Saturday, 4 December 2021

Fire and Breath

Dreams have been few due to insomnia from the med withdrawal from the crap I was injected with.
Locks, in my body working threw them.

Lots of pain too.....  my joints are fucked.
hips and knees.

Bit better after the moon fire, I burnt lots of stuff for the new moon.
Changed the alter to as realise as usual I asked for this
🙄 😏

Woke at 333, I knew I'd had a dream but my recalls shit as I'm not onboarding any aspects for recall.
I knew it was to do with inhale 
That word also dragon breath

'Puff the magic dragon'

The ME's we made for navigation,  they help us work out cores corrections.
 

course (n.) 
c. 1300, "onward movement, motion forward, a running in a prescribed direction 
or over a prescribed distance; path or distance prescribed for a race, a race- 
course" from Old French cors "course; run, running; flow of a river" (12c.), from 
Latin cursus "a running; a journey; direction, track navigated by a ship; flow of a 
stream;" from curs- past participle stem of currere "to run" (from PIE root *kers- "to run"). 
Also from c. 1300 as "order, sequence;" meanings 'habitual or ordinary procedure" (as in 
course ofnature) and 'Way of life, personal behavior or conduct" are from early 14c. 
Most of the extended senses developed 14c. from notion of "line in which something moves" 
(as in hold one 's course) or "stage through which something must pass in its progress." 
Thus, via the meaning "series or succession in a specified or systematized order" (mid-14c.) 
comes the senses of "succession of prescribed acts intended to bring about a particular result" 
(c. 1600, as in course oftreatment) and the academic meaning "planned series of study" (c. 
1600; in French from 14c.), also "that part of a meal which is served at once and separately/' 
(late 14c.)• 
Meaning "the flow of a stream of water" is from mid-14c.; that of "channel in which water 
flows" is from 1660s. Courses was used for the flow of bodily fluids and 'humors' from late 
14c.; specifically of menstrual flux from 1560s. 
Adverbial phrase of course 'by consequence, in regular or natural order" is attested from 
1540s, literally "ofthe ordinary course;" earlier in the same sense was bi cours (c. 1300). 
Matter of course "something to be expected" is by 1739. 
Related entries & more

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corse (n.) 
late 13c_, "a dead body;" c. 1300, "a living body;" c. 1400, "the main part ofanything," from 
Old French cors, from Latin corpus "'body" (from PIE root *kwrep- "body•: form, 
appearance"). Archaic from 16c_; compare corpse. 
Related entries & mon

 

inhalation (n.) 
1620s, "a breathing in: " noun of action from past participle stem ofLatin inhalare "breathe upon" 
(used here as if it meant "to breathe in"): from in- "on_ upon" (from PIE root "in") + halare 
"breathe. "


 

 

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