Then after they played their new song, they performed a one-off collaboration song I had written for them
I'm not sure what the song was for, whether it was written for a movie soundtrack or something similar, but it as definitely one of my songs, I could sense it while they were playing it
It sounded awesome with Corey Taylor singing it
It was definitely one of my songs, but it was written very definitively for Corey Taylor's vocals
I was able to remember the structure of the song when I woke up well enough that so that I can actually record it someday in the future, for real
In another dream I was translating Egyptian Hieroglyphs. Almost like I was being tested on what they mean
I have a working knowledge of hieroglyph relation structure, so I was able to recognise this one particular glyph consciously and remember it. Though the form(s) of certain parts of the glyph was slightly different to that we find in Egypt
It had reference to a "book" in this particular glyph and to my knowledge there is no such known hieroglyph depicting a modern book
The relation of the book in this hieroglyph was not in the "open book" state, but half the book (right-hand side) was tipped up, like it was being closed from the back indicating a book given or supplied
The glyph translated to "A book relating to that which is above, given to those which are below". But the glyph was done in such a way that it didn't have any distinction of origin or possessive other than book itself being given
Meaning it could either be written with 4 sets of left-facing open arms, or 6. Depending on the context of how the texts were/are perceived
Whether or not those who read it perceived (believed) it to be truth, or whether they merely appreciated and considered the possibility of truth within it
Though it could very well be used as a (hiero)glyph for the Bible, the way it was given/taught/shown/understood by me, it could be the algorithmic standard for any written text/book viewed by one person, written by another
As imagination qualifies as/to belief when defining the book/text in glyph
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