I live on a boat in San Francisco bay and I'm lying in bed listening to the sound of the water hitting the back of my boat right now. Schaumberger invented big copper whirlpool pots that could fly like flying saucers.
There is an old phrase / coloquial turn of phrase, however you want to describe it: "I can feel it in my waters" - If you watch old British television shows from the 80's or earlier you'll come across it. It basically means "I can sense it's going to be so" or "I have a hunch it will happen/ it happened". It's used to describe knowledge that does not come from direct observation but from "feeling", "insight", "intuition" etc.
If you look it up there's lots of nonsense relating the phrase to female womb/uterus... but it's used by both genders- - I believe it's simply an aknowledgement of the fact the human body is 80% water, so when you "feel it in your gut", it's the same meaning, but in a way "waters" is a more accurate description.
I live on a boat in San Francisco bay and I'm lying in bed listening to the sound of the water hitting the back of my boat right now. Schaumberger invented big copper whirlpool pots that could fly like flying saucers.
There is an old phrase / coloquial turn of phrase, however you want to describe it: "I can feel it in my waters" - If you watch old British television shows from the 80's or earlier you'll come across it. It basically means "I can sense it's going to be so" or "I have a hunch it will happen/ it happened". It's used to describe knowledge that does not come from direct observation but from "feeling", "insight", "intuition" etc.
If you look it up there's lots of nonsense relating the phrase to female womb/uterus... but it's used by both genders- - I believe it's simply an aknowledgement of the fact the human body is 80% water, so when you "feel it in your gut", it's the same meaning, but in a way "waters" is a more accurate description.