(This was during the night to Wednesday, 7/4 2010)
I saw a wolf in a cave entrance, laying on his back.
Arms and legs outstreached.
Each paw was tied in chains that went into the mountain.
He was in pain and anger.
Another wolf walked past, near to the first one.
This was a female wolf.
As she trodded by, the male wolf started twisting and turning, as in desperation, trying to get loose.
In this vision, that I saw in first person, a man came up and stood next to me.
I've never seen this man before, but I knew he was a geologist.
He looked at the wolf and said;
"This might very well be the reason why there has been so many earthquakes lately"
I then understood that the wolf was the mighty Fenrir.
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However, there are some inconsistencies in this dream.
The wolf could have been the Fenrir, but the legend says that he was tied
around his neck only with the chain "Gleipnir".
This chain was secured by it being tied on the other side of Midgaard (the Middle Earth).
As the chain snaps; doomsday is upon mankind.
What carries more resemblance with the "chain to each paw" is the grim fate of
Lokí, demigod of malevolence, mischief and cunning ruse.
As a punishment for killing the God of grace and purity; "Balder", he was put in a cave and tied from each arm and leg with the intestines from two
of his sons and with a venomous snake hung above him, dripping its searing poison onto his face.
His wife, "Sygin", holds a cup to collect the droplets from the serpent, but every once in a while she needs to empty it and as she does that, Lokí
will convulse in agony, violently shaking the ground, causing
earthquakes.
Still, I may very well have seen
both Lokí and the Fenrir because
the Fenrir is one of Lokí's offsprings (he had numerous others, all
of them being evil demons or monsters that haunt the old mythological Norse domain.
The other, female wolf, might have been Sygin.
As I woke up, I had an uneasy feeling that the days of Rangarók might very well be upon us...
Read more:
Rangarók
Lokí and
Sigyn
Fenrir
[edit on 9-4-2010 by Raud]