View Full Version : When I was a child I dreamed of Martial Law so many times
shadowstalker
31st May 2020, 15:53
When I was a child I dreamed so many times of Marshal Law I would wake up crying. My gifts have been with me since childhood, but I had hoped beyond hope that this would have never come to pass. Being psychic is not always fun or easy. For all you psychics out their seeing the future come to pass in this way along with C19 (zombies) I weep with you, and share your pain, spiritually and emotionally.
Tyy1907
31st May 2020, 18:33
:heart:
When I was a child I dreamed so many times of Marshal Law I would wake up crying. My gifts have been with me since childhood, but I had hoped beyond hope that this would have never come to pass. Being psychic is not always fun or easy. For all you psychics out their seeing the future come to pass in this way along with C19 (zombies) I weep with you, and share your pain, spiritually and emotionally.
Theres still things we can do that can prevent this future potential
Asking the Divine to raise up the hearts of the true perpetrators behind all this (whomever they may be). Given your psychic gifts your power of intention can be greatly used :heart:
ExomatrixTV
1st June 2020, 13:06
Which Word Should I Use?
https://writingexplained.org/wp-content/uploads/dreamed-versus-dreamt.pngDreamed and dreamt each form the past tense and past participle of the verb dream. They are both correct, but dreamed is more common in both British and American English. The British tend to use dreamt more often than the Americans, but still not as much as dreamed.
Additionally, dreamed is probably considered more refined than dreamt.
For example,
As a child, I dreamed of being a millionaire.
This seems more refined than,
As a child, I dreamt of being a millionaire.
Since dreamed is the more common variant, it is probably the better choice in formal writing scenarios. Here’s a helpful trick to remember dreamt vs. dreamed.
Dreamed rhymes with esteemed, which is an easy way to remember to use it in formal settings.
Summary
Is it dreamt or dreamed? Dreamed and dreamt are two forms of the same word, which is the past tense and past participle of the verb dream.
They are interchangeable. Both are correct, but dreamed is more common in all English-speaking regions, and is therefore a practical choice for professional or educational writing.
Since dreamed rhymes with esteemed, it should be easy to remember that dreamed is better in these esteemed types of writing.
In summary,
Both dreamed and dreamt are acceptable.
Dreamed is considered slightly more refined.
Dreamed is also used more four times more frequently than dreamt.
Ernie Nemeth
1st June 2020, 15:44
I dreamed you dreamt this whole thing up.
Agape
2nd June 2020, 02:43
Dreamt vs dreamed ( my preferred application path :) )
When I was between 5 and 6 or so, I dreamed number of times of nuclear war. Could be 3 or 4 times really and the rest were “after shocks”. Some of them were so intense that me too I woke up crying and ran to mum.
Of course they were not real. It was the end of 70s and the PTB of Cold War were threatening each other nukes.
I was not a fearful kid or suffering from nightmares so these dreams themselves scared me because it’s in the same age one starts to explore the truth behind everything and I could “see” many things the adults could not.
Interestingly, there were never any armies or soldiers in those “war dreams”, there was just widespread collapse of buildings, destruction from out of nowhere and we were trying to run to safety.
..
On the other hand, I dreamt of exploring the planet and its life. Tropical jungles and deserts and mountains and remote islands, I dreamt of discovering new plants and medicines and of meeting animals and all the various tribes and kinds of people that exist elsewhere.
So when I say “I dreamt of ..” it means a conscious activity to me.
“Is that all we see or seem but a dream within a dream?” ( E.A.Poe)
🦢
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