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Symbolism

How to Interpret Your Dreams

7 min readUpdated April 24, 2026

Dream interpretation isn't decoding a code. It's asking better questions of yourself, using dream material as the prompt. A symbol doesn't mean the same thing for two different people. Generic dream dictionaries assume it does, which is why they so rarely land. The interpretations that actually change how you move through your week are almost always ones you find yourself.

Why not just look it up

Generic dream dictionaries fail for a simple reason: symbols are personal. A dream about a snake means something different to someone who grew up handling snakes than to someone who has a phobia. The lion for a reader who watched The Lion King repeatedly as a child is not the lion of someone who once encountered one in Botswana. Context, association, and memory shape what any image means for you.

This doesn't mean interpretation is arbitrary. It means the most useful lens is your lens, informed by your associations, not the statistical average of the internet.

Four questions to ask every dream

  1. 1

    What was the emotional weather?

    Not the plot. The feeling. Anxiety, curiosity, dread, tenderness, exhilaration. The feeling is usually more accurate than any scene to what the dream is pointing at.

  2. 2

    What does each major image remind you of?

    Go fast. Don't filter. A staircase might remind you of your grandmother's house, a movie scene, an argument about aging. Every association is data. Write them all down.

  3. 3

    Where is this feeling in your waking life?

    Dreams often surface feelings you're too busy to register awake. A dream of being late for something might be the leak of a deadline you've been minimizing. A dream of reconciliation might be a part of you quietly ready for something before the conscious mind catches up.

  4. 4

    What would this dream ask of you, if it could speak?

    This question sounds strange but is useful. It pushes past analysis into instruction. A way of surfacing what the dream seems to want you to notice, do, or attend to.

Jungian basics, demystified

You don't need to study Jung to interpret dreams, but a few of his concepts are genuinely useful and often misrepresented online.

  • Shadow. The part of you that the conscious mind disowns. Shadow figures in dreams aren't evil. They're unclaimed. Often they show up as pursuers, strangers, or people you dislike who keep reappearing in different skins.
  • Anima / Animus. The unconscious counterpart of your conscious gender identity. Figures of the other gender in dreams often carry this weight. Not as literal romance, but as symbolic negotiation with your inner other.
  • Archetype. A pattern of character that shows up across cultures and individuals. The Wise Old Man, the Trickster, the Great Mother, the Hero. Recognizing an archetype helps you see the size of what the dream is working through.

Building your personal dictionary

After a few months of journaling with mood tags and symbols, you'll start noticing your own recurring vocabulary. An image that means one thing for you may mean something different for a friend. This personal dictionary is more valuable than any published one, because it's tracked to your actual psyche rather than the statistical mean.

Keep it informal. A note attached to the symbol entry, a pattern observed across six months. That's enough. The dictionary grows as the journal does. Epona's codex is designed for exactly this kind of slow accretion.

When a dream keeps showing up

Recurring dreams deserve a different approach. When the same dream returns over weeks or years, it often signals something that hasn't been processed or acknowledged. Treat the recurrence itself as the message: which element persists, which evolves, and what life event or emotional situation seemed to summon it back. Keep the entries side by side in your journal so the variations are visible over time.

Red flags

Interpretations to distrust:

  • Ones that feel too satisfying too fast. Real insight is usually uncomfortable.
  • Ones from strangers online who don't know your history.
  • Ones that place all the meaning in a single element. Most dreams are structured around a whole scene, not one symbol.
  • Ones that predict the future. Dreams don't predict. They process, prepare, and sometimes warn. They don't tell you which lottery numbers to pick.

Frequently asked questions

How long after a dream can I still interpret it?

Usable interpretation is possible for days or weeks after the dream, as long as the entry is detailed enough. The emotional texture fades faster than the plot, so capturing the feeling at the time of writing matters more than the sequence of events.

Do nightmares need interpretation?

Not always. Some nightmares are the mind processing stress without needing conscious work. If the same nightmare recurs or the emotional residue lasts days, it's worth attention. A useful journaling technique: write the nightmare twice. Once as it happened, once as you'd have preferred it to end. The second version isn't escapism. It's a way of showing yourself the other possibility.

Is it okay to share dreams with others?

Selectively. Sharing can deepen understanding if the other person asks questions rather than offers interpretations. Avoid sharing with anyone likely to diagnose you or impose their framework. Your dreams are data about your inner life. Treat them with care.

What if a dream seems to have no meaning?

Not every dream is meaningful. Some are the mind discharging the day's noise. A useful rule: if a dream still has pull on you 24 hours later, it probably has something to say. If it slides out of memory quickly, let it slide.

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