I have a very old dream diary which I dusted off to include this dream since it seems appropriate now that the 2012 Olympics are among us.
I dreamt that I was above, in the sky somewhere looking down as a spectator; because I never actually saw myself in the dream. There were a great many people in the dream, thousands; all running away. They were running down the middle of a wide street or highway which was not congested with cars, rather with people in dismay. Some of the maasses were yelling, screaming and wiping their eyes as if something was irritating to them. Others ran with their hands covering up their nose and mouth. I could not make out their features since I must have been so high up but was able to see color and lights. It appeared to be sunny and daytime from my standpoint but the weather conditions down below on the earth where I was witnessing, was a gray cloudy perhaps drizzling with rain day. Yes, there indeed was a gray mist coming through the gray sky which appeared to be spreading out to cover all of those fleeing and actually following them. The people running in my dream were clothed like everyday people; no uniforms or costumes but it was clear they were fleeing away from something perhaps in the air which was disturbing them.
I am not sure if this was a different dream or a continuation of the one above but I also saw lifeless bodies along the sidewalks and on top of the grass as those close to them wept and wailed as their futile attempts to restore life back went undone. The masses continued to run, or perhaps march past those on the side. Yes! This was more of a march now. What meaning could this dream have intended for me? I wrote it in my spiral notebook as soon as I had awakened until today when I feel that this dream must be related to the 2012 Olympic Games.
Perhaps some sort of airborne pathogen injected or embedded into random un-suspecting representatives from each part of the globe participating in the Olympic games in order to bring in these pathogens in to London; to a hand picked location which was once a toxic land but now, of course it is said to be toxic free and washed clean specifically for the building of the Olympic site.
Could it be possible that many spectators as well as managers, trainers and game participants which had to get vaccined before being allowed to travel to the games may be, without any knowledge to them, carriers to London and spread these airborne pathogens to their global neighbors? It certainly is possible considering the location selected for the Olympic Games. It is certainly a possibility that there may indeed be a time released (like seed implant used to treat patients with prostate cancer have) pathogen which may infect hundreds of thousands upon returning to their homeland.
It certainly is something to consider.
CONTRAVERY OVER 2012 OLYMPIC LOGO
Some argue that it appears more like the wrod, Zion rather the numbers 2012.
Guess the extra dot in the middle makes it more like the word Zion.
Activists say they will
continue to lobby the government on boycotting the Olympics
The Bhopal city used to be famous for the sport, and their coach, Khorshid Ali,
played for India's national team in the 1980s - and was on course for Olympic
selection.
But as a new Indian team prepares for the London Olympics, Mr Ali wants them
to boycott the games - in protest at the event's sponsorship by Dow
Chemical.
The US giant has been in the frame of campaigners ever since it bought the
remnants of the Union Carbide corporation, previously the owner of the pesticide
plant that leaked tonnes of lethal chemicals over Bhopal on the night of 2
December 1984.
Suffocating in his bedroom, Mr Ali remembers fleeing into the street in panic
along with thousands of others.
Unsure which way to go in the darkness, many ran deeper into the toxic cloud.
Harbo Bai (left) and her
husband lost their daughter in the Bhopal disaster
At least 3,000 people are thought to have died in the first 24 hours - and
thousands more from the after-affects, making it the world's worst industrial
disaster.
Tens of thousands of others have been left with lifelong disabilities.
For Khorshid Ali, it meant the end of his Olympic dreams.
"After that, I couldn't play good hockey," he says. "My stamina and fitness
were gone."
Other Bhopal players do not agree with a boycott, and even Mr Ali admits he
is reluctant to take this stand.
And there is virtually no chance of India staying away, especially with its
Olympic hopefuls now doing their final training.
But it is a sign of how toxic the legacy of the Bhopal disaster remains.
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