T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1464.1 | Tie me kangaroo down, boy, tie me kangaroo down... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME---as an Adventurer! | Wed May 08 1991 10:14 | 7 |
| re: .0
Don't know...however, could it have something to do with
the "ties that bind," etc.? Lots of room for symbology here.
Frederick
|
1464.2 | | CSCMA::SCHILLER | | Wed May 08 1991 13:12 | 4 |
|
When you said "knots around their necks" the image that popped into
my mind was a noose.
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1464.3 | Fan mail from some Flounder(er)? | DNEAST::BERLINGER_MA | LIFE IN THE ASTRAL PLANE | Wed May 08 1991 13:33 | 28 |
|
Re. .0
Cathy,
From what I can recall from a boating course I
took, a "Monkeys Fist" knot was tied in the end of a line (nauticle
jargon for *rope*). The size of the knot gave the line some weight.
The line could then be tossed, with some acuracy, to perhaps another
ship. With the line between the two ships things (mesages, mail,
packages, stouter lines......) could be sent back and forth without
the two ships ever touching each other- important when in heavy seas.
I found it signifigant that the "knot necklaces" came from one house
(the neighbor) to another house ( the woman with the children) and that
the children acted strange until the knots removed. Perhaps there was
a request or an invitation of aliance which at first seemed ok but
later felt not ok and so the aliance was broken.
The symbolism in dreams is intensly personal to the dreamer, and
my coments are not ment as anything more than my humble opinion.
Later,
Mark
|
1464.4 | "Knot" limited to witchcraft
| STORIE::KALLIS | Pumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift. | Wed May 08 1991 15:46 | 10 |
| Re .0 (Cathy):
Knots are used in a variety of traditions, generally as "binding."
They're often used in love spwells, though also in curses.
A "monkey's fist" is a knot often used by sailors (of yore) as a solid
rope ending. I haven't heard anything specific in the way of one being either
good or bad luck.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1464.5 | Follow-up | STORIE::KALLIS | Pumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift. | Thu May 09 1991 16:36 | 10 |
| Not trusting entirely to memory, I did a bit of checking last night.
There is a "love spell" that uses knots to "bind" the object of one's desire
to the person casting the spell. It was supposed to have been popular with
a certain grade of spellcasters in Medieval times. Its structure and symbolism
are rather black, and it isn't something I'd be philosophically in consonamce
with. However, its form is general enough so it could be modified for other
uses. A variant of it might be used in other classes of curse.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1464.7 | ...not for naught... | GIAMEM::ROSE | | Fri May 10 1991 07:28 | 46 |
| re: .0
Cathy, here's a possible interpretation of the dream, based
on the information given:
You're thinking about relocating. The movie represents your
thoughts and feelings about the move and its consequences...
You once had a decent relationship with your husband, but now
he's changed. It's as though the former man is dead. So you
shun him - you take your children and move to the coast or ocean
[o shun]. You leave your financial security, as represented by
the Golden Gate city, behind. You settle for Mendocino [men dough
seen no], a place where you hope to be free of him.
Physical separation is easy; psychological separation isn't. There's
a seemingly odd part of you that can't get him out of your mind.
You're still close to him. You're still attached. You're like a
"her" with a "b". And everywhere you turn, there he is, dominating
you, surrounding you...herb, herb, herb, Herb. [A "b" is just a
displaced "p"; and the "p" is a pointer to "Herb" in the sense of
"Pa rsley/father/husband." The "Pa" theme is reinforced later in
the monkey's fist or "pa w".]
One day you realize you have to make a decision regarding the chil-
dren. Here they are, roped into a situation in which they're strand-
ed without a father, and living with a mother who, financially speak-
ing, can't make ends meet. You're at the end of your rope. You must
retie the knot; you must return the children to a loveless [neck less],
knot-filled [not-filled/unfulfilled] marriage. But it's for their own
good! They must never again be separated from their father, the mon-
key's "paw".
So you rejoin your husband, but the children can't readjust. They've
had a taste of freedom now, and they're growing like weeds. They need
to continue to grow in a less restrictive environment. Also, your sep-
aration has given you new insight into yourself. You're now ready to
handle things differently. You end the marriage. You free your chil-
dren. You...
wake up.
Virginia
|
1464.8 | thought provoking replies | WR1FOR::BREAZEACA | | Fri Jun 07 1991 12:22 | 10 |
| Hi -
Sorry for such a long time between replies, but I have been on vacation
for three weeks and came back to a stack of stuff. Thanks for all your
thoughts on my dream! .7 is really wild, Virginia! We are really
moving - just sold the house this week, but we are all moving
*together* - no one is getting left behind!
Cathy
|
1464.9 | | GIAMEM::ROSE | | Sat Jun 08 1991 07:08 | 12 |
|
re: .8
Cathy,
Glad to have you back! And best of luck in your new
home.
Virginia
p.s. Have you met your new neighbors yet? {:)*
|