06-15-2016, 01:28 PM
I can guarantee the five little fishies song isn't advising me of anything except to avoid that music.
In my case, I have a different situation with the music that pops up in my head. There are times when I'm aware of people thinking about me because I hear song snippets. Think ringtones, tunes that are used to identify different callers. When I hear those song snippets, I know the person is thinking of me in some way. For example, when I hear Ed Sheeran's "Thinking Out Loud" I know the spouse is thinking of me. If there's a bunch of different song snippets from one group, for instance Fleetwood Mac, I know that all those ringtones come from people who are associated with one another in some way. On the rare occasions I hear instrumentals/orchestral/jazz, that indicates a non-human energy's attention on me.
Oh, and the ringtones are always indicative of the person and their intentions towards me.
What's interesting is sometimes the song will be covered by different people but I will get a particular artist and it will be clear that the ringtone is based on that artist's interpretation of the song. For instance, one person's ringtone is "River Deep, Mountain High," Harry Nilsson's or Annie Lennox's versions, not Tina Turner's or anyone else's. And someone else's was the Joan Baez version of "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," not the Grateful Dead's.
The Hoyt Axton/Linda Ronstadt song is a ring tone from someone who wants my attention and is very, very persistent. Sometimes the ringtones morph as the situation changes but they'll always remain with the same singer. This particular person started out with Axton's "Della and the Dealer," shifted to "Evangelina" and now it's "Lion in Winter."
It's not as complicated as it sounds and it makes it easy for me to know if I want to respond to the call or not(usually not, although I might call the spouse and find out what's up when Ed starts singing over and over in my head). It also lets me know if the attention is human/non-human and that predicates how I'll handle the attention(usually I ignore it. No sense in looking for trouble, after all).
Yeah, it's weird but it works.
In my case, I have a different situation with the music that pops up in my head. There are times when I'm aware of people thinking about me because I hear song snippets. Think ringtones, tunes that are used to identify different callers. When I hear those song snippets, I know the person is thinking of me in some way. For example, when I hear Ed Sheeran's "Thinking Out Loud" I know the spouse is thinking of me. If there's a bunch of different song snippets from one group, for instance Fleetwood Mac, I know that all those ringtones come from people who are associated with one another in some way. On the rare occasions I hear instrumentals/orchestral/jazz, that indicates a non-human energy's attention on me.
Oh, and the ringtones are always indicative of the person and their intentions towards me.
What's interesting is sometimes the song will be covered by different people but I will get a particular artist and it will be clear that the ringtone is based on that artist's interpretation of the song. For instance, one person's ringtone is "River Deep, Mountain High," Harry Nilsson's or Annie Lennox's versions, not Tina Turner's or anyone else's. And someone else's was the Joan Baez version of "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," not the Grateful Dead's.
The Hoyt Axton/Linda Ronstadt song is a ring tone from someone who wants my attention and is very, very persistent. Sometimes the ringtones morph as the situation changes but they'll always remain with the same singer. This particular person started out with Axton's "Della and the Dealer," shifted to "Evangelina" and now it's "Lion in Winter."
It's not as complicated as it sounds and it makes it easy for me to know if I want to respond to the call or not(usually not, although I might call the spouse and find out what's up when Ed starts singing over and over in my head). It also lets me know if the attention is human/non-human and that predicates how I'll handle the attention(usually I ignore it. No sense in looking for trouble, after all).
Yeah, it's weird but it works.