Dream dictionaries offer generic interpretations of symbols in your dreams,
But they don't tell you the whole story.
Your dreams are more personal than any dream dictionary can explain.
It's time to ditch your dream dictionary and start listening to the real messages in your dreams.
Discover your unique dream language.
Whether your dream is about being chased,
Losing your teeth,
A lost loved one,
Being late,
Taking a test,
Losing something,
Flying,
Falling,
Walking around naked,
Dying,
Or just driving out of control,
All of these dreams are more than just a one-word definition.
The fact that they are common dreams does not in any way mean the common explanation applies to you.
The context is everything.
The emotion is everything.
Who you are,
How it makes you feel,
And your unique life experience means everything when it comes to interpreting what that dream means to you.
Ever since I was a child,
I was fascinated by dreams.
I was also very drawn to decipher what they meant.
This of course led me to dream dictionaries.
Every time I would have a dream,
The next morning I would dutifully look up each symbol trying to figure out what it meant and why I was dreaming about it.
I would sometimes find some explanations insightful,
But most of the time they led me down a different path away from the message the dream was trying to tell me.
The digital world is filled with dream dictionaries,
Some offering just the author's interpretation and others offering an aggregate of multiple different dictionary explanations online.
It's very tempting to use those sites to make sense of your own dreams,
But that could not be further from the truth.
The truth of your dreams lies strictly,
Solely,
And only in the dream symbols meaning to you.
I have heard this referred to as your own dream poetry or your own dream language.
We all have one,
And they are all as different and unique as each person.
Every person has experienced life a different way,
Lived different places,
Met different people,
Endured different trials,
Celebrated different successes,
And all are in a different stage in their journey of life.
Every symbol in your dream comes from your life,
Your experience,
Your emotions,
Your knowledge.
And while there are common symbols we all encounter and things about our lives we all share,
What those symbols mean to you is utterly unique and cannot be defined by a standard definition.
To put this theory into action,
Let's consider if someone tells me there was a pen in their dream.
Consider the possibilities just within that one symbol.
Everyone has pens,
Has used pens,
And knows what a pen is.
You might even be able to say pens are universal.
However,
Of course,
Every pen is different.
Think of all the different types of pens there could be.
Modern pens such as a stylus made for your cell or mobile phone,
Standard office supply pens such as ballpoint or rollerball,
Or old-fashioned reed or fountain pens that were dipped in ink wells.
Some pens are gray and drab,
Some utilitarian,
Some pens are fancy or gold-plated,
Some are chewed up from biting on them,
And so on.
The standard dream dictionary interpretation would be that a pen,
In its literal sense,
Is a tool for writing.
Writing is,
Of course,
A form of communication.
Some dictionaries go a step further to say you have a call to be a writer or that the pen represents a guarantee,
An agreement,
A fortune,
Etc.
What is missing from this one-word interpretation is,
Well,
Everything.
Who is the dreamer?
Who is the dreamer in the interpretation?
Where are they?
What is the action?
What is the pen doing?
Consider the possibilities.
To hold a pen.
Throw a pen.
Pick up a pen.
Drop a pen.
Lose a pen.
Give a pen.
Be given a pen.
Have a pen that is not working.
They all have different meanings,
And they all should be considered in the context of the dreamer.
What is happening in the dream with the pen,
And most importantly,
What does a pen symbolize to the dreamer?
In the context of the dream,
How did the symbol appear?
What was happening to the symbol?
And what emotions were felt around that symbol?
To flush out what that symbol means to the dreamer,
We often have to disassociate them temporarily from the symbol.
If you were to say it out loud,
How does it sound?
What image does it evoke?
If you had to tell someone who had never seen a pen before what a pen was used for,
How would you describe that?
Is the pen a mirror or a key to anything in your waking life?
Someone might say it reminds them of a gift they received once for a special occasion.
If so,
Then the dream recalls positive memories of receiving a gift,
Perhaps of the person that gave it to them and what that person represented for them.
Or maybe it reminds them of an office they used to work in where everyone would steal their pens.
If so,
Then the dream recalls negative memories of a situation where they always felt frustrated.
Does the dream have negative or positive associations with pens?
All of these questions raised are just around one symbol.
Think about how many symbols you may encounter in just one dream on any given night when you sleep.
This is why dream dictionaries do not help us when it comes to getting the true message out of our dreams.
Each symbol has to be considered in the whole context of the dream with all of its other symbols and what meaning and significance that holds for the dreamer exclusively.
It does not matter what that symbol means to anyone else.
All that matters is what it means to the dreamer.
Are you ready to say goodbye to your dream dictionary for good?
Are you ready to unlock your unique dream language?
To harness the transformative power in your dreams?
To discover the meanings of your dreams and what specific message they hold just for you?