Man, I gotta tell you, a few months back, I was absolutely drowning in my own head. I was trying to figure out if I should just ditch my steady gig and go all-in on this consulting thing. The pressure was real, you know? My sleep was garbage. Every single night, it was like my brain decided to run a blockbuster movie starring every woman I’d ever met, and I was the bewildered audience.
I’m talking about vivid stuff. My old high school chemistry teacher yelling about combustion. My ex-boss signing papers that weren’t real. Total strangers just standing in weird corners. At first, I just blew it off as stress, but then the pattern got spooky. It was always a woman, but never the same one, and the feeling they left me with—that was the constant.
That’s when I finally snapped and started the damn log. I decided to treat my own subconscious like a messy Excel sheet that needed cleaning up. My working title for the whole thing was simple: Does the specific identity even matter, or is the dream just recycling old faces to tell me the same thing?
The Setup: Catching the Ghosts Before Coffee
I knew I couldn’t trust my memory once the sun hit the window, so the first thing I did was grabbed this ugly, red-cover notebook I had kicking around and a pen that actually worked. I stuck it right on my nightstand. No phones, no fancy apps, just pen and paper—old school. The rule was, the second my eyes opened, before I even thought about coffee or checking the time, I had to force myself to scribble down three things:
- The Woman’s ‘Type’: (Boss, mother, stranger, friend, shadow/mean one).
- The Emotion: (Fear, comfort, urgency, judgment, curiosity).
- The Action: (What was she doing? Talking, watching, giving me something, taking something away).
I kept this up for a solid six weeks. I was probably averaging two-to-three entries a week that were detailed enough to matter. Once I had about 15 solid entries, I cracked open the notebook and started to categorize the whole mess. This is where the practice really started to pay off, because the specific face disappeared, and the archetype jumped right out.
The Unpacking: Four Spiritual Types I Tracked
I realized that the spiritual message wasn’t attached to “Aunt Susie” or “Jane from accounting.” It was attached to the role they were playing. Here’s what my practice log showed me, broken down by type:
The Authority Figure/The Boss (Old Teachers, CEOs, Cops):
I had tons of these. They were always judging me, or handing me a test I couldn’t pass. I initially thought it meant I needed to stop slacking off at work. Wrong. My logs showed the consistent emotion was self-doubt. These figures weren’t about my external job; they were about my inner critic. Every time my old boss popped up, it meant I was beating myself up about the consulting decision. The spiritual meaning? It’s time to stop letting external expectations rule my internal life.
The Stranger/The Hidden One (Never Seen Her Before):
These were the most unsettling, but ultimately, the coolest finds. They weren’t friendly or mean—they were just present. My log showed the action was always passive: they were standing behind a door, looking over a hill, or pointing vaguely into the fog. I figured out these figures were my untapped potential or hidden gifts. The dreams only happened when I was actively resisting a new skill or too scared to start a project. The spiritual note was clear: Check the parts of you that you keep hidden away.
The Mother/The Healer (Anyone Caring or Nurturing):
These were rare but potent. They were always offering a hug, or a warm cup of something, or just sitting silently next to me. The emotion was always comfort, but sometimes, an uncomfortable guilt. It wasn’t about my actual mother. It was about my desperate need for self-care. The guilt showed up when I was pushing myself too hard and ignoring my body. Spiritual meaning? If you see this type, you are running on empty. Stop.
The Shadow/The Antagonist (The Mean or Crazed Woman):
These were the ones that made me jump out of bed. Yelling, fighting, or chasing me. I used to think these were warnings about bad people in my life. After tracking them, I saw they were almost always accompanied by an action of rejection in the dream. They weren’t rejecting me; they were representing the part of myself I was rejecting. Maybe my anger, my sadness, or the grief I hadn’t processed. Spiritual note? Whatever she is doing, that’s an emotion you need to own up to and deal with.
The Outcome: Why This Practice Log Even Exists
Look, I spent a good portion of my life thinking the dreams were literal—a reflection of the people around me. I know this stuff now because I had to figure it out to save my own sanity and my bank account.
I was in this ridiculously toxic tech environment for years. I had the skills, but the environment was sucking the life right out of me. When the consulting decision hit, I was paralyzed. My boss—a woman who was the real-life manifestation of the ‘Authority Figure’ type—was demanding 80-hour weeks. I was exhausted, stressed, and my savings were good, but leaving felt like jumping off a cliff.
I kept tracking those dreams, forcing myself to look past the faces and into the feeling. When I finally saw the pattern written down in my own sloppy handwriting, it was a slap in the face. My dreams weren’t telling me the people around me were bad; they were telling me I was letting my Inner Critic (The Boss) destroy my Inner Healer (The Mother). They were telling me I needed to embrace my Hidden Potential (The Stranger) instead of letting my fear (The Shadow) run the show.
The day I finally gave my notice, it wasn’t because a guru told me to, or because I read it in a book. It was because the woman in my dream, the Stranger, finally stopped pointing into the fog and just walked straight into the light. That was my practice in action. I ripped the sheet out of that red notebook, pinned it over my desk, and I haven’t looked back.
