You Trying To Fight?

I did not record my dreams, but amazingly I barely remember several dream fragments.

Dream 1

One dream possibly involved the television show Game Of Thrones, but that is all that I can remember of this dream.

Dream 2

A second dream possibly involved work, and so I assume that I was working at The BP Library but that is all that I can remember of this dream.

Dream 3

A third dream possibly involved a male character from a YouTube video by the YouTube channel Brandon Rogers called BLAME THE HERO – Ep 1: The Worst Ending who first said: “You trying to fight?”.

This character was in the dream wearing similar clothing and a hood and there were several times that people said things that caused him to say: “You trying to fight?”.

So he kept almost getting in fights and having brief arguments with people, and maybe he got into a few shoving / pushing matches before someone broke them up but that is all that I can remember of this dream.

The end,

-John Jr

“Accents” By Denice Frohman | Interview With Poet Denice Frohman

“Accents” By Denice Frohman

What it is?

Last night I saw two YouTube videos by the YouTube channel TED-Ed that caught my attention, the first video was called “Accents” By Denice Frohman, and the second video was called Interview With Poet Denice Frohman.

Interview With Poet Denice Frohman

What is it about?

“Accents” By Denice Frohman

This is how TED-Ed describes this video:

An animated interpretation of Denice Frohman’s poem “Accents”

Watch an interview with the poet here: https://youtu.be/MbA7hvrDneo

This animation is part of our series, “There’s a Poem for That,” which features animated interpretations of poems both old and new that give language to some of life’s biggest feelings.

Poem by Denice Frohman, directed by KAPWA / Robertino Zambrano.

Interview With Poet Denice Frohman

This is how TED-Ed describes this video:

An interview with poet Denice Frohman about her poem “Accents”

This interview is part of our new series, “There’s a Poem for That,” which features animated interpretations of poems both old and new that give language to some of life’s biggest feelings.

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