Quotes in a dream

A great way to begin following your dreams is to read some inspirational quotes. Quotes have a special way of motivating you to do the necessary work needed to having your dreams come true. QUOTES ABOUT DREAMS & GOALS. Don’t call it a dream. Goals may give focus, but dreams give power. You don’t manifest dreams without taking chances. – Stephen Richards. All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them.

Great quotes can be inspirational and motivational. You can use quotes to help guide your decisions in life, work and love. Here are 50 of the best inspirational quotes to motivate you.

Goal
  1. I was just wondering if everyone would be willing to share what they feel are the most iconic quotes from the Dream SMP server. I'm hoping for quotes that are actually related to the SMP and not just quotes that are being said while on the Dream SMP but are actually about something else (Ex: Quackity and Jschlatt speaking Spanish).
  2. Self-awareness quotes. The winner of the hoop race will be the first to realize her dream, not society's dream, her own personal dream.

No matter how it is presented to you, if you have dreamt of a quote then it denotes to you being emotionally affected by it.

Quotes can be projected in many forms. You might be reading it on a piece of paper, hearing somebody else speak it, or even saying the quote yourself. Trying to read letters and numbers in our dreams can be very peculiar. The symbols are sometimes upside down, misshapen or blurred out, thus making it difficult for our brains to process it (especially as dreams are tricky enough to process on their own accord).

Quotes DreamQuotes

In this dream, you may have been

  • Reading a quote.
  • Saying a quote.
  • Listening to somebody else say a quote.
  • Citing the Bible.
  • Reading an exam question.

Positive changes are afoot if

  • You are able to understand your personal connection to the text.

Often when dreaming of quotes they will appear misshapen. This should not deter you from trying to recognize the origin of that quote, as it is a great start in order to help you decipher more about what your dream really meant. If you are struggling to remember, then try and think back to the day before as your quote might have been something you'd recently encountered in your actual life.

Quotes

Generally, you are more likely to remember a quote if it strongly hits an emotion within us. This is transferred into our dream because we find some relevance to it within our own lives, and our subconscious is now trying to show us that relevance. Dreaming of a quote does not denote to any one general interpretation, it is dependent on how it reflects onto the individual.

Sounds from the outside world can sometimes slip into our dreams. If you have fallen asleep watching a film, or while there is music playing nearby, then you might hear words and lines that seem familiar. This does not mean your brain is trying to tell you something. The dream is purely creating visuals which your mind has manipulated from the audio.

It is common for people to dream of quotes from a religious passage if they practice religion themselves. Mainly in Christianity and Islam dreams are seen as messages from God. The visions are viewed as signs meant to help guide your next steps in life or to answer your prayers.

The way you can find these dreams advantageous is if you can decipher their meaning and relevance to you as a person. If your quote was from something you consider to be old fashioned or dated, perhaps you are feeling stuck and unable to grow anymore in the position you are in. If your quote is a lyric in a song to which you find distasteful, maybe you are struggling with that aspect of yourself, and are viewing yourself more negatively then you should be.

Feelings that you may have encountered during a dream of quotes

Happiness. Joy. Freedom. Oppression. Sadness. Difficulty. Victory. Comfort. Sadness.

Quotes Dream

BENEATHA (Dropping to her knees)Well – I do – all right? – thank everybody! And forgive me for ever wanting to be anything at all! (Pursuing him on her knees across the floor) FORGIVE ME, FORGIVE ME, FORGIVE ME! (Act I, scene i)

Beneatha’s desire to use their father’s life insurance after his death to go to medical school annoys her brother Walter. Walter thinks that studying medicine isn’t a womanly profession, and he worries that the tuition cost is too much of a cut of the check. Beneatha, who is angry, sarcastically asks her brother to forgive her for having a dream. Like all of the characters in the play, Beneatha has a dream that is just out of reach.

MAMA…Big Walter used to say, he’d get right wet in the eyes sometimes, lean his head back with the water standing in his eyes and say, “Seem like God didn’t see fit to give the black man nothing but dreams – but He did give us children to make them dreams seem worth while. (Act I, scene i)

Beneatha wants to go to medical school, her brother Walter wants to invest in a liquor store, and all Mama wants is a better life for her children. Mama’s dream is focused not on herself but on her family and their prospects for a brighter future. Mama references her husband Big Walter’s poignant statement to make a point that for black parents, their dreams always seem deferred towards their children. Through their children, Big Walter says, a black man’s dreams are kept alive.

Quotes Dream Believe

RUTHHoney…life don’t have to be like this. I mean sometimes people can do things so that things are better…You remember how we used to talk when Travis was born…about the way we were going to live…the kind of house… (She is stroking his head) Well, it’s all starting to slip away from us… (Act II, scene i)

Ruth encourages her husband Walter to remember the time when their baby was born, the hopeful way they talked about the future and all the plans they made together. Ruth knows they are inching farther away from their dreams. Although weary with the constant daily struggle of making ends meet and keeping her marriage alive, Ruth has become resilient. In this scene, Ruth exemplifies how all of the characters have to work constantly to overcome their depression and feelings of hopelessness.

Quotes Dreaming

WALTER…Just tell me where you want to go to school and you’ll go. Just tell me, what it is you want to be – and you’ll be it….Whatever you want to be – Yessir! (He holds his arms open for TRAVIS) You just name it, son… (TRAVIS leaps into them) and I hand you the world! (Act II, scene ii)

After Mama finally releases some of the insurance money to Walter, Walter is re-energized and immediately begins asking his son Travis how he can help him accomplish his dreams. Exemplifying his father’s belief that a black man’s dreams are always deferred to his children, Walter tries to act like the head of the family and help his son. Walter’s optimism and desire to “hand [his son] the world” showcases his love for and dedication to his son, which underscores a major theme that runs through the play: Dreams are ultimately accomplished through family.

BENEATHAI know that’s what you think. Because you are still where I left off. You with all your talk and dreams about Africa! You still think you can patch up the world. Cure the Great Sore of Colonialism--(Loftily, mocking it) with the Penicillin of Independence--! (Act III, scene i)

Beneatha’s dream to be a doctor slowly fades over the course of the play, and by Act III she is overcome with misery and nearly gives the dream up completely. As Beneatha is at her lowest point, Asagai tries to reinvigorate her interest in returning to Africa, saying that Beneatha is too attached to the insurance money and Africa is where she can contribute to true reform. Beneatha mocks Asagai’s dream of reform, comparing it to a medicine that might make things feel better, but really won’t cure anything. Beneatha’s comments underscore how the idealism in the characters’ dreams is always challenged by pragmatism.