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|    alt.dreams    |    The best ones are of the wet variety    |    13,884 messages    |
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|    Message 13,149 of 13,884    |
|    sandydollar2015@gmail.com to dick...@gmail.com    |
|    Re: A Lot of Bull Clip    |
|    26 Aug 22 06:37:34    |
      On Wednesday, August 24, 2022 at 7:37:30 PM UTC-6, dick...@gmail.com wrote:       > On Sunday, August 21, 2022 at 9:26:30 AM UTC-5, sandy$ wrote:        > > The scene opens when I find myself outside a pasture of of 5 bulls. I       can't believe my eyes. One of the bulls is a brahman and two tone gray in       coloring and rest are solid rust colored. The horns have all been sawed off.       Bulls are really expensive to        own. Like [$10,000.00] and more per bull. Doesn't the owner know not to put       them together because they fight especially around females. One of the bulls       sights something way out in the pasture and they all take off after it. I wake       up at that moment.        > > Sandy$        >        > Hey Sandy... I edited whatever you wrote as a price per bull because what       was written made little sense to me. Perhaps it was a misunderstanding, but if       you'd care to acknowledge the suggested edit, or correct me, feel free. I have       no idea what modern        day bulls go for, but back when my sister's father-in-law raised prize       (polled) Herefords, I *think* they were around $10K apiece.        >        > Funny (but TRUE) anecdote: when my (eldest) sister married her man, the       ceremony was held in the "back yard" of his parents' home (which beyond the       relatively short back yard was a beautiful white rail fence, beyond which was       a field around the main        barn.)        > So while the preacher was performing the ceremony, one of the prize bulls       decided to do what bulls do best with the cows in the field, and all this took       place just a short distance behind the groom's side of the center focus of the       ceremony. Whether        the father-in-law put those two up to it for "good luck" or not is another       question. Still, hers is the ONLY "first marriage" out of us 5 siblings to       have actually held intact with both spouses still alive. (My middle sister's       husband passed some time        ago. My older brother is on his 3rd wife, and my youngest sister died during       her second marriage. I've been lawfully divorced twice, yet technically never       married / still single! Funny story... for another time....)        >        > It is possible that the bulls each represent potential "suitors" in your       life. One (the Brahman) is the "main guy" in whatever relationship(s) you may       have had, while the 4 monotone guys were more like "beta males" to the "alpha       male."        >        > Whatever they all took off after, it was likely bovine related in some way.       Bulls have been linked to (false or Egyptian) "God" images for millennia. The       cow is thus related to the female goddess iconography.        >        > Still, I'm more interested in what a "Brahman" bull means to *you,* such as       "how did you recognize it as a Brahman bull?"       ***********************************       Hello Dick,        I don't think you should change what some one else posts. Thinking       the $100,000 for a rodeo bull is correct because of the breeding. As far as       these bulls being symbols of my previous suitor's as I was married 4 times and       one marriage to        the same guy twice which was a big mistake.        All my husbands were good looking and all blondes with blue eyes. The Brahan       bull could represent a man I was engaged to but had commitment problems, so       after three postponements, I walked away.         Sandy$              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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