O Goncho, on the other hand, is a pure white dragon that appears every 50 years, morphing into a golden bird. It is a harbinger of famine and represents lack.
An older dream in which I am walking down an alley. Stopping near an area of dumpsters and telephone poles, I look up and there is a white (albino) dragon caught in electrical wires suspended mid-air. It is raining and the dragon, larger than life (it was actually white with some minor pink tones) and rather uncomfortable-looking, struggles to get itself loose. I want to try to help but there is not much I can do and lightning appears to be an impending risk. In Japanese culture, most dragons are water deities associates with rainfall and bodies of water. According to Wikipedia, "Mizuchi 蛟 or 虯 was a river dragon and water deity. The Nihongi records legendary Emperor Nintoku offering human sacrifices to mizuchi angered by his river engineering projects" and Watatsumi 海神 "sea god" or Ryūjin 龍神 "dragon god" "was the ruler of seas and oceans, and described as a dragon capable of changing into human form. He lived in the undersea Ryūgū-jō 龍宮城 "dragon palace castle", where he kept the magical tide jewels."
O Goncho, on the other hand, is a pure white dragon that appears every 50 years, morphing into a golden bird. It is a harbinger of famine and represents lack.
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AuthorI'm a writer journaling dreams and impressions, sounds and revelations, heard or not heard, but ultimately shared with you, the wider audience. Archives
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