Question:

VERY Strange dream, what could it mean?

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So heres how the dream began.

We (me, my brother and my sister) where in a carnival and there was a ride that involved u being seateed in a room while they put a giant dragon outside this room and ur suppose to stay for a period of time (i know wtf). In the dream I didnt want to do this in the room at the carnival, but at my room in my house. I sat in my house with my siblings and nothing happened, so we thought there was no dragon coming, but soon a little baby dragon comes, and we said to our selves that we are safe because baby dragons cannot fly, but about 20 even smaller dragons began CLIMBIING the outside of my house and reached the upstairs. We were all terrifred, but the dragon turned out to be nice in the end and all the anxiety was over.

Seriously, could this dream represent something i maybe feeling, or is simply some bad egg fu yung.

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  1. The ride is the trip of life.  The carnival is life on earth.  The dragon is Satan, holding you in the room (life on earth -- the classroom of life), even though you don't want to be here, and you'd rather be immortal in a beautiful body and live forever, in a fantasyland of RPG-like adventures of might and magic -- an eternal fantasy.  Baby Satan arrives, and people feel the anxiety...but he's a good guy in the end, and people will see that once he soothes their anxieties.

    So that's what you're feeling when you wake up.  Your own greater self is trying to wake you up to your own immortality.


  2. The fact that you and your siblings comforted one another in this dream is very touching.  My guess would be that the giant dragon represents a problem -- or at least something that you expect will be a problem.  In order to deal with the anxiety surrounding this problem, you ask to be placed in your bedroom.  Once home, you can rely on the security of your home base and the comfort of your family to help you through your nervous feelings.  

    This does not make the problem go away, but it does allow the problem to be broken up into several smaller, more manageable pieces.  Fighting the anxiety still seems like a daunting task, but in the end you discover that you're capable of overcoming what you imagined to be an overwhelming monster.  You come out of this challenge with a new sense of strength for having done this.

    My advice: continue to rely on your family for support as you encounter new and frightening challenges in your life.  And trust that you have what it takes to be stronger in the end.    

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