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Hopi

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Hopi

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

Hopi, asteroid 2,938 (the 2,938th asteroid to be discovered, on June 14, 1980), is approximately 25.4 kilometers in diameter and has an orbital period of 5.6 years. Hopi was named after the Hopi tribe of North American Indians. Jacob Schwartz gives the astrological significance of this asteroid as “territorial disputes, minority experiences, Native Americans.” According to Martha Lang-Wescott, Hopi represents the awareness of oppression and prejudice. This asteroid also represents the principle of “ambush,” including psychological ambush. This asteroid’s key words are “prejudice” and “ambush.”

Sources:

Lang-Wescott, Martha. Asteroids-Mechanics: Ephemerides II. Conway, MA: Treehouse Mountain, 1990.
Lang-Wescott. Mechanics of the Future: Asteroids. Rev. ed. Conway, MA: Treehouse Mountain, 1991.
Schwartz, Jacob. Asteroid Name Encyclopedia. St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn Publications, 1995.
The Astrology Book, Second Edition © 2003 Visible Ink Press®. All rights reserved.

Hopi

(dreams)

The Hopi, who live in the southwestern desert plateau of the United States, regard dreams as particularly important. Hopi society conveys much of its religious and recreational experience through a rich imagery derived from dramatic rituals that are frequently translated into dreams. These images are consistently presented to individuals throughout their lifetimes.

It is believed the soul of each person, corresponding to the Spirit of the Breath (hikwsi), can resist what the Hopi call the Mighty Something (himu), which is a composite concept of divinity. When the hikwsi resists the himu, the Hopi become confused. The Hopi then look for familiar anchors in their inner world, and this is expressed in dreams.

Dreams are viewed as an attempt by the self to make a statement about the individual’s present situation, as well as the extent of the person’s cultural integration. They are considered a type of thought-action in which hikwsi explores both the inner and the outer world through images provided by Hopi religion. Good dreams have to be held in the heart and can be told only after they have been fulfilled, whereas bad dreams—in that they contain bad thoughts—must be eliminated through the practice of reporting and discussing them, and by working out problems in them through confession of questionable behavior.

The Hopi believe that hikwsi is not confined within the mortal individual, but can be projected through thought, prayer, and dreams, and can interact with distant people and things. Also, the conceptual universe of the Hopi is not delimited by the notions of time and space, which make dreams an experience apart from reality.

Hopi dreams are characterized by a number of personally invented and culturally defined symbols that are applicable to personal situations at the time of the dream. For instance, when Palulukon, the Water Serpent, appears in a dream, it can represent both a possible punishing and a possible supportive agent, depending on whether the dream is charged with quiet or fear. The state of being at the time of the dream can determine the specific use of cultural or personal symbols, as well as the rules used to deal with and interpret the dream.

The Dream Encyclopedia, Second Edition © 2009 Visible Ink Press®. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Kuo bankroto tikimybes reikUme yra arciau 1, tuo imone yra labiau nemoki ir jai gali gresti bankrotas, o kuo tikimybe yra arciau 0, imone moki ir sekmingai veikianti.
"Siek tiek idomesnes, jei moki angliskai, bet jei vaikas nemoka kalbos, tai jam bus nuobodu, gali visiskai prarasti motyvacija."
Michel/Miguel s'apparente toutefois aussi a Moki, le dandy dans Bleu Blanc Rouge; le nom de ce personnage est une deformation de "mikiliste"; celui-ci a besoin, pour assumer son existence, d'une double appartenance, le Congo et la France, ainsi qu'une figuration: la sape, qui est la facon de s'habiller; la casquette en cuir est un heritage de cette periode.9 Face au Michel qui reste, il y a le Michel qui part.
She leaves five grandchildren, Ripp Charters and his wife Phyllis of Gardner, Ross Charters and his wife Moki Brown of Brooklyn, NY, Amy Barker and her husband Time of Naples, FL Kendal Blackford of Naples, FL, and Henry Blackford and his wife Rae of Naples, FL, six great-grandchildren; Matthew and Ruth-Ann Barker, Kiley Charters, Mika Charters, Annabel and Adair Blackford, and several nephews and nieces.Ginny was predeceased by her husband W.
Associated Press reporter Edwin Kindzeka Moki contributed to this report from Yaounde, Cameroon.
Miami, FL, November 06, 2014 --(PR.com)-- Outform (www.outform.com) has partnered with Moki Mobility to release its Moki Pulse Mobile Device Management (MDM) integrated software solution which enables remote access and control of the iDISPLAY tablets and media players at any location via a standard web browser.
(48) "Cameroun: Un coursier du Boko Haram aux arrets a Waza," camer.be, June 19, 2014; Moki Edwin Kindzeka, "Cameroon's Military Seizes War Weapons," VOA, June 18, 2014.
163 to the twisty gravel Moki Dugway on State 261 and the Muley Point overlook.
Varnika also told the name of other two friends of the victim, "One of the friends of Saloni belongs to Bihar named Narendra Sharma and the third one named Kazi Moki."
Step dad Don, who died in 1995, was a kind of poster boy for modern music's outer limits; her Swedish mother, Moki, earned her rep as a painter and textile artist.
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