In the beginning of the dream, Satan had invaded Earth, and had given Humanity 24 hours until he had claimed it his domain. Humanity, myself especially, had believed that God would intervene, and would never allow Humanity to perish at the hands of the Devil. Well, 24 hours passed, and nothing happened. When this happened, I felt genuinely depressed that my Lord and Savior hadn't done anything. Then, as a race, we decided it was up to us to defend ourselves. We had created a machine that was to combat Satan. In what way, I have no idea. At first, it was working. Then, he jumped up into space and started to fly past many, many planets. He finally hit the edge of space, which was nothing but a shack and a fence. Beyond that was nothing but pure darkness. Upon reaching that, he turned around, flew back to Earth, and smashed into the machine, destroying it. I don't quite remember what happened after that. However, at some point, Satan had turned into a woman and approached me, asking if I wanted to be her sex slave.
Anyone know what any of it means?
Dream of Satan
- hobotubbie
- Adept
- Posts: 184
- Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2011 1:31 am
Re: Dream of Satan
missclicked troll pit?
Re: Dream of Satan
Crisis of Faith.
Satan is a sham.
Seek out the truth behind the Serpents driven off by Padraigh.
Your Truth lies therein, with your Ancestors...
Satan is a sham.
Seek out the truth behind the Serpents driven off by Padraigh.
Your Truth lies therein, with your Ancestors...
Re: Dream of Satan
Even if this post from Irishman is not an actual dream but more an emanation of fantasy from his subconscious, it is still revealing.
The dream begins with a crisis: consciousness is threatened by an invasion of the shadow side of the personality represented by Satan. There is a hope that the opposite pole, God, would intervene. However, Irishman appears to not have a connection with Higher positive powers. To compensate for this lack, the consciousness constructs a series of 'machines,' which are defense mechanisms. However, these defense mechanisms in his life appear to have failed and his emotional life is under the dark cloud of negativity.
The Seeker was correct: this is a crisis of faith and Irishman would be much happier if he could find and build a connection to more positive Higher powers.
The dream begins with a crisis: consciousness is threatened by an invasion of the shadow side of the personality represented by Satan. There is a hope that the opposite pole, God, would intervene. However, Irishman appears to not have a connection with Higher positive powers. To compensate for this lack, the consciousness constructs a series of 'machines,' which are defense mechanisms. However, these defense mechanisms in his life appear to have failed and his emotional life is under the dark cloud of negativity.
The Seeker was correct: this is a crisis of faith and Irishman would be much happier if he could find and build a connection to more positive Higher powers.