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(@kateinpdx)
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Posted by: @anya

https://www.excursionssicily.com/trinacria-symbol-of-sicily/

Does this fit?

Thank you for finding that. The link with Medussa and independence is really interesting. I think that partly fits.  In the dream the woman making this shape was distorted and creepy though - like something from a scary movie. But honestly, it could be all the positive symbolism being corrupted, as @joy mentioned. I'm glad to see all the positive meanings of this symbol!

It is interesting how these symbols that we have no conscious knowledge of can show up in our dreams though, isn't it? I think all these things fit and in time maybe we'll understand more why. 



   
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 Joy
(@joy)
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@kateinpdx yes this is very interesting how the unconscious clearly knows about things and issues and e.g. meaning of symbols that are important or processes that are just happening in the collective which the everyday conscious mind would simply not know - yet the unconscious does know all that and even more....



   
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(@osyn1)
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@joy I definitely got the feeling of positive symbolism being warped. Like, it felt like the Mother was grieving when I read about the dream



   
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 Joy
(@joy)
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@osyn1 yes, .... possibly mourning the fact that the attempt was made to turn the symbol for female, wise energies into a symbol for male, toxic energies?



   
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(@jeanne-mayell)
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@kateinpdx Incredibly fascinating dream.  And equally fascinating interpretations from @joy, @anya, and @osyn1.

Evokes hope that women will overcome the plans that Project 25 has for them.

Evokes my belief that our current U.S. situation is part of a wheel or cycle, as in the Celtic interpretation of the triskelion. That the shift to this dark government is part of a cycle, and so this cycle will continue turning. We are currently still in the midst of a dark phase of that wheel, but it too will end and we will turn toward the light, ever toward the light.

It also fits with @Raincloud's recent dream that reminds me that rogue figures in power are  mentally unwell people, and their darkness will not last. 

The "bowl of sorrows" part of the dream, then turning into a cookie, is also profound, and ancient. It also reminds me that the rogue leaders of the world are also trying to deal with their own sorrows, and the cookie is how we find something palatable, and a gift from those sorrows. 

 



   
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(@kateinpdx)
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Thank you Jeanne, that is a beautiful interpretation and gave me goosebumps.

I look forward to looking back on these times. May we all find strengths and gifts as we navigate them. 



   
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 Baba
(@baba)
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@kateinpdx Your dreams definitely resonate with me as profound and important to pay attention to! Thank you for sharing them. 

I had an early morning vision just as I was waking up today: 

I see Marco Rubio and he looks aged and unhealthy. I hear him say, “I’m in charge!” No idea what this means.



   
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 Joy
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@jeanne-mayell This interpretation is simply stunning in the very best way, so thank you very warmly. Your words make me overall ghoosbumps and I need to think and feel over it a longer time to be able to reply in words. ❤️ 🌹



   
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 Joy
(@joy)
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@kateinpdx @anya @osyn1 @jeanne-mayell 

 
I would love to share with you some more details that I know about the original meaning of the ancient triskele. I think it i's so beautiful! Its three individual legs do not just stand for locomotion – they represent a "path" where the female elemental force of the mother goddess can express itself over a human lifetime and make sure everyone is thriving. These three "paths or forms of expression" are:
  • The young woman as the youthful beauty
  • The adult lady as the mother.
  • The mature woman as the wise guardian who has been through life and has gained a lot of valuable experience.
The young woman carries the feminine elemental force within her, which has the power to attract and focus the energies of a young man. The young men are always looking to explore and conquer the world. Yet a young woman can focus the male energies into a loving bonding and the wish to start a family. The mother's feminine elemental force nourishes the children on all levels and allows them to thrive. At the same time, the mother's feminine elemental force lovingly transforms the young man into the father, the defender and the provider of the family. This way, they both can become further the wise elders. The feminine elemental force of wise older women is there to guide the well-being of society as a whole. When women in a society embrace some of these three expressions of the feminine elemental force or mother goddess, it ensures the well-being and prosperity of a people, and the energy of the men also shifts towards making the society a better place.
 
But at the heart of each form of the three feminine expression is the one primal force of femininity, which  can take these three different forms over a human lifetime to support a people flourish. The ancient triskele is a symbol that represents exactly this. It has therefore one single face in the center, which represent the feminine primal force or the mother goddess, surrounded by three legs, which represent the three paths and forms of feminine expression.


   
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 Joy
(@joy)
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@jeanne-mayell

The Bowl of Sorrows can be a symbol of really hard times of intense suffering, and even of imminent violent death. Also Jesus Christ talked about the Bowl of Sorrows shortly before His sufferings.

Your heartwarming words, dear Jeanne, remind me a bit of the admirable attitude of Dietrich Bonhoeffer and his famous poem. Bonhoeffer was a christian pastor and anti-Nazi dissident in Germany, famous for offering brave resistance to the dictatorship in many ways, including openly and vocally opposing the Nazi euthanasia program. For this, he was executed by the Nazis in 1945. Heartbreakingly this was only a very few days before WWII was over.
 
In the death row, Bonhoeffer wrote a heartfelt and comforting poem to his fiancée, titled "Wonderfully Protected by Good Powers." This poem has become enourmously famous here in Germany. In this poem, Bonhoeffer talks about a wonderful, invisible world he inhabits, and he's totally sure it's real. These are the "good powers" that surround him, even as his path leads him through suffering with the heavy burden of evil days and the bitter Bowl of Sorrows meaning that even violent death is approaching him. Evil is not ignored by Bonhoeffer but it's not in dualistic opposition to the good powers either. The power of evil is limited in time, but the good powers are not. The Bowl of Sorrows is overcome inwardly in the anticipated joy in the good and a certainty that connects him forever with his fiancée: "We know that God's light shines for us in the night."
 


   
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