Brima Hina It-s Not Just A Dream--- Jpg [work]
The possessive apostrophe is missing from "It-s" (should be "It's"). This is a classic sign of either a non-native English typist, extreme haste, or a deliberate stylistic choice to mimic digital decay.
In visual culture, a photograph is often called "frozen time." But a dream is fluid, uncontrollable. To insist that an image is not just a dream is to fight against the ephemerality of memory. The speaker seems to be addressing someone—Brima Hina—with a desperate clarity: "This happened. This exists. I have proof." Brima Hina It-s Not Just A Dream--- jpg
The phrasing "It's Not Just A Dream" suggests a rejection of the oneiric. But why would a .jpg be a defense against dreamhood? Because digital images are fallible. They can be edited, deleted, or corrupted. A dream, by contrast, cannot be screenshotted—but it also cannot be used as evidence. The possessive apostrophe is missing from "It-s" (should