dreaming of flying when you are 3 to 5 years old. It is a very common dream, though less prevalent in adults. More than one third of the dreaming population has dreamed of flying one time or the other. - Flying dreams are known to have a positive relationship with relief from tension and nightmares.
- Lucid dreamers tend to have twice as much of flying dreams.
- An intense emotional condition can also trigger off a flying dream
- The dreams are not exclusive to the post flying machines era. They have occurred in ancient times too, as records in dream books of Babylonian and Egyptian civilizations reveal.
- People with an imaginative personality and creative thinkers have more flying dreams
- Those who fly planes have these dreams, though they rather fly like Superman in their dreams, not in aeroplanes.
What triggers off a flying dream? The reasons offered for these dreams are - Psychological - the dreamer has had an intense emotional experience
- Physiological Ð There is a change in the breathing pattern of the dreamer
- Physical -There is an actual physical movement of the bed.
- Precognitive Ð In preparation of a flying trip
- Consciousness Ð Awareness of movement around you
At an emotional level, a flying dream maybe your defence mechanism to ward of obstacles or transcend over them. But where is your flight headed? Are you seeking something in your flight or is it one of pure joy of the experience? You will have to identify which particular meaning is the most relevant interpretation. Source: http://purpleshaman.com
(See also: Dream
Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation Flying , Dream Dictionary Flying )
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 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Egyptian: : Dreams Sitemap I - E
This is a sitemap for Dream
Dictionary - E . Click on a link
and you will find multiple dream interpretations and the meaning behind this
particular dream.
Dream Dictionary - E eagle, eagles, earring, earrings, ears, earth, earthquake, earthquakes, earthworm, earwig, eating, ebony, ecccc, echo, eclipse, ecstasy, education, eel, eels, eggs, egyptian, eight, elbows, elderberries, election, electric shock, electricity, elephant, elevator, eleven, elixir of life, elopement, eloquent, embalming, embankment, embarrassment, embrace, embroidery, emerald, emigration, emperor, employee, employment, empress, enchantment, encyclopedia, enemy, engagement, engine, engineer, english, entertainment, entrails, envelope, envy, epaulet, epicure, epidemic, ermine, errands, escape, estate, europe, evening, evergreen, exam, examination, ex-boy, ex-boyfriend, ex-boyfriend, exchange, execution, ex-girlfriend, exile, ex-lover, explosion, eye, eyebrows, eyeglass, eyeglasses, eyes,
More about dreams here:
Dream Dictionary
Dream Dictionary
- A, Dream
Dictionary - B, Dream Dictionary
- C,
Dream
Dictionary - D, Dream Dictionary
- E , Dream
Dictionary - F,
Dream
Dictionary - G, Dream Dictionary
- H, Dream
Dictionary - I,
Dream
Dictionary - J, Dream Dictionary
- K, Dream
Dictionary - L,
Dream
Dictionary - M, Dream Dictionary
- N, Dream
Dictionary - O,
Dream Dictionary
- P, Dream
Dictionary - Q, Dream Dictionary
- R,
Dream
Dictionary - S, Dream Dictionary
- T, Dream
Dictionary - U,
Dream
Dictionary - V, Dream Dictionary
- W, Dream
Dictionary - X,
Dream
Dictionary - Y, Dream Dictionary
- Z
Also see these pages:
Hinduism
Dictionary , Buddhism
Dictionary, Spiritual
Dictionary, Sanskrit
Dictionary , Parapsychology
Dictionary, Paganism
Dictionary, Mysticism
Dictionary , Theosophy
Dictionary , Alternative
Health Dictionary
Read more here: » Dreams Sitemap I - E |
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New Age
Spirituality Dictionary on Akhenaton
Akhenaton (Egyptian, "he who acts effectively for the invisible solar disk") Pharaoh of Egypt ca. 1350 to 1334 BC, often called (erroneously) the first monotheist of recorded history. He first came to the throne as Amenhotep IV and worshiped traditional gods. However, after his fourth year, he elevated a minor deity, the Aton, i. e. , the "disk of the sun" (a form of the sun god, Re), to the position of state god of Egypt and changed his name to Akhenaton to reflect his devotion to that deity. His pantheon consisted of a trinity that included the Aton, Akhenaton, and Nefertiti (also the name of his wife), which was the focus of popular worship. While Akhenaton was worshiped as the unique son of the Aton, Nefertiti was celebrated for her fertility. Common people were excluded from worshiping the Aton itself. Egyptians could worship only the royal couple; the couple in turn worshiped the sun disk. The new religion was maintained by Akhenaton's popular appeal as king, but it quickly passed away after his death. Akhenaton's motives in promulgating his beliefs were political and religious, since he elevated himself to the status of a god higher than customary for an Egyptian king. Akhenaton's religion recognized both Egyptians and foreigners as equal beneficiaries of the same god, and it overturned established conventions in Egyptian language and art.
(See
also: Akhenaton ,
New Age Spirituality, Body Mind and Soul)
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New Age
Spirituality Dictionary on Anubis
Anubis An Egyptian deity with the head of a jackal or dog and the body of a human. He leads the souls of the dead to the underworld and helps Osiris at his final judgment. Anubis' particular concern is with the funeral cult and the care of the dead, and, Anubis is often considered the inventor of embalming. Considered benevolent and good, Anubis was present in the underworld (Duat) at the weighing of the dead person's soul, and was also at home in the heavenly sky realms of Ra. Anubis was worshipped at Abydos and was also worshiped at Lycopolis, Abt and other cities. Although the god's name is translated in texts as Anubis, this is actually the Greek form of the Egyptian name Anpu.
(See
also: Anubis ,
New Age Spirituality, Body Mind and Soul)
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Spiritual Theosophical
Dictionary on
Ptah, Pthah
Ptah, or Pthah (Egypt, Egyptian). The son of Kneph in the Egyptian Pantheon. He is the Principle of Light and Life through which "creation" or rather evolution took place. The Egyptian logos and creator, the Demiurgos. A very old deity, as, according to Herodotus, he had a temple erected to him by Menes, the first king of Egypt. He is "giver of life" and the self-born, and the father of Apis, the sacred bull, conceived through a ray from the Sun. Ptah is thus the prototype of Osiris, a later deity. Herodotus makes him the father of the Kabiri, the mystery-gods; and the Targum of Jerusalem says: "Egyptians called the wisdom of the First Intellect Ptah"; hence he is Mahat the "divine wisdom"; though from another aspect he is Swabhavat, the self-created substance, as a prayer addressed to him in the Ritual of the Dead says, after calling Ptah "father of fathers and of all gods, generator of all men produced from his substance": "Thou art without father, being. engendered by thy own will; thou art without mother, being born by the renewal of thine own substance from whom proceeds substance".
(See also: Ptah, Pthah , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul,
Spiritual Dictionary,)
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Spiritual
- Theosophy
Dictionary on Atef
Atef (Egyptian) Father; the Atef-crown was one of the crowns of Osiris (also of Khnum, less frequently of other deities) and of some kings of Egypt, especially the Ramessed line. It consisted of the tall white conical cap of Upper Egypt, flanked with a pair of ostrich plumes and having the solar disk and uraeus in front; oftentimes the cap was omitted. The atef was emblematic of the sovereignty of Egypt under the attributes of light, truth, and divinity -- the feather being the hieroglyph for truth; also the "two feathers represent the two truths -- life and death" mystically, while the uraeus is the symbol of initiation (TG 42, 355).
(See also: Atef , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Sun God, Sun Gods
Sun God, Sun Gods Sometimes applied to the cosmic logoi, which collectively are not only symbolized, but actually are represented by and through the septenary sun. Deities of masculine character are often called sun gods. Like the sun, a sun god may be on various planes, from that of a Logos to that of the absolute in various subordinate hierarchies. Sun gods in mythology usually slay dragons, as Apollo slays Python, and often have serpents for their emblems, the serpent being dual in aspect -- high and low, inner and outer, active and passive, positive and negative, spiritual and material. As in Egyptian mythology, Osiris the sun god manifests as Horus, his own son, who is also a sun god, in similar fashion sun gods are manifested in man and on the lower planes of nature; similar to the Egyptian Osiris we have Adonis, Bacchus, Krishna, Christ, etc., as the sun god or spiritual monad in man; and cosmically we find sun gods on various planes.
(See also: Sun God, Sun Gods , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary,
Body mind and Soul)
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Spiritual Theosophical
Dictionary on
Noon
Noon (Egypt, Egyptian). The celestial river which flows in Noot, the cosmic abyss or Noo. As all the gods have been generated in the river (the Gnostic Pleroma), it is called "the Father-Mother of the gods".
(See also: Noon , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul,
Spiritual Dictionary,)
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Spiritual Theosophical
Dictionary on
Ammon
Ammon (Egypt, Egyptian). One of the great gods of Egypt. Ammon or Amoun is far older than Amoun-Ra, and is identified with Baal. Hammon, the Lord of Heaven. Amoun-Ra was Ra the Spiritual Sun, the "Sun of Righteousness", etc., for - "the Lord God is a Sun". He is the God of Mystery and the hieroglyphics of his name are often reversed. He is Pan, All-Nature esoterically, and therefore the universe, and the "Lord of Eternity". Ra, as declared by an old inscription, was "begotten by Neith but not engendered". He is called the "self- begotten" Ra,, and created goodness from a glance of his fiery eye, as Set-Typhon created evil from his. As Ammon (also Amoun and Amen), Ra, he is "Lord of the worlds enthroned on the Sun’s disk and appears in the abyss of heaven". A very ancient hymn spells the name "Amen-ra", and hails the "Lord of the thrones of the earth...Lord of Truth, father of the gods, maker of man, creator of the beasts, Lord of Existence, Enlightener of the Earth, sailing in heaven in tranquillity. . . All hearts are softened at beholding thee, sovereign of life, health and strength We worship thy spirit who alone made us", etc., etc. (See Bonwick’s Egyptian Belief.) Ammon Ra is called "his mother’s husband" and her son. (See "Chnourmis" and "Chnouphis" and also Secret Doctrine I, pp. 91 and It was to the "ram-headed" god that the Jews sacrificed lambs, and the lamb of Christian theology is a disguised reminiscence of the ram.
(See also: Ammon , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul,
Spiritual Dictionary,)
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Theosophy Dictionary on Aethiopians, Ethiopians
Aethiopians, Ethiopians An undefined but powerful group of peoples, generally placed south of Egypt and east of Babylon; often spoken of as being at one time a monarchy and able to contribute kings to the Egyptian throne. Blavatsky shows the archaic racial connection between Egypt and India (SD 2:417; IU 1:569-70). Migrants from northwestern India to Africa took with them the names of their great river, variously called Aethiops or Nila, now called the Indus. These immigrants were the so-called Sons of Horus or Blacksmiths of Egyptian records, mighty builders but somewhat later than the Atlantean descendants who built the first pyramids. This makes the Aethiopians -- and also, therefore, some of the Egyptians -- Aryans. A highly advanced urban civilization of Mohenjo-Daro has been discovered on the Indus "between Attock and Sind," exactly the location mentioned in The Secret Doctrine as the abode of the Aethiopians. The reason classical Greek and Roman writers speak of the Egyptian Aethopians was that the Aethiopians of southern Egypt were then considered to be the last remnants of an Aryan immigration from South India, which took place in prehistoric antiquity, and Greek and Roman writers not infrequently contrasted and identified the Aethiopians of Egypt with the Eastern Aethiopians. It was originally these Eastern Aethiopians who were known to the prehistoric Greek nations as the Aethiopians -- the only ones then considered as rightfully bearing this name. These Eastern Aethiopians inhabited the central and especially the southern part of the Indian peninsula including Ceylon, and therefore were the descendants of one of the last subraces of that portion of Atlantis existing earlier on a land south of India called Lanka, of which Ceylon, then one of its northern highlands, is the only present geological remnant. See also Ethiopia
(See also: Aethiopians, Ethiopians , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Spiritual Theosophical
Dictionary on
Priestesses
Priestesses. Every ancient religion had its priestesses in the temples. In Egypt they were called the Sa and served the altar of Isis and in the temples of other goddesses. Canephorœ was the name given by the Greeks to those consecrated priestesses who bore the baskets of the gods during the public festivals of the Eleusinian Mysteries. There were female prophets in Israel as in Egypt, diviners of dreams and oracles; and Herodotus mentions the Hierodules, the virgins or nuns dedicated to the Theban Jove, who were generally the Pharaohs’ daughters and other Princesses of the Royal House. Orientalists speak of the wife of Cephrenes, the builder of the so-called second Pyramid, who was a priestess of Thoth. (See "Nuns".)
(See also: Priestesses , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul,
Spiritual Dictionary,)
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