Interpret My Dream

Describe the dream you actually had and get an interpretation of your dream - your symbols, your emotions, your story - not a one-size-fits-all definition.

Press for an instant interpretation

Your dream, not a generic symbol

Search "what does it mean to dream about water" and you will get the same paragraph everyone else gets. But your water dream had a context: maybe it was a calm sea you waded into, or a flood rising through your house while you slept. Those mean almost opposite things - and only an interpretation of your specific dream can tell them apart.

When you describe your dream here, the interpreter looks at three things together: the symbols (what appeared), the emotion (how you felt - the single most reliable clue), and the story (what happened, and in what order). It is the difference between looking up words in a dictionary and reading a sentence.

What makes a dream worth interpreting well

The dreams people most want to understand are rarely random. They tend to arrive at thresholds - before a big decision, during a stressful stretch, after a loss - and they reuse a small set of powerful images to do it: teeth, being chased, an ex, falling, water. Each of those can point in very different directions depending on the rest of the dream, which is why a tailored interpretation matters more for exactly the dreams you care about most.

Tips for describing your dream

  • Lead with the feeling. Dread, relief, fascination, grief - name it. It narrows the meaning faster than any symbol.
  • Keep the verbs. Were you watching, running, falling, searching? What the dream was doing often matters more than what was in it.
  • Note who was there. A stranger, a parent, an ex, yourself - the cast changes the reading.
  • Mention if it recurs. A dream that keeps coming back is telling you something is unresolved.

Reflection, not prediction

We will never tell you a dream predicts the future. What we can do is help you see what your dream might be reflecting about your waking life, so the interpretation becomes a starting point for understanding yourself - which is the only thing a dream can honestly offer.

Common dreams people ask us to interpret

Frequently asked questions

How do I get the best interpretation of my dream?

Include the details that stood out and, crucially, how you felt. "I was falling" is a start, but "I was falling and felt strangely calm" points somewhere very different from "I was falling and panicking." Emotion is often the single most useful clue.

Can you interpret a recurring dream?

Yes, and recurring dreams are worth paying attention to. A dream that keeps returning usually means an underlying situation has not been resolved. Describe the version you remember best, and note that it repeats - that pattern is part of the meaning.

I only remember part of my dream. Is that enough?

Usually, yes. A single vivid image or the feeling you woke with is often enough to reflect on. Describe whatever you have - even a fragment - and you can ask follow-up questions to explore it further.

Why does my dream mean something different from my friend's same dream?

Because a dream is filtered through your life, your associations, and your feelings. Two people can dream of the same snake and it can mean a hidden fear for one and a fresh start for the other. That is exactly why interpreting your specific dream beats looking up a generic symbol.

Will you tell me what my dream predicts?

No - and that is on purpose. Dreams are not forecasts. We help you understand what your dream might be reflecting about your waking concerns, so you can reflect on it, rather than handing you a prophecy.