No. That's just what you have been thinking about recently.Dreams do not "mean" anything. They are random neuron firings at at time of the sleep cycle that happen to allow individuals to remember the patterns of neurons that fired just then.
The name of the bottle is NUVO...it's some kind of sparkling vodka.
its the engine diagnostics warning light which tell you have a fault following a audio signal and visual signal saying some kind of fault. its the engine diagnostics warning light which tell you have a fault following a audio signal and visual signal saying some kind of fault.
Lucid Dreaming
how do some dreaming stories describe how the Australian environment was shaped.?
they are warning the predators that they are poisonous, though only half of the time they actyually are. :) genius:)
It means your engine needs attention of some kind
It means your engine needs attention of some kind
Here are some sentences.He is deceased but his sister is still alive.Is that actor alive or deceased?
some say to remember the deceased, to let others know that that person has not be forgotton about and that people are still visiting, some believe that if you leave a penny the deceased will stay with you and bring you good luck..kind of like watch over you and some say its to pay the toll to cross the river
The question probably refers to Conscious Dreaming, popularized in a book of that title by Robert Moss. While some people argue they are different, conscious dreaming seems to be similar to lucid dreaming. See attached link for the description of the book at Amazon.
Don't know what it means, but five short blasts from the hoRN must be a warning of some kind?
It is not possible to "wake up" in a dream. When one awakens from a dream, one is no longer asleep, and no longer dreaming. Some individuals are able to become aware that one is dreaming while still in the process of dreaming, which is called "lucid dreaming."