MICHELLE COLLIER
DECEMBER 1, 2009
Today I dreamed that some people were looking out the window. I took a peak to see what they were looking at. I saw two big UFOs hovering right above the street. I cannot describe what I saw because I have never seen anything like them. All I can say is they looked like machines, maybe satellites but they were not in space. I have seen this in several other dreams.
Then out near the horizon I saw a giant, in fact two of them. One of them was straight ahead and the other to the right. But I was focussed on the one straight ahead.
The giant straight ahead was as tall as the sky. In perspective I would have to say he could have been on the other side of town, but he was so tall he could see me looking at him through my window.
He looked like a roman soldier. He kind of reminded me how the soldiers looked in the movie 300, with the same headgear on but he also looked metallic, maybe even gold.
We looked at each other in the eyes and then he headed in my direction and struck my window with some sort of spear. It crashed through the window but did not harm me.
This dream could be literal or symbolic. At this point, I am unsure. But, there are a lot of symbols here: 1) window or looking glass, 2) satellites or watchers, 3) giants or nephilem/angels, 4) smashing of the window or blocking my ability to see.
All of these symbols are significant to me at this time, as many of you know I have had struggles remembering my dreams. I have been in a battle over this and I am beginning to get the victory as I am beginning to recall my dreams and all of them are spiritual in nature.
Juggernaut: A juggernaut ( American pronunciation (help·info)) is a term used to describe a literal or metaphorical force regarded as unstoppable. It is often applied to a large machine or collectively to a team or group of people working together, and often bears association with crushing or being physically destructive.
Overall, when I think about this giant in my dream, it reminds me of this scripture:
Daniel 8 Prophecy Related
Daniel 9:20-27
U.S. To Help Rebuild City Of Babylon In Iraq
Reuters News Article on Babylon Project
Tomb of Xerxes, Return of Xerxes, Reincarnation of Xerxes, Xerxes and Aldebaran
Obama and Xerxes - The First Time I heard of Barack MP3
Excerpt from MP3 "very soon you are going to have a black president"..."a black president very soon and hes going to be a communist"..."he is educated, ivy league and his name is barack". "his mother was white from middle america and his father was black and from africa". "new york, chicago and san francisco are cities of interest".
Steve Quayles Dream Page - Dream of Giants and Aliens
Obama Dreams
SOVIET UNION'S DEMISE LEAVES LUMUMBA STUDENTS IN A BIND
Watertown Daily Times (NY) - Friday, February 14, 1992
Author: Associated Press
For nearly a decade, Roman Obama's life at Patrice Lumumba University (SEE THIS) was almost paradise. He studied for free and got warm clothes and cheap airline tickets that let him see the world.
"We had so many possibilities. Maybe it was not a luxurious life, but we could travel and do things," said Obama, a 31-year-old law student from Equatorial Guinea .
The former Soviet Union spent huge sums of money over the past few decades to educate tens of thousands of foreign students - mainly from the developing world - in the name of "peoples' friendship."
Young people from Asia, Africa and Latin America studied medicine, agronomy, law and Marxist economics at universities and institutes around the country.
For those students, the place to be was Patrice Lumumba , founded by Nikita S. Khrushchev in the early 1960s when dozens of Latin American, Asian and African countries won their independence.
Now Lumumba 's dorms are crumbling. The Russian government and the university have little money. Once a Soviet showcase, the university and its students are a burden.
The entrance to all dormitories at Lumumba are guarded by police who demand to see the passports of all visitors.
In Obama's building, the lights do not work in the elevators, the garbage chute is clogged and heating is a problem.
Named for a Congolese revolutionary, Lumumba was considered in the West to be a ideological training ground for future cadres in Soviet-backed regimes such as Ethiopia, Nicaragua and Vietnam.
As the collapse of communism became more apparent, Obama revised his thesis to address the problems of cooperation between the International Monetary Fund and Africa. He hopes to work in private practice or for his country's government.
Sitting on his bed, which takes up most of his dorm room on the 13th floor of a deteriorating high-rise, Obama wonders how he'll survive his last semester.
His scholarship of 137 rubles a month is now worth about $1.37. He has no money to pay for the airline ticket that would cost 215,000 rubles to return home to Equatorial Guinea .
Obama's room is more cramped than usual. His countryman Luis Alonso, who was studying in the Ukrainian city of Odessa, managed to buy a plane ticket at the old price and is headed home. But hotels cost too much so Alonso is camping out with Obama until he gets an exit visa.
"It's impossible for us to study. The universities have no money and our government has no money. We are hostages," said another countryman, Enrique Edu, 29, a law student at Baku University in Azerbaijan.
Edu came to Moscow to plead for help for his wife, their child and about 150 other students from Equatorial Guinea in the former Soviet Union.
Baku University no longer gives foreign students any money and wants foreign students to pay a dollar a day for their dorm rooms, Edu said. He still gets his former Soviet stipend of 150 rubles ($1.50) but is not sure how long even that small sum will continue.
The students' plight was raised last week at a meeting of heads of government of the Commonwealth of Independent States.
Deputy Prime Minister Gennady Burbulis of Russia said the commonwealth members agreed to seek new accords "taking into account the obligations of the former Soviet Union and preserve them in order to guarantee normal vital activity of foreign students."
Obama remembers the days when he and his friends used to be able to buy airplane and train tickets for rubles. They went around the world, often stopping in West Berlin to buy electronic goods that they would bring back and sell for high prices in the Soviet Union.
Now, they can't afford even a second-class train ticket to Berlin, and Obama said that "these days, life is good if we have bread and chicken."
Obama Message Board Posts
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/2344042/posts
Obama News Paper Article
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=4mwQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=5osDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6655,2037468&dq=roman-obama
The Old Ones
DECEMBER 1, 2009
Today I dreamed that some people were looking out the window. I took a peak to see what they were looking at. I saw two big UFOs hovering right above the street. I cannot describe what I saw because I have never seen anything like them. All I can say is they looked like machines, maybe satellites but they were not in space. I have seen this in several other dreams.
Then out near the horizon I saw a giant, in fact two of them. One of them was straight ahead and the other to the right. But I was focussed on the one straight ahead.
The giant straight ahead was as tall as the sky. In perspective I would have to say he could have been on the other side of town, but he was so tall he could see me looking at him through my window.
He looked like a roman soldier. He kind of reminded me how the soldiers looked in the movie 300, with the same headgear on but he also looked metallic, maybe even gold.
We looked at each other in the eyes and then he headed in my direction and struck my window with some sort of spear. It crashed through the window but did not harm me.
This dream could be literal or symbolic. At this point, I am unsure. But, there are a lot of symbols here: 1) window or looking glass, 2) satellites or watchers, 3) giants or nephilem/angels, 4) smashing of the window or blocking my ability to see.
All of these symbols are significant to me at this time, as many of you know I have had struggles remembering my dreams. I have been in a battle over this and I am beginning to get the victory as I am beginning to recall my dreams and all of them are spiritual in nature.
Juggernaut: A juggernaut ( American pronunciation (help·info)) is a term used to describe a literal or metaphorical force regarded as unstoppable. It is often applied to a large machine or collectively to a team or group of people working together, and often bears association with crushing or being physically destructive.
Overall, when I think about this giant in my dream, it reminds me of this scripture:
Daniel 8 Prophecy Related
Daniel 9:20-27
U.S. To Help Rebuild City Of Babylon In Iraq
Reuters News Article on Babylon Project
Tomb of Xerxes, Return of Xerxes, Reincarnation of Xerxes, Xerxes and Aldebaran
Obama and Xerxes - The First Time I heard of Barack MP3
Excerpt from MP3 "very soon you are going to have a black president"..."a black president very soon and hes going to be a communist"..."he is educated, ivy league and his name is barack". "his mother was white from middle america and his father was black and from africa". "new york, chicago and san francisco are cities of interest".
Steve Quayles Dream Page - Dream of Giants and Aliens
Obama Dreams
SOVIET UNION'S DEMISE LEAVES LUMUMBA STUDENTS IN A BIND
Watertown Daily Times (NY) - Friday, February 14, 1992
Author: Associated Press
For nearly a decade, Roman Obama's life at Patrice Lumumba University (SEE THIS) was almost paradise. He studied for free and got warm clothes and cheap airline tickets that let him see the world.
"We had so many possibilities. Maybe it was not a luxurious life, but we could travel and do things," said Obama, a 31-year-old law student from Equatorial Guinea .
The former Soviet Union spent huge sums of money over the past few decades to educate tens of thousands of foreign students - mainly from the developing world - in the name of "peoples' friendship."
Young people from Asia, Africa and Latin America studied medicine, agronomy, law and Marxist economics at universities and institutes around the country.
For those students, the place to be was Patrice Lumumba , founded by Nikita S. Khrushchev in the early 1960s when dozens of Latin American, Asian and African countries won their independence.
Now Lumumba 's dorms are crumbling. The Russian government and the university have little money. Once a Soviet showcase, the university and its students are a burden.
The entrance to all dormitories at Lumumba are guarded by police who demand to see the passports of all visitors.
In Obama's building, the lights do not work in the elevators, the garbage chute is clogged and heating is a problem.
Named for a Congolese revolutionary, Lumumba was considered in the West to be a ideological training ground for future cadres in Soviet-backed regimes such as Ethiopia, Nicaragua and Vietnam.
As the collapse of communism became more apparent, Obama revised his thesis to address the problems of cooperation between the International Monetary Fund and Africa. He hopes to work in private practice or for his country's government.
Sitting on his bed, which takes up most of his dorm room on the 13th floor of a deteriorating high-rise, Obama wonders how he'll survive his last semester.
His scholarship of 137 rubles a month is now worth about $1.37. He has no money to pay for the airline ticket that would cost 215,000 rubles to return home to Equatorial Guinea .
Obama's room is more cramped than usual. His countryman Luis Alonso, who was studying in the Ukrainian city of Odessa, managed to buy a plane ticket at the old price and is headed home. But hotels cost too much so Alonso is camping out with Obama until he gets an exit visa.
"It's impossible for us to study. The universities have no money and our government has no money. We are hostages," said another countryman, Enrique Edu, 29, a law student at Baku University in Azerbaijan.
Edu came to Moscow to plead for help for his wife, their child and about 150 other students from Equatorial Guinea in the former Soviet Union.
Baku University no longer gives foreign students any money and wants foreign students to pay a dollar a day for their dorm rooms, Edu said. He still gets his former Soviet stipend of 150 rubles ($1.50) but is not sure how long even that small sum will continue.
The students' plight was raised last week at a meeting of heads of government of the Commonwealth of Independent States.
Deputy Prime Minister Gennady Burbulis of Russia said the commonwealth members agreed to seek new accords "taking into account the obligations of the former Soviet Union and preserve them in order to guarantee normal vital activity of foreign students."
Obama remembers the days when he and his friends used to be able to buy airplane and train tickets for rubles. They went around the world, often stopping in West Berlin to buy electronic goods that they would bring back and sell for high prices in the Soviet Union.
Now, they can't afford even a second-class train ticket to Berlin, and Obama said that "these days, life is good if we have bread and chicken."
Obama Message Board Posts
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/2344042/posts
Obama News Paper Article
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=4mwQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=5osDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6655,2037468&dq=roman-obama
The Old Ones
Giants in New Zealand
No comments:
Post a Comment