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ARTICLES RELATED TO Meaning of Dreams about Wagon |  |  |  | Meaning of Dreams about Wagon: Dream Interpretations
Dictionary - Wagon
Dream
Interpretation Wagon
Riding a wagon means quick advancements at the job. Dreaming of driving a wagon full of hay reflects your thrifty character trait and conservative attitude towards risky ventures. If you are falling out of a wagon, the dreams shows your clumsy nature and foretells misfortune with the job. If a mule is pulling the wagon, you are influenced by dangerous and stupid people. Seeing an empty wagon denotes your dissatisfaction and failure.
Source: Dream-Land, http://www.dream-land.info
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Wagon , Meaning of Dreams about Wagon ,
Dream Interpretation Wagon )
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Interpretation - Wagon
Wagon - To dream of a wagon, denotes that you will be unhappily mated, and many troubles will prematurely age you.
- To drive one down a hill, is ominous of proceedings which will fill you with disquiet, and will cause you loss.
- To drive one up hill, improves your worldly affairs.
- To drive a heavily loaded wagon, denotes that duty will hold you in a moral position, despite your efforts to throw her off.
- To drive into muddy water, is a gruesome prognostication, bringing you into a vortex of unhappiness and fearful foreboding.
- To see a covered wagon, foretells that you will be encompassed by mysterious treachery, which will retard your advancement.
- For a young woman to dream that she drives a wagon near a dangerous embankment, portends that she will be driven into an illicit entanglement, which will fill her with terror, lest she be openly discovered and ostracised. If she drives across a clear stream of water, she will enjoy adventure without bringing opprobrium upon herself.
- A broken wagon represents distress and failure.
Source: 10 000 Dream
Interpretations, by Gustavus Hindman Miller
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Wagon , Meaning of Dreams about Wagon ,
Dream Interpretation Wagon )
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Dream Dictionary - Car, Driving, Driving a Car, Car Driving, To drive a car, To drive a cab
Car, Driving, Driving a Car, Car Driving, To drive a car, To drive a cab - To dream of driving a carriage, signifies unjust criticism of your seeming extravagance. You will be compelled to do things which appear undignified.
- To dream of driving a public cab, denotes menial labor, with little chance for advancement. If it is a wagon, you will remain in poverty and unfortunate circumstances for some time. If you are driven in these conveyances by others, you will profit by superior knowledge of the world, and will always find some path through difficulties. If you are a man, you will, in affairs with women, drive your wishes to a speedy consummation. If a woman, you will hold men's hearts at low value after succeeding in getting a hold on them.
- [59] See Meaning of Dreams about Cab or Carriage.
Source: 10 000 Dream
Interpretations, by Gustavus Hindman Miller
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Car , Dreams - Meaning of Dream about Car , Dream Interpretation Car )
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 |  |  | Meaning of Dreams about Wagon: Dictionary on Dreams Meaning
from; Diving to DrinkingDictionary
on Dreams Meaning including the meaning of dreams about: Ditch, Dividend, Diving, Divining Rods,
Divorce, Docks, Doctor, Dogs, Dolphin, Dome, Dominoes, Donkey, Doomsday, Door,
Door Bell, Doves, Dowry, Dragon, Drama, Dram-drinking, Draw-knife, Dressing,
Drinking, Driving, Dromedary.
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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 |  |  | Meaning of Dreams about Wagon: Dreams Interpretation from; Diving to DrinkingDreams
Interpretation including the meaning of dreams about: Ditch, Dividend, Diving, Divining Rods,
Divorce, Docks, Doctor, Dogs, Dolphin, Dome, Dominoes, Donkey, Doomsday, Door,
Door Bell, Doves, Dowry, Dragon, Drama, Dram-drinking, Draw-knife, Dressing,
Drinking, Driving, Dromedary.
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: » Dreams Interpretation: Dreams Interpretation from; Diving to Drinking |
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 |  |  | Meaning of Dreams about Wagon: : Dreams Sitemap I - W
This is a sitemap for Meaning of
Dreams - W . Click on a link and
you will find multiple dream interpretations and the meaning behind this
particular dream.
Meaning of Dreams about - W wadding, wading, wafer, wafers, wager, wager, wages, wagon, wagtail, waif, wail, waist, waiter, wake, walk, walking, walking stick, wallet, walls, walnut, waltz, want, war, wardrobe, warehouse, warlock, warrant, wart, warts, washboard, wash-bowl, washer woman, washing, wasp, waste, watch, watching others eat, water, water lily, water-carrier, waterfall, waves, waves, wax taper, way, wealth, weapon, weapons, weasel, weather, weaving, web, wedding, wedding clothes, wedding ring, weddings, wedge, wedlock, weeding, weeds, weeping, weevil, weighing, welcome, well, welsh rarebits, werewolf, wet, wet nurse, whale, whalebone, whales, wheat, wheels, whetstone, whip, whirlpool, whirlwind, whisky, whispering, whistle, white, white hair, white lead, white moth, whitewa, widow, wife, wig, wild, wild animals, wild man, will, willow, wind, windmill, window, windows, wine, wine-cellar, wine-glass, wings, winter, wire, wisdom, witch, witness, wizard, wolf, wolves, women, wooden shoe, wood-pile, woods, wool, work house, workshop, worm, worms, wound, wrath, wreath, wrecks, wrinkled skin, writing,
More about dreams here:
Meaning of Dreams, Meaning
of Dreams - A, Meaning of Dreams
- B, Meaning
of Dreams - C, Meaning of
Dreams - D, Meaning of
Dreams - E, Meaning of
Dreams - F, Meaning of
Dreams - G, Meaning of
Dreams - H, Meaning of
Dreams - I, Meaning of
Dreams - J, Meaning of
Dreams - K, Meaning of
Dreams - L, Meaning of
Dreams - M, Meaning of
Dreams - N, Meaning of
Dreams - O, Meaning of
Dreams - P, Meaning of
Dreams - Q, Meaning of
Dreams - R, Meaning of
Dreams - S, Meaning of
Dreams - T, Meaning of
Dreams - U, Meaning of
Dreams - V, Meaning of
Dreams - W, Meaning of
Dreams - X, Meaning of
Dreams - Y, Meaning of
Dreams - Z,
The most common dreams:
Being
Chased, Being
Naked, Examination,
Falling,
Flying,
Loosing
Property, Missing
Transportation, Sex, Teeth
Falling Out, Water,
Animals,
Baby,
Body
Parts, Death,
Disaster,
Drowning,
Finding
New Rooms, Food,
Hair,
Hands,
House,
Invisible,
Love,
Machines,
Money,
Mountain,
Not
Able to Move, Rebirth,
Running,
School,
Snake,
Spirits,
Teacher,
Teeth,
Traveling,
Vehicle
Read more here: » Dreams Sitemap I - W |
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Mysticism
Magick Dictionary
on
PARSONS, JOHN WHITESIDE
PARSONS, JOHN WHITESIDE I hight Don Quixote, I live on peyote, marijuana, morphine and cocaine, I never know sadness but only a madness that burns at the heart and the brain I see each charwoman, ecstatic inhuman, angelic, demonic, divine. Each wagon a dragon, each beer mug a flagon that brims with ambrosial wine. So goes a poem written by magician Jack Parsons, head of the California lodge of the O.T.O. (1944-52), as privately printed in a 1943 issue of The Oriflamme. This was, synchronistically enough, as Robert Anton Wilson has pointed out, but a few weeks before the discovery of LSD. All of Crowley's disciples struggled valiantly to "discover the identity of the hidden God" within them, their "True (Thelemic) Will" and to find a way to implement their knowledge. Their endings were mostly dismal. Those who claimed success in the Great Work ceased all further activity and led lives thereafter of total obscurity. One of them, Frater 210, Jack Parsons, claimed success, only to go up in flames shortly thereafter. Jack Parsons was a co-founder of The California Institute of Technology. His contributions to the aerospace industry and nuclear research were so considerable that he has the unique distinction of being the only North American sorcerer in the 20th Century to have had a mountain on the moon named after him. He was also one of Aleister Crowley's more bizarre disciples. He was born on October 2, 1914, in Los Angeles, California. The only offspring of divorced parents, he spent a solitary and uneventful childhood. He devoted himself, as solitary children do, to reading and daydreaming. He also harbored a grudge against authority and interference and nursed a rebellious spirit. His studies led him into aerospace technology, but by temperament he was apparently not a scientist and his life did not truly begin until 1939, when an acquaintance, Wilfred T. Smith, introduced him to Aleister Crowley's writings and invited him to join his Agap‚ Lodge of the Ordo Templi Orientis. Wilfred T. Smith, or Frater 132, had ostensibly been a special protege of Crowley's, who had decided for astrological reasons that Smith was a god imprisoned in human flesh. This seems curious to us now, because Smith's behavior was totally psychopathic. The truth is that Smith had fallen into disfavor with Crowley, who had decided the man was turning the O.T.O.'s California Lodge into a cheap love cult, which Crowley considered a "slimy abomination." As soon as Parsons came into the order, Smith grabbed Parson's wife, Helen, as his very own familiar and had a child by her. Thereupon Parsons abandoned her and took her younger sister, Betty, as his mistress and magickal partner. This arrangement appeared to work well enough for him and he soon advanced into the inner circles of the lodge. Meanwhile, Crowley very cleverly gave Smith a specific formula for his apotheosis and ordered him to resign in order to identify this God within. This was the easiest way of getting Smith out of the Lodge so that Parsons could be put in charge. Immediately, Smith's star began to fall. He conceived a hatred for Parsons and "attacked him astrally." Kenneth Grant in his Magical Revival recounts a curious hallucination or dream that Parsons underwent with a black-caped figure whom he transfixed with knives and eventually drove away. But now Parsons, determined to repeat his initial disasters, brought in a mysterious "Frater X" as his secretary and who seemed a promising candidate for the lodge which Parsons had now taken over. His new friend, however, also proved to be a rogue and quickly wormed out of Parsons the top-secret psycho-sexual and magical techniques of the Agape Lodge. Soon thereafter, Frater X got him to enter a business venture with him, with Parson's money as the lion's share of the investment. Next Frater X persuaded him to sell the property that was the headquarters of the Lodge. Then he and Betty went on a yachting cruise around the world. Now that Frater X had reduced him to poverty, Parsons had to earn his living in an "aircraft company." What it is about the occult that could possibly interest dreary U.S. government agents defies the imagination, but Parsons was, after all, working for the government. So by now the O.T.O. was swarming with U.S. intelligence agents posing as members! Since his mistress had also been stolen from him, Parsons set about, by evocation (and ritual masturbation supervised by Frater X), to obtain an Elemental Spirit to take the place of Betty. And in 1946 he wrote to Crowley that he had actually found such an elemental -- a woman named Marjorie Cameron. She soon became his second wife. Crowley wrote to warn him to avoid excessive devotion to an elemental, but his warning had little effect... Now Parsons contacted an "Intelligence" who spoke to him, directly at first. It was not long, however, before he began speaking through Fr. X, who, it seems, had returned and been forgiven! This time Frater X informed Parsons that he was "overshadowed by an Angel with flaming hair." Parsons now set about to make a Moonchild -- a procedure that must take place at a time when the moon is "void of course" or without earth influence. This endeavor annoyed the dying Crowley very much. In fact, by now, Crowley was thoroughly disgusted with Parsons and the Californians. At this point Parsons took the "Oath of the Abyss" and the magical name of "Belarion Armilus All Dajjal Anti-Christ." In 1948 he took the oath of the Antichrist and in 1949 penned his autobiographies. Finally he took up the "Black Pilgrimage," a terrible path forcing him to chose between suicide, madness and the Oath of the Abyss. In this endeavor he would open himself up to the influence of the demon, Choronzon. Not long after that, in June of 1952, Parsons began a dangerous invocation in a last ditch effort to release his Will. He called upon an Aethyr who had already brought disaster to a fellow magus (Kelley), backed up by a sexual magick of his own. In his further rituals with the woman of the flaming hair and the invocation of the Lady of Babalon (not to be confused with "Babylon") there are constant calls to fire and flame, "Flame is out Lady, flame is her hair. I am flame" (In this case, "fire" refers to its opposite, "blood.") Suddenly, while working in his lab in Pasadena, he dropped a phial of fulminate of mercury and burst up in a terrible explosion -- ordinary fire being the opposite and balancing complement of blood. Twenty years after his fiery death, official maps depicting the dark side of the moon prominently honored his many aerospace contributions with "Parson's Crater." Perhaps this act was fully intended as a deliberate pyrrhic mockery, suggesting mythic figures of old who were translated to the skies as immortal stars. Parsons is not the only mortal to have achieved celestial recognition without apotheosis, but he's the only one who deliberately tried, failed and then made it by default. What makes Parsons so intriguing, no doubt, is that he appears in so many footnotes by so many different authors and yet hardly anything is known about him. Moreover, trying to cut a path through his zigzagging life is extremely frustrating for the biographer. Most lives, whether dull or interesting, tend to tell us something about the person, but Parsons' life seems almost deliberately labyrinthine. His writings are not easily unearthed and jealously guarded. The reason for that isn't hard to discern. Parsons was a social and intellectual rebel during an era of rigid conformity. He was not only the author of the two-volume book about the Anti- Christ: The Black Pilgrimage and The Manifesto of the Anti-Christ (which eponym he conferred on himself) but also claimed, says Colin Wilson, that he had been advised by a Higher Power "to declare war on all authority that is not based on courage and manhood... the authority of lying priests, conniving judges, blackmailing police and to call an end to restriction and inhibition, conscription, compulsion, regimentation and the tyranny of the laws." The "Higher Power," it turned out, was an even more elusive character: our old friend, the sinister Frater X. Until quite recently the Identity of Frater X remained unknown. Rumor had it that he had lived to a very old age in fame and luxury from the misuses of the magickal secrets that he had stolen. His identity remained a mystery until the late 1980's when it was revealed in several places at once that Frater X was none other than L. Ron Hubbard, father of Dianetics and Scientology. Even initiates may not always recognize the daring, inspired and cosmic scope of Parson's effort. How much Hubbard was involved is uncertain, but that extraterrestrial contact of some kind was made through Parsons' rift in the wall between worlds was revealed, according to Kenneth Grant, by the Babalon working. He and Achad began this only a year before Crowley's death in 1947 and that year coincided with the first wave of ufo "invasions." "Parsons opened a door and something flew in" says Grant. Whatever that may be, something more than Babalon and channeled writings, we now realize, erupted into our world and continues to pour in, moving at weird and mocking variance to our sublunary science and reality systems. Crowley's and Achad's initiations, says Grant in his Outside the Circles of Time, led up to the "40's framed by AL. III. 46, the number of Mu, Cry of the Vulture of Maat and key of the mysteries" and that in turn finally "fulminated in Hiroshima of 1945." Grant wrote those words in 1980, before AIDS and the greenhouse effect, quoting from Crowley: "Now the 80's cower before me and are abased." Ego and Initiation run the same hurdles. Ego interferes with the natural course of apotheosis. And for Grant, psychiatry is out of the question. It exposes the sensitive, personal and private talismans and techniques needed for reshaping social progress to the killing glare of mindless immediacy and expediency. Initiation, says Parsons himself, must proceed as best it can through and past the barriers... "until the misty bastions of infantile Trawenfells change into the rocks and crags of eternity; the garden of Klingsor into the City of God." The Xtian idea of a God descending to become a man is the exact reverse of Magick. If Crowley's goal was to release the God hidden inside every human being, Jack Parsons dared to go a step further. His intention was to raise Hell to earth's level, to elevate our hellworld a step closer to Heaven! Since he was by nature a quiet and humble man, such a fusilary and hubristic ambition proved so powerful a charge for him that it burst out of the astral plane and destroyed him on the physical plane.
(See
also: PARSONS, JOHN WHITESIDE , Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind
and Soul,)
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Spiritual Yoga
Dictionary III on
Chakra
Chakra: Literally, the wheel of a wagon; it is a term used to represent the energetic centers of the body. In Hindu Yoga there are seven such centers that store and release life force (prana): the base of the spine, the genitals, the naval, the heart, the middle of the forehead, and the top of the head.
(See also: Chakra ,Yoga, Yoga Dictionary)
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Spiritual Dictionary on Raidho
Raidho: The fifth rune of the Elder Futhark, representing the letter R. The Nordic peoples idenified this rune with the wagon, and as may be expected, it is a prime indicator of travel or movement. Also See: Raido
(See also:
Raidho , Magic,
Shamanism,
Paganism, Wicca)
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Spiritual Yoga
Dictionary IV on
Cakra or Chakra
Cakra or Chakra:
Cakra or Chakra ("wheel"): literally, the wheel of a wagon; metaphorically, one of the psycho-energetic centers of the subtle body (sukshma-sharira); in Buddhist yoga, five such centers are known, while in Hindu yoga often seven or more such centers are mentioned: mula-adhara-cakra (muladhara-cakra) at the base of the spine, svadhishthana-cakra at the genitals, manipura-cakra at the navel, anahata-cakra at the heart, vishuddha-cakra or vishuddhi-cakra at the throat, ajna-cakra in the middle of the head, and sahasrara-cakra at the top of the head
(See also: Cakra or Chakra ,Yoga, Yoga Dictionary)
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