Two traditions of dream reading
Dream Journal
Write what you remember of a dream below. We will pull out the symbols we recognize, read each one in the tradition you choose, and surface any pairings the tradition has notes on. For a full written interpretation by Dylan, see the instant interpretation.
Carl Jung argued that dream symbols arise from a shared substrate — the collective unconscious — and recur across cultures because they are part of being human. His readings are less about prediction than about which part of the psyche is speaking.
Or tap symbols — pick as many as you like
Each symbol — Jungian
horse
creatures, instincts
If favorable: The horse is the body's vitality — Pegasus, Sleipnir. A ride well managed shows the ego in good relation with the instinctual self.
If shadowed: An uncontrollable horse signals body or sexual energy that the ego has lost the reins of.
death
the dreamer's condition
If favorable: Death in dreams is rarely literal — it is the symbolic completion of one form of self so that the next can emerge.
If shadowed: Repeated death-dreams of the same person signal unresolved attachment; the psyche is asking that piece of the relationship to complete.
Go deeper
For an interpretation that ties these symbols together into a single woven reading, written for you — drawing from both Artemidorus and the Jungian frame — let the dream be read whole.
Instant interpretation →