Woke up this morning feeling like I’d just done ten rounds with a boxing glove, but worse—my gut was churning. I’d had this dream, right? A super vivid one about taking out a monster loan, the kind that ties you up for twenty years. The guy across the desk looked shady, smelling of cheap aftershave and making me sign papers I couldn’t even read.
I immediately reached for my notebook, the one I keep strictly for recording these weird mental movies. I scribbled down everything. The bank name (made up, of course, but felt real), the ridiculously high number, and, most importantly, the sick, sinking feeling of obligation I had when I woke up. I knew this wasn’t just some random brain fluff. It felt like a warning.
My Initial Gut Check: Throwing Out the Junk
First thing I did after making coffee was jump onto the search engine. You know the drill. ‘Dream interpretation loan.’ Total garbage, man. I waded through all the usual nonsense.

“A loan represents future financial burden.”
“You have latent anxiety about debt.”
“It means you should invest.”
I slammed the laptop shut. I’m financially stable. I actively manage my money. This simple, cookie-cutter analysis? It was insulting. It missed the entire point of the feeling I had, which was heavier than money—it was about being trapped.
I decided to treat this like a real-life investigation. My practice is always to look at the emotional residue, not the symbol itself. The loan was a symbol. What was the feeling? Burden.
I started listing all the big, heavy things in my life that felt like a “loan” but weren’t cash:
- The promise I made to my sister to help her move across the country next summer.
- The commitment to finish that open-source project I started months ago.
- The expectation I feel from my old mentor to take over his business when he retires.
See? All heavy duties. But none of them hit the mark. I was missing the shady feeling of the dream.
The Real Reason I Care: The Defaulted Life Loan
You’re probably asking yourself why a dream about a fake bank loan would make me spend two full days logging and analyzing my life like this.
Here’s why. It’s because I’ve been burned by a loan—a life loan—that nearly wiped me out, and it had zero to do with a bank.
About seven years ago, I was running a small, super efficient digital agency. Just me, doing things right. A guy I knew from way back, let’s call him Bob, came crawling to me. He wanted to start a big retail thing but had no clue about the digital side. He didn’t have startup cash for a proper agency contract, so he pitched me hard. He promised me huge amounts of future business. He said, “Just get me up and running, put in the time now, and I’ll repay you tenfold with all my future contracts and referrals.”
I shook his hand. I basically gave him an equity loan of my time, credibility, and expertise. I spent six grueling months building his entire infrastructure, designing his workflow, and training his staff. I had my own clients waiting, projects idling, but I honored my commitment to him. I essentially loaned him my momentum.
Guess what happened? He got massive. Within two years, he was doing huge numbers. I picked up the phone to talk about those ‘future contracts’ and ‘referrals’ he promised. Silence. He ghosted my calls. He deleted my email address from his contact list. I found out later he hired a massive, faceless agency because they were “more professional.”
The sting wasn’t the money I didn’t get, because I budgeted for that risk. The sting was the default. It was the feeling of giving someone a huge piece of my life force, and them turning their back, leaving me with nothing but the emptiness and a giant, unpaid debt to myself. That experience cemented a core truth in my brain: a loan is a transaction of trust, and when that trust defaults, it’s far worse than any overdraft fee.
The Realization: Paying Off the Non-Cash Debt
Once I connected the dream’s shady banker to Bob, the whole thing cracked wide open. The dream wasn’t about the money I might owe. It was about the shadowy commitment I was avoiding, the heavy obligation that felt like it might lead to a painful default.
I went back to my list. The mentor’s business. That was it. I realized I was feeling pressured to take it on, but deep down, I didn’t want it. I had been loaned the expectation that I would step up, and it felt like a massive, terrifying debt.
So, I took action. I called my mentor. I didn’t beat around the bush. I expressed my gratitude, but then I firmly told him I couldn’t take on the business. I explained I was pursuing a different path. It was an uncomfortable conversation, man, but when I hung up that phone, the sick, churning feeling in my gut just… vanished.
Is a loan dream bad? No. It’s a loud, annoying alarm clock forcing you to audit your obligations. My practice recorded this: the dream was a simple diagnostic tool. I identified the debt (the unwanted commitment), and then I paid it in full (had the tough conversation). The loan dream hasn’t bothered me since. Case closed.
