Alright folks, let me tell you how I finally started making sense of the weird movies playing in my head while I sleep. Been meaning to tackle this dream stuff for ages, kept having these crazy dreams and waking up thinking, “What the heck was that about?”
First Step: Just Write it Down
I literally grabbed this old notebook from my nightstand – the one filled with shopping lists and bad doodles. Stuck a pen right next to it. That first night? Woke up at 3 AM remembering this bizarre dream about losing my teeth at a grocery store checkout line run by my kindergarten teacher.
Grabbed the pen immediately, still half-asleep, eyes barely open. My handwriting looked like a spider dipped in ink ran across the page, but I wrote down:

- Place: Bright, messy grocery store (like Mr. Johnson’s class 20 years ago)
- People: Mrs. Henderson (kindergarten teacher) as cashier, random shoppers
- Feeling: Panic! Embarrassment. Tooth falling into the conveyor belt.
- Weird Stuff: Paying with Monopoly money. Teeth were squeaky clean.
The key? Wrote it before even getting a glass of water. Later that morning, reading it back was both hilarious and confusing. But hey, the details were still there! Major win.
Moving Beyond Chicken Scratch
Okay, the notebook and pen worked once, but needing light and coherent handwriting at 3 AM wasn’t sustainable. My phone’s notes app became the hero. Started a note called “Dream Dump” (real creative, I know). Now when I wake up groggy, I just tap my phone screen and dictate or type gibberish. Much easier than deciphering ink blots.
Big realization: Writing anything down immediately, in whatever form, beats remembering vague feelings later. Consistency is king, even if it feels silly.
Spotting the Repeaters
After about two weeks of dumping these snippets into the phone or notebook, I finally sat down with a coffee one Sunday morning and actually read them all back-to-back. And wow, patterns jumped out:
- Being chased? Happened three times! Always by something unseen, just a feeling of dread behind me. Never saw who or what it was.
- Water? Dreams with oceans, swimming pools, overflowing sinks – popped up five times in ten days. Sometimes calm, sometimes scary waves.
- Old School Buildings? Like, seriously? My high school cafeteria kept showing up, even though I haven’t thought about it in years.
Felt kinda dumb I hadn’t noticed this before. These things kept happening!
Trying Out the “A-Z” Thing
Looked at that list of recurring things. My phone note said “Water – Big Waves Last Night”. Instead of diving into some deep Freudian thing (no idea where to even start), I went super basic. Literally thought: “Okay, water in dreams… what’s the simplest possible meaning people throw around?”
Remembered something about water relating to emotions. Made me pause. That week had been super stressful at work, and a family thing was bothering me. Felt like emotions were “overflowing” or hard to control? Huh. Maybe there was a tiny, simple connection. Didn’t solve my problems, but it felt… relevant? Like my brain was shouting “HEY! STRESS LEVELS HIGH HERE!” through a wave dream.
Tried it again with those chase dreams. Simple association: Feeling pressured? Feeling like you’re running from something? Bingo. Major work deadline looming. Again, simple connection clicked. Not rocket science, but surprisingly useful.
Where I’m At Now
Honestly? I’m no dream guru. Some dreams are still absolute nonsense and I just laugh at them (“Flying squirrels playing chess? Okay then, brain.”). But the practice? It’s become routine:
- Phone goes on the bedside table, ready.
- Wake up, grab phone, dump anything remembered.
- Once a week, I scan for repeats.
- When a repeat happens, I try that ultra-simple “A-Z” starting point: What basic thing does this symbol/feeling often represent? Does it feel vaguely relevant to my current real life stuff?
The biggest surprise? It actually makes me more aware of how I’m feeling during the day. If I dreamt about being late constantly, maybe I am feeling stretched thin. It’s like a nightly check-in from my subconscious using really weird symbols.
Bottom Line for Beginners
Don’t overcomplicate it at the start. Forget the huge dream dictionaries for now.
- Capture it FAST when you wake up (phone notes saved me).
- Look for repeats – themes, feelings, places, weird objects.
- Try the simplest meaning first for one recurring thing. Google “simple meaning of [thing] in dreams” – just grab the most common starter idea.
- See if it connects loosely to what’s bugging you, exciting you, or stressing you out right now in real life.
It feels less like mystical interpretation and more like decoding weird messages from my own brain using a really basic cipher. Takes 5 minutes in the morning. Worth a shot, right? Start dumping those dreams!
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
  
 