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Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment | A Wisdom Archive on Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment |  | Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment A selection of articles related to Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment |  |
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment |  |  |  | Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment:
Dream Dictionary - Enchantment, Spell, Enchanting, Enchanting Others, Cast a Spell
Enchantment, Spell, Enchanting, Enchanting Others, Cast a Spell - To dream of being under the spell of enchantment, denotes that if you are not careful you will be exposed to some evil in the form of pleasure. The young should heed the benevolent advice of their elders.
- To resist enchantment, foretells that you will be much sought after for your wise counsels and your liberality.
- To dream of trying to enchant others, portends that you will fall into evil.
Source: 10 000 Dream
Interpretations, by Gustavus Hindman Miller
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Enchantment , Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment , Dream Interpretation Enchantment )
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 |  |  | Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment: Dream Meaning Dictionary from; Embarrassment to EntertainmentDream
Meaning Dictionary including the meaning of dreams about: Embarrassment, Embrace, Embroidery,
Emerald, Emperor, Employee, Employment, Empress, Enchantment, Encyclopedia,
Enemy, Engagement, Engine, Engineer, English, Entertainment, Entrails, Envelope,
Envy, Epaulet,
Dream Dictionary Index
including links to 10.000 dream interpretations: Dream Dictionary Index
For more dream
interpretation, see: Meaning of Dreams or Dream Dictionary
For articles about
dreams, see: Dreams
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 |  |  | Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment: Dream Interpretations from; Embarrassment to EntertainmentDream
Interpretations including the meaning of dreams about: Embarrassment, Embrace, Embroidery,
Emerald, Emperor, Employee, Employment, Empress, Enchantment, Encyclopedia,
Enemy, Engagement, Engine, Engineer, English, Entertainment, Entrails,
Envelope, Envy, Epaulet,
Dream Dictionary Index
including links to 10.000 dream interpretations: Dream Dictionary Index
For more dream
interpretation, see: Meaning of Dreams or Dream Dictionary
For articles about
dreams, see: Dreams
Read more here: » Dream Interpretations: Dream Interpretations from; Embarrassment to Entertainment |
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 |  |  | Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment: Why are we moved to do what we do? Ð Part IIOnce the basic
needs of life are met, most people turn to the pursuit of pleasure, fun, and
enjoyment. These include finding comfortable places to relax and rest, tasty
food and drink, entertainment, recreation, sports, arts, socializing, romance,
taking consciousness-altering substances such as caffeine, nicotine, alcohol,
and other drugs.
Read more here: » Motivation: Why are we moved to do what we do? Ð Part II |
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Naga
Naga (Sanskrit) Serpent; the symbol of immortality and wisdom, of renewed births, of secret knowledge and, when the tail is held in the mouth, of eternity. The nagas or serpents of wisdom are, therefore, full initiates: "the first Nagas -- beings wiser than Serpents -- are the 'Sons of Will and Yoga,' born before the complete separation of the sexes, 'matured in the man-bearing eggs produced by the power (Kriyasakti) of the holy sages' of the early Third Race" (SD 2:181). These first nagas were the original human adepts, who were later symbolized by the terms serpents and dragons. "These 'originals' -- called to this day in China 'the Dragons of Wisdom' -- were the first disciples of the Dhyanis, who were their instructors; in short, the primitive adepts of the Third Race, and later, of the Fourth and Fifth Races. The name became universal, and no sane man before the Christian era would ever have confounded the man and the symbol" (SD 2:210). The early Mexican word nagual, now meaning sorcerer and medicine man, is akin in its meaning, for "Some of the descendants of the primitive Nagas, the Serpents of Wisdom, peopled America, when its continent arose during the palmy days of the great Atlantis, (America being the Patala or Antipodes of Jambu-Dwipa, not of Bharata-Varsha)" (SD 2:182). The Hebrew equivalent is nahash also meaning magic, enchantment, thus showing the same connection of ideas. Naga may be equated with Ananta-sesha, the seven-headed endless serpent of Vishnu, "the great dragon eternity biting with its active head its passive tail, from the emanations of which spring worlds, beings and things. . . . The Nag awakes. He heaves a heavy breath and the latter is sent like an electric shock all along the wire encircling Space" (ML 73).
(See also: Naga , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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 |  |  | Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Enchantment: An Irish Myth ConcordanceAn Irish Myth Concordance
The following concordance is based
on 'Gods and Fighting Men' by Lady Augusta Gregory, first published in 1904.
Page number references are to the 1976 trade paperback edition published by the
MacMillan Company of Canada Limited. Breif supplimentary material is taken from
'Dictionary of Irish Myth and Legend' by Ronan Coghlan, published in 1979 by
Donard Publishing Comapany, and referenced as 'DIM' in the following text.
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Spiritual Dictionary on glamour
glamour: Glamour is the art of enchantment. In occult lore, glamour is the ability to create an illusion around a person, place, or thing. In legend, the art of glamour was used to make the old appear young or to disguise one's appearance in different ways. It was also used to hide or camouflage something and to make one thing appear to be another.
(See also:
glamour , Magic,
Shamanism,
Paganism, Wicca)
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Spiritual Dictionary on Geis
Geis: (gayss), plural geassa (gassa) - A controlling spell or enchantment in which a certain action or behavior will cause another certain action or effect. Usually it takes the form of a taboo or a destiny, as when CuChullain overheard Cathbad say that any boy who accepts weapons on that day would be destined to be a great hero, and he asked his king for arms. Also See: Geas
(See also:
Geis , Magic,
Shamanism,
Paganism, Wicca)
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Iormungandr
Iormungandr (Icelandic) (from Iormun huge, vast, superhuman + gandr magic, enchantment or andr spirit) In the Norse Edda, the Midgard serpent which girds the earth, one of three gigantic offspring of Loki. The other two are Fenris, the wolf destined to devour the sun when its life is spent, and Hel, queen of the realms of death. Iormungandr may refer to the equator, the plane of the ecliptic and, in a still larger context, to the Milky Way.
(See also: Iormungandr , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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New Age Spirituality
Dictionary on
Nahash
Nahash (Hebrew - serpent) In Hebrew this word is associated with magic and enchantment. It is related to and pronounced almost the same as the Sanskrit word naga. Most authorities agree that, as it is used in the first of Genesis, this word cannot mean simply a snake. It is the ego which indeed winds about the heart of a man and envelops it in its coils, having nothing to do with a serpent except as a metaphor. In various usages one may read it as ego or as kundalini or as something not quite one nor the other.
(See also: Nahash , New Age
Spirituality, Body
Mind and Soul)
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Nehushtan
Nehushtan (Hebrew) [from nahash to whisper, practice divination] A serpent, both actual and mystical, especially the brazen or brass serpent; Hezekiah "brake the images, and cut down the groves, and brake in pieces the brazen serpent that Moses had made: . . . and he called it Nehushtan" (2 Kings 28:4). Both the verbal root and its derivative nouns involve the meaning, not only of an omen or augury, but also enchantment, magic, incantation.
(See also: Nehushtan , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Spiritual
- Theosophy
Dictionary on Azhi-Dahaka
Azhi-Dahaka (Avestan) Zahak (Persian) (from azhi, azi serpent; cf Sanskrit ahi) The destroying serpent or dragon; in the Avesta a three-headed dragon who strives to seize and put out the hvareno -- the sovereign light, the glory from above. He takes hold of it, but Atar, the fire god, son of Ahura Mazda, frightens him away and recovers the light. The scene of the fight is the sea, Vourukasha (the sea from which all the waters on the earth fall down with the winds and the clouds) or the waters of space (Yast 19). Another myth, closely parallel with that in the Vedas, tells how Thraetaona Athwya slays the three-mounted, three-headed, six-eyed serpent, the most dreadful drugh created by Angra Mainyu. The scene of the battle is the four-cornered Varena, the four sided heavens (Yasna 9). Connecting the serpent with Satan or evil, Blavatsky writes: "War in heaven between Thraetaona and Azhidahaka, the destroying Serpent, ends on earth, according to Burnouf, in the battle of pious men against the power of Evil, 'of the Iranians with the Aryan Brahmins of India' " (SD 2:390). In far later times both the Pahlavi commentaries on the Avesta and the great epic writer of Persia, Ferdowsi, personalized Azhi-Dahaka as a fiend called Zahak and Thraetaona as King Jamshid. Azhi-Dahak in a pact with the Devil sells his soul in return for worldly possessions and the estate of his father, Mardas, a man of many virtues. He consents to the death of his father, totally gives into self-indulgence in physical pleasures out of vanity, and falls prey to the enchantment of flattery. No sooner does Zahak permit the Devil to kiss his shoulders than two black snakes grow in place of his lip marks. Since no cure can be found that will get rid of the vicious snakes, the Devil in the form of a physician prescribes that relief would only come from feeding the snakes with the fresh brains of young men. Azhak later finds and cuts Jamshid into two in the sea of China, and reigns with cruelty for a thousand years until Fereydoun (Thraetaona, the thrice potent) defeats him and chains him to Mount Damavand.
(See also: Azhi-Dahaka , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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