web counter
Brian's Dream Diary - Over 8,000 documented dreams, many of which have already come true :: Brian Ladd specializes in dream analyzation, dream prediction, remote viewing and more with thousands of documeneted dreams that have come true...the largest personal online dream diary in the world. Brian does not claim to be psychic, he insists we all can predict the future using our dreams, and much, much more.

Brians Dreams
Homepage,where dreams really do comee trueMore About Me and my familyRadio ShowInterviewsBrians Cards and
LettersMissing People Dream
ViewingsFound
PeopleEarthquakes DreamsAlerts and Currect
Warning

Dream Discussion Forum TV Archives Dreams via email Dream readings by me for you...and less than $10

Additional posts on this page will be made available via my Facebook Site and my Twitter Page.





As of Friday, September 08, 2006 20:24:52 -0400 this is what we have on this specific dream drawing prediction.  If your able to help provide proof or information on this specific drawing, please click here to send me an email.  Please include the exact date of the dream or the DD number.  And again, thank you for your time, its very much appreciated.

DD3842



See if this dream has come true yet   | Submit information for this dream



Another bird flu dream, and I know I said I wanted to stop posting these dreams in hopes that I would stop having them...however I think this might be important, and hopefully it will be my last one.   This says "breaking news, avian flu 6/20/06 would will know, too late, stop it know, CDC lies, island, Atlantic flyway, NYC 3 weeks, NC 6 weeks" I'm almost certain the X's are where the flu is going to be found.


6.18.2006

I think you may have drawn the Island of Sumatra where the sole survivor of the cluster involving 7 family-members is now being diagnosed with some sort of brain-fever!
Not looking good at all - Thank You for all your warnings on this important matter!
I recently broke 2 toes and see it as a way to be able to prepare myself mentaly (I got lots of time to think now lol) for a flu-pandemic, as I feel people really need to prepare now!
Love and Health,
Mariella

reply

Hi Mariella, how did you break your toes?...and thanks for the links.

Brian

 Life and Death on the Death Railway Through the Jungle of Sumatra

by George Duffy

Whenever an American Fire Department or Police Department is struck by tragedy, as happened in the Massachusetts cities of Worcester and Holyoke this past December 1999 when six firefighters and one police officer were killed while performing their duties, the outpouring of public grief and sympathy is overwhelming. Thousands of their fellow officers, from all over the United States, including bagpipe bands and color guards, travel to pay their last respects and take part in the funerals and memorial services.

On such occasions my thoughts always revert to the last twelve months before the Japanese surrender in World War II. In those days I, and about 5,000 Allied military personnel -- mainly Dutch and English, but including a little over 200 Australians and 15 Americans, were held as prisoners of war by the Japanese. We were engaged in the building of a narrow-gauge railway across the central portion of the island of Sumatra, in what is now known as Indonesia.

The northern terminal of the railway was the city of Pekanbaru (new spelling), therefore the project became known as the Pekanbaru Rail Line. In more recent years, a Dutch author dubbed it "The Death Railway Through the Jungle."

Indeed death was no stranger there. We were overworked, underfed, provided with little medicine, and subjected to constant physical and mental abuse by our Japanese overseers.

A hospital for malaria, dysentery, pellagra, and beri-beri patients existed in name only. It was simply a dilapidated bamboo-framed, thatched roof barracks where the sick were placed to await their eventual death. Once in a while, a man recovered his health and returned to the daily camp routine, but it was not the rule.

In April 1945, I was living and working in the Base Camp which contained this "hospital." Deaths that month (according to my journal) totaled 106; an additional 14 died out in the construction camps along the line. My job, with 29 other officers, was to cut down rubber trees and carry the logs into camp. There, another group sawed and split them for the cookhouse and the locomotives. (That's right: wood-burning boilers!) Rarely did the full complement of 30 report for work. Everyone was afflicted with malaria which reduced our number to about 20 on a given day.

We worked in teams of three - an axe man, and two carriers. Rubber trees grow tall and straight. The wood is fairly soft - and wet. Each of us became quite adept at felling a tree and we even had contests to see who could most accurately predict the line of fall. One man chopped while the other two went in and out of the camp. Burlap bags were used to protect the log carriers' shoulders and also to hide the occasional dried fish, fruit, or vegetables purchased from a passing native vendor. (Such food was available, but the Japanese would not buy it or requisition it, and actually attempted to prevent us from "smuggling" it into camp.)

Therefore, the "wood party" offered an invaluable, though risky, opportunity for its members to create a "black market" inside the camp. We always had a single guard with us. Due to the nature of the work, we were spread through the plantation, so most of the Japs simply spent the day sitting by our camp fire reading the pornographic books they all carried, or snoozing.

The railway workers carried their mid-day meal with them when they left in the morning. We on the "wood party" came into camp at noon for our meager cup of steamed rice and a watery soup made of tree leaves. Before we went to work in the afternoon someone from the "hospital" would tell us how many deaths had occurred in the previous 24 hours. For each deceased, four of us would be detailed to carry the straw-matting wrapped body to the cemetery which was adjacent to the plantation where we chopped down the trees. Out of respect for the dead, we covered our nakedness with a shirt or jacket. (The sole, daily item of wearing apparel was a Japanese-style loin cloth.)

 

Several prisoners labored at the unending task of digging the graves and burying the remains. Most of the time we never knew the identities of the lost souls who we carried over the creek and up the hill. Only if a prisoner had five friends was he accorded a proper burial, generally at the end of the work day.

Such was the case on May 29, 1945, less than three months before V-J Day. Sidney M. Albert, one of the cooks on our ship, the American Leader, had died. In the evening, Stan Gorski, our ship's bosun, a U. S. Marine, an English soldier, and I, were the pall bearers. Another shipmate, Carl Kalloch, carried the shovels and the cross.

All clergy had been left behind on Java when we came to Sumatra, thus the committal service for anyone off my ship became my responsibility. It was brief. The Lord's Prayer. The 23rd Psalm, read from a borrowed Bible. Lower the body. Fill the hole. Erect the wooden cross, and, under the watchful eyes of the Jap sentry, trudge back to the gate and get inside the barbed wire before dark.

 

 

The cause of Albert's death was malnutrition, or as it was called out there, "beri-beri." Lack of protein and vitamins caused kidney malfunction which resulted in fluid retention. A victim would first notice a soft swelling of his hands and feet which eventually progressed to his torso. He ballooned in size to as much as 250 to 300 pounds, losing mobility, and putting a severe strain on his heart. Albert was a load.

My exertion in carrying him to his burial site so sapped me that the next day, according to my journal, I suffered "the worst attack of malaria that I've had yet. I worked for 31 days without a break, most of the time axe work, and when the 'old bug' hit, I went down for the count. The whole packet -- fever, chills, and sweats. I never imagined it could be so bad".

Albert was 49. The average age at death of the 700 who perished on that railway was 37 years and 3 months. Five were 57, one was 58, another 66. They probably had wives and children -- somewhere. Yet most of them when they died had not five friends to mourn for them.

On Sumatra there were no columns of fellow soldiers, sailors, or airmen. There were no color guards. On Sumatra there were no pipers nor drummers. No flowers. No eulogies. Death on Sumatra rarely arrived as a thunderclap. It moved slowly and inexorably through the "hospital." The men who died knew it was coming, and there was nothing to prevent it.

It is a great mystery, isn't it? The 700 unfortunates of Sumatra are just as dead as the 6 Worcester firefighters and the Holyoke police officer. By comparison, though, how fortunate were these latter 7 men to have had their lives celebrated with such pomp and ceremony. How fortunate were their families to witness the out-pouring of pride and devotion and brotherhood exhibited by their men's peers. How fortunate are we all to be living in a civilization that prides itself on such responses.

How fortunate that we won the war!


Postscript: Comparison between death rates of British and Dutch POWs

When I was doing the research for the above article I picked up the thread of a thought that has been in my mind for many years. I have long felt that there were links between death rates, ages and nationalities on that railway job. Not until recently, however, did I bother to do a detailed study. First of all, a look at central Sumatra, the prison camps and their society.

The plan was to create a 138-mile connection between the town of Pekanbaru and an existing rail line which ran to the city of Padang on the Indian Ocean. Pekanbaru is located in the center of the island at latitude 0 degrees, 39 minutes north, thus 39 nautical miles above the equator. It was a small seaport, connected via the Siak River to the Strait of Malacca. Much of the surrounding terrain was swamp, with numerous interlaced waterways, creeks and bayous. It was a terrible area on which to build railbeds, bridges and to lay tracks.

Fifteen miles or so south of the town the ground was more stable, but the mangroves were replaced by a huge, dense, towering jungle, complete with wild tigers and elephants. Compounding the prisoners' problems was the extreme equatorial heat and the rains of the spring monsoon.

From May to September 1944 the Japanese threw into this inhospitable corner of the earth somewhat over 5,000 Allied prisoners who they had captured on Java two and a half years earlier. Of that number almost 4,000 had been in the Royal Dutch Indies' Army and close to 1,000 were British Army, Navy and Air Force personnel. Additionally, 200 Australians and 15 Americans, mostly merchant seamen whose ships had been sunk by a German raider, rounded out the total.

Unfortunately, considerable rancor existed between the various nationalities. The British and the Australians were never friendly, even before the war. That tenor actually went back to the 1700s when Australia was colonized by British emigrant prisoners. The numerically superior Dutch were disliked by both the Brits and the Aussies on the grounds that the Dutch in the East Indies, without a fight, had capitulated to the Japanese. In return, the Dutch pointed to the British surrender of Singapore.

Numerous of the European Dutch spoke English, but there was no more than a handful of English or Australian officers -- never mind the soldiers -- who knew any Dutch. This spilled over into frequent confrontations and even brawls. Meanwhile, everyone contracted malaria; many suffered with dysentery; and tropical ulcers -- a gangrenous condition -- disabled others. The fact that the food ration was barely life-sustaining overshadowed everything. As early as Dec. 31, 1944, 125 prisoners had expired.

After the last prisoner was repatriated, one historian shows the following death rates:

As the Americans and Australians composed just 4 percent of the work force, they are not included in this study.

Those are the numbers that reinforce my long-held opinion: To supplement what little the Japanese gave us, the young Dutch successfully used their knowledge of the indigenous grasses, roots, mushrooms, nuts, etc. to win the battle of survival. Chauvinistically, they kept what they knew to themselves. Being at that time quite fluent in the Dutch language, I had become a member of their society and learned from them.

Another example of chance favoring the prepared mind.


Write to Captain George Duffy

Other articles by Captain Duffy Captain George Duffy's Home Page
Return to: Index
Return to: POW

Recombinomics Commentary
June 15, 2006

After being stated recovered from bird flu, JG must reside in the hospital and might not come home. He the diagnosis suffered the infection in and around the brain. If being forced to come home, JG could be suddenly unconscious.

"There were the infection and the clump of pus in and around his brain," said the Co-ordinator Tim the Handling of Adam's Hospital Bird Flu the Medan Owner, Adlin Adnan in Medan, on Thursday morning (15/6). This infection was known after being done pemindaian against JG. "The temperature of his body also was not yet stable," said Adlin.

This hospital, said Adlin, will coordinate with the Hospital of Sulianti Saroso Jakarta to memperlajari the patient's relations recovered bird flu and the brain infection. According to Adlin, the case that was suffered by JG was classified as rare and first happened in Sumatra.

The above translation indicates that the sole survivor of the H5N1 bird flu cluster near Medan, north Sumatra, has neurological involvement. Neurological involvement of H5N1 has been associated with PB2 E627K. This polymorphism is found in all human isolates that are H1, H2, or H3. PB2 in H5N1 has been associated with neurological problems in mammals. Mice infected with H5N1 have neurological involvement and E627K has been found in brain isolates. Similarly, tigers in Thailand infected with H5N1 have neurological symptoms and E627K. E627K has also been found in H5N1 from cats and dogs. Experimental ferrets infected with H5N1 with E627K have hind leg paralysis.
 
  

 

6.19.2006

Hi Brian,

Did you hear about this?  Just found it on Reuters.com

http://today.reuters.com/News/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-06-16T211558Z_01_N16233075_RTRUKOC_0_US-BIRDFLU-CANADA.xml

Best wishes,

Gooby

reply

Hi Gooby, yes I did hear about this and I have posted your link.

Thanks

Brian


6.19.2006

Hi Brian.  On the upper half of your drawing you've written 'break news CTV'.  CTV News' logo is a circle, square and triangle as you've drawn.  They are out of Toronto...check www.ctv.ca.
(Lloyd Robertson, the late night anchor is one of the most well-respected Canadian news personalities of all time.) 
Probably not much help.
Myyki
reply

Hi, thanks and will do.

Brian 


6.19.2006

Brian,
    Another update on your bird flu dream, Canadian officials announced that they may have an announcement on June 20 concerning the gosling that died.  Please keep us posted on your remote viewing.
Thanks
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000082&sid=a2YT5XOLrBqo&refer=canada

reply

Hi, thanks for this, and I will :)

Brian

 

6.20.2006

Hi Brian,

Regarding the bird flue, H5N1, just a few thoughts an observations.

I have done a little research and found that in the ferret model (and the mouse model), when these are infected with H5N1, they show the virus getting into extrapulmonary organs (organs other than the lungs and airway). They also sound in these models that the virus would get into the brain and some of the animals exhibited neurological symptoms such as hind leg weakness.

So far it is the opinion, at leat to my knowledge, that the virus does not infect extrapumonary organs or the brain in humans - although neurological symptoms were reported to be observed in one sever case.

In another article that I read they mentioned that there may be the possibility of infection being able to occur via an oral route; the ferrets mentioned above were infected via virus titers being placed in the nasal mucosa, I'm not sure what research has been done on this yet - but if an epidemic occurs, it's best to wash the hands before eating :)

An article in my latest issue of JEMS (an EMS journal) stated that some scientists are not as concerned about the ability of the bird flue to spread easily since it takes up residence deep in the lungs.

Regarding how to handle an outbreak should one occur, there is a very interesting article below, which discusses the use of hospital volunteers to work from door-to-door and help take the load off the hospitals, which would quickly become overwhelmed in an epidemic/pandemic scenario as would the EMS. Boston utilized hospital volunteers in the 1918 swine flu outbreak and did better than many other areas. See:

http://www.mathpuzzle.com/superflu.html

So if this were to happen, perhaps by some foresight and effort (and the Grace of God) we can mitigate its severity.
I'll try to send some of the other links over the next few days.

Cheers,

Jim D.

Wilton, CT

reply

Thanks Jim, and I appreciate any help you can give me.

Brian


7.4.2006

 Hi Brian,
 Please do not post my name or location. Small town you know? That Island looks like the Island I live on. Knott's Island NC, we have hundreds of thousands of birds ( Geese, Ducks, Eagles, Ospreys etc..) that stay the winter, then they leave and other birds come in for the Summer ( This is a big wildlife refuge (Mackey Island). The one X you have written down is the location of where the Geese stay during the winter, the other X looks to the secondary Bird resting spot is. 
 Anyhow This is for your Eyes only, If it comes to pass it would not surprise me given the amount of migrating birds we have here. 
 Keep up the good work
Jill

reply

Hi Jill, thanks, posted.  I also try my best to never post anyone's email or home address.

Brian

 

 

 

PAGE 1  |  PAGE 2 






dream diary navigation

For the lasted information on my dreams, please visit my Dream Forum here, or see below for the very latest posts.

all dreams - dreams this year - this month - this week - last night - top 10 - correct - thumbnails - dream forum - dream cures - dreams about youtell-a-friend

 

Additional Site Information and Links

Click below to view my nightly Missing Persons TV Show and Dream Talk with Brian Ladd and Debra Brink - Click here to access my Dream Forum now.

Missing Person's TV Show Feed | Missing Person's Radio Feed

View all my TV Shows here

Site Links

Home - Sharing Hope News - Become a Member - Subliminal Store - Natural Cures and Home Remedies CD Collection - More About Me - Video Chat Rooms - Video ArchivesCriticsDream Forum - Radio Blog TalkMySpace - Facebook - Site News - Popular Dreams that have come true - Verified / Correct Dreams - Last night's dreamsDreams this month - Dreams archives - Dream Thumbnails - Missing Persons Section - Missing Person Forum - Missing Persons Radio - Missing Person's TV - Missing Database - Domains - Remote/Brian/Dream Viewing - Edgar Cayce - COA Forum - Free dream newsletter - Contact meInvention dreams - Spread the word - Reader's letters and comments - Request a dream/pillow viewing - Proof of God and the Human Soul - Secrets - Dream CuresFBI's Most Wanted - Help Wanted - Gale St. John - Sitemap - Video RSS Feed - Swine Flu (H1N1) Forum - FindJessie.com - FindAdji.com - FindCindy.com - ClearTVNetwork.com - JusticeforRobert - JusticeForHaleigh.com - www.FindGabriel.comAngels are Missing Website - E.S.P.I. TV - www.PsychicNetwork.tv - Stickam - Site Map 2 3 - wiki docs - XML  links