
I woke up in a sweat, was it a dream, did I just see Bree, and 7 others on their knees bound, dressed in white clothe robes? I am clearly sure it was Bree, she looked right into my eyes, helpless, as if she was looking right through me to....ohmy I turned around and I was facing a group of three priest, standing in a room made to look like the temple of Denderah. I looked up, and yes, there it was the denderah zodiac on the ceiling.
Am I, a spirit here, or is this real, I am being shown this for some reason, if so. I walk, almost floating towards the back of the room, there are others here, but only the eight are dressed in white, and only the eight are bound.
What is that I hear, a female voice, booming from the entrance, I have goose bumps on my arms. The priest raise their arms with staffs in them and slam them on the floor all in succession, someone comes forward and gets the eight on their feet.
The sound of footsteps come closer, I can see the real bright shinning golden robe, the face, who is that, I have seen her before, where?
As she walked towards the priest, she turned her head and looked at me, no way! It can't be her, she is with child I noticed. I shook my head left and right, as if to say to her, no damn way, not you.
I remember something I read in the bible, "a Woman with a Crown of 12 Stars and was," with child? Can't remember it all, but she was dressed in a strangely bright robe, with a crown of 12 stars, and on the floor, where she stood, was painted a "Red" Moon? Is this real, I sure hope it is a dream, but Bree is there, standing now, still bound. As I step towards her, I hear a priest say:
"The Persecuted Woman, Two Wings of a Great Eagle, and
Three and One Half." The sound is slowly getting lower and lower, I wake up.

I search "Denderah" again, I have searched this many times, but nothing before about the "Circle of eight, or maybe search the woman, a female Thoth?"
Wait what is this?
"On the Denderah Zodiac we see eight captives in
the circle are bound on their knees but they are not
headless.
Hieroglyphs of Denderah Zodiac for Decan 0 or
37 seen under Piscis Austrinus and on top of the
circle begin with the fish sign, Egypt. Kha,
then the mouth sign, Egypt. r, and next has the lower arm sign, Egypt. a, then either the quail chick, Egypt. w, ou,
or the duck sign, Egypt. s3, sa, and ends with a star.
This reads as [Kha-r-a-ou] or [Kha-r-a-sa].
The eight captives inside the large disk represent
eight (actually 9 but traditionally seen as being

that could form the left-hand half of Capricornus.
These figures do stand for the glyphic symbol of
enemies or wickedness. These are Decan stars and
to one source the glyphs say Sa-r-a or a-r-sa, the
figure to the right is also named sa-r-a (possible an
indicator of epithet, title or a piece of time).
If comparing to the Grand Temple Decan 37, the
nine headless captives as seen below on the lower
section of ESNE Plate 87, is located between
Aquarius and Capricornus.
The eight figures are thus between the end of one
cycle and the beginning of another. The plausible
explanation is we have 8 men bound in a wheel of fate,
fortune, destiny, or the zodiac.
In "The Dawn of Astronomy" a study of the
temple-worship and mythology of the Ancient
Egyptians by J. Norman Lockyer, New York, The
McMillian Company 1897, as seen on page 276.
<picture?>
This represents the Month-Table at the Ramesseum,
with the hieroglyphic names and image of the Nerteru
for each Egyptian month. It should also be noted
that each of the neteru seem to be facing each other
in pairs of six, which may have been done for
asthetics, instead of the usual facing one direction
to determine the read on the hieroglyphs. I found it
interesting that it starts from left to right
beginning with Capricornus and ending with Aquarius.
Another interesting point is the gap or spaced area
centered between month 1 and 12, which turns out to
be the area that represents the epo gomena, is left
blank with no hieroglyphs or images. This area
should be exactly opposite of Denderah Decan 0 or
37, the circle of eight bound."
by Jim A. Cornwell, Copyright © July 20, 2002, all
rights reserved
Etymology: Middle English ceremonie, from Middle French ceremonie, from Latin caerimonia
1 : a formal act or series of acts prescribed by ritual, protocol, or convention.
What a dream indeed.

Mulapin