Look, I’m not gonna lie to you. The last few weeks had me messed up. I’m talking about waking up at 3 AM, heart hammering like a cheap drum, sheet soaked in sweat. It wasn’t a small nightmare; it was the same damn dream, every single time: being attacked by a monstrous black bear. You know, the kind of terrifying, silent predator that just looms over you, and your body forgets how to move.
I’ve always kept a practice log, right? But usually it’s about coding architecture or how to fix a leaky faucet. This time, I knew I had to log something else because this dream, man, it was kicking my butt so hard it was spilling into my waking life. I felt paralyzed, unable to make simple decisions. So I grabbed my worn-out notebook, the one with the coffee stains, and I decided to treat the dream like a broken piece of code I needed to debug.
The Mess I Was Really Running From
First step in my practice? I had to figure out why this dream started. I scrolled back through my calendar, through my work notes, back to the day the nightmares started. And there it was, plain as day. That Monday. That was the day I got the email. It was from a potential partner on a massive project—a project I absolutely needed to land to keep my small operation afloat. The guy was a hot mess, totally toxic, known for steamrolling people. Everyone said stay clear, but I was desperate, so I took the meeting anyway.

The moment I walked into that meeting room, I knew I was screwed. The negotiation wasn’t a negotiation; it was a verbal ambush. I remember physically shrinking in my chair, just nodding and saying “yes” to ridiculous demands because the fear of losing the deal was bigger than my self-respect. I came home that night, feeling like I had just been mauled. Then the dreams started.
I realized the bear wasn’t some random monster from my subconscious. The bear was that damn partner. The bear was the confrontation I was too scared to have. The bear was the massive, crushing pressure I was allowing into my life because I felt like I couldn’t say no. That was the core problem I had to fix in my practice log.
My Practice: Turning Paralyzation into Action
I tried the usual garbage. I looked up “bear attack dream interpretation.” It was all vague nonsense: “A bear symbolizes raw power” or “You are experiencing a challenging situation.” Yeah, no kidding. That didn’t help me unfreeze my feet.
So, I tore up those canned interpretations and did my own thing. I dedicated the next few pages of my notebook to this exercise. I needed to isolate the action I needed to take in real life.
My steps were simple, visceral, and totally necessary:
- I drew the bear, crudely, just black marker on paper, and I wrote that dude’s name right over its face. I needed to see the real connection.
- I logged the single strongest emotion from the dream: not fear, but paralysis. My legs wouldn’t work.
- I asked myself the hard question: What action am I preventing myself from taking in real life right now? The answer was immediate: I needed to walk away from that partner, no matter the cost.
- I set a timer for five minutes and wrote out the exact email I needed to send, not thinking about politeness, just thinking about cutting the cord. I wrote it three times until it felt right—direct, firm, final.
I realized the “inner power” the dream was telling me to find wasn’t some gentle spiritual awakening. It was the raw, primal ability to push back. It was the power to say, “No, not on my terms,” and walk away from a bad situation that was literally draining my soul. The bear was a messenger saying, “You’ve got that power, but you’re refusing to use it.”
The Final Act: The Unfreezing
The practice paid off immediately. The next day, after hitting the ‘send’ button on that brutally honest email, I felt a weight lift that I hadn’t realized I was carrying. My stomach dropped—I was giving up a big chunk of potential income—but then my shoulders relaxed. It was the ultimate, albeit scary, expression of self-respect.
What happened next was the final entry in my practice log. That night, I went to sleep earlier than usual, exhausted but relieved. The bear came back. But this time, it was different. I still saw the bear, massive and dark, but I didn’t feel the paralyzing dread. My legs worked. I didn’t run away; I didn’t fight; I simply stood my ground. And the bear, instead of attacking, paused. It turned, and it lumbered away into the woods. It didn’t vanish; it just moved on.
That was it. The dream stopped. It hasn’t come back since. That whole process taught me that when a dream is that terrifying and repetitive, it’s not about some hidden weakness; it’s about a massive, unaddressed strength—a kind of power—that you are actively refusing to accept and use in your waking life. My practice was simple: identify the real-life bear, write its name down, and then unleash the power I was using to keep myself paralyzed. The moment I did that, the dream fixed itself. It’s wild what your brain will do when you refuse to deal with the real confrontation.
