Grief finds its own language in the dark.
When someone or something is gone, the dreaming mind keeps returning to them. It is not confusion or denial. It is one of the ways the psyche holds what it cannot yet release. Epona gives you a place to receive those dreams and keep them, without asking what any of it means.
A record of a conversation that can't happen awake
Visitation dreams feel different from ordinary ones. The person is there, or almost there. Something passes between you. Then you wake, and ordinary life resumes, and the dream is already dissolving. Epona lets you get it down before it goes: the quality of light, the words that were almost said, the feeling you carried out of sleep. Years later you may find these records have become something you return to. Not a wound reopened. A place where the person is still present.
Dreams that return are worth writing down
Grief often speaks in repeated images. A house you can't find the exit to. A phone that won't connect. A reunion that keeps getting interrupted. These aren't symptoms to be decoded. They are the mind working something through, at its own pace, in its own time. Keeping a record lets you see the shape of that work. Sometimes a symbol shifts slightly from one dream to the next. Sometimes the reunion completes. The journal holds the whole sequence so you can witness it.
Your grief doesn't need to be organized or explained
This is not a tool for processing or for making meaning quickly. There's no prompt asking you to reflect, no nudge toward insight. You can record a dream in three sentences and leave it there. You can note that you dreamed of them and felt peaceful, or felt the loss all over again, without explaining either. The app keeps a quiet, dated record. What you make of it, and when, belongs entirely to you.
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Record your dream now
Start writing in the browser. You can publish anonymously, then sign in later if you want to save and manage it.