If you dream of a bright colored blanket within your dream then this shows that you are likely to encounter some minor projects in the future. Difficulties can sometimes translate themselves into new opportunities and solutions to impossibilities. To see a baby’s blanket in your dream, signifies happiness, love, safety and protection. Are you trying to get a form of protection from the outside world? This dream can also mean that you are trying to hide a situation in waking life. If in your dream you could see a lifesaving blanket (such as in a road accident) means that times will change for the better. To dream that you are wrapped up in a blanket, denotes you fear the unknown. You may feel some sort of threat or confusion from people in your current life. Dreaming of a large blanket means that you want to cover something up that is important to you.
To give away a blanket suggests that you may be experiencing much insecurity in your waking life. To dream of sitting on a blanket means that need to feel well-protected – this is both physically and emotionally. To see or dream that you are homeless and in a blanket on the streets represents the difficulties and sense of defenselessness that you are going through. You are seeking for some sort of refuge. On the other hand, it signifies your fear of things that are different from you.
Generally, blankets in your dream means a deceit if it is soiled. If the blanket is new and white then this is a positive omen, which suggests success. To dream that you wrap yourself in a blanket to keep warm is a sign that comfort is on the way. To dream of more than one blanket means that nothing can compensate for the loss of hope in a person: it entirely changes the character. “How can I work—how can I be happy,” are questions you seem to be asking yourself, “when I have lost all hope?” One of the most cheerful and courageous workers in history was Carey, the missionary. This is a short story that should enable you to understand what your dream means in order to help you work out what you need to do in your life going forward.
When in India, it was no uncommon thing for him to weary out three pundits, who officiated as his clerks, in one day, he himself taking rest only in change of employment. Carey, the son of a shoe-maker, was supported in his labours by Ward, the son of a carpenter, and Marsham, the son of a weaver. By their labours, a magnificent college was erected at Serampore; sixteen flourishing stations were established; the Bible was translated into sixteen languages, and the seeds were sown of a beneficent moral revolution in British India. Carey was never ashamed of the humbleness of his origin. On one occasion, when at the Governor-General’s table he over-heard an officer opposite him asking another, loud enough to be heard, whether Carey had not once been a shoemaker: “No, sir,” exclaimed Carey immediately; “only a cobbler.” An eminently characteristic anecdote has been told of his perseverance as a boy. When climbing a tree one day, his foot slipped, and he fell to the ground, breaking his leg by the fall. He was confined to his bed for weeks, but when he recovered and was able to walk without support, the very first thing he did was to go and climb that tree. Carey had need of this sort of dauntless courage for the great missionary work of his life, and nobly and resolutely he did it.

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