I Started Journaling My Weird Dreams
You know, I’ve always had these super vivid dreams. Not just the typical “oh, I forgot my pants” kind of stress dreams, but the full-on movie-in-my-head stuff. For years, I just let them slide, maybe mentioned a crazy one at breakfast, and then forgot about it. But a few months ago, things got intense. Specifically, the black jaguar started showing up.
It wasn’t scary, really. It was usually just there, watching me, maybe moving through a jungle or a dark room. Always silent, always that sleek, intense black. After the third time in two weeks, I figured, okay, something is up. I decided to actually track this down.
The Black Jaguar Project: Setting Up the System
My first step? Get organized. I’m a practical guy, so I wasn’t going to rely on vague memory. I grabbed a cheap notebook—not even a fancy Moleskine, just a standard lined one—and titled it “The Dream Log.”
- Rule 1: Immediate recording. As soon as I woke up, before checking my phone or having coffee, I had to write down the core elements. Key actions, feelings, and colors.
- Rule 2: Focus on symbols. I specifically started looking for recurring elements, like the jaguar, water, specific people, or certain confusing places.
- Rule 3: Keep a feeling tracker. Did I wake up anxious, energized, confused, or calm? This felt crucial for interpretation.
I committed to this for 30 days. The first week was messy. I’d wake up at 3 AM with a flash of memory, groggily scribble something like “dark cat, tall trees, felt heavy,” and then pass out again. But quickly, the habit set in.
The Deep Dive and The Revelation
Once I had about 20 entries, I started seeing patterns emerge. The black jaguar was always present during dreams where I was trying to make a big decision in waking life. For example, the week I was debating switching jobs, the jaguar was walking confidently alongside me while I climbed a tricky, rocky path.
I started digging into basic dream lore—not the high-brow psychoanalysis stuff, but the common symbolism. Jaguars, especially black ones (melanistic), are often linked to power, shadows, intuition, and hidden aggression or protection. I found sources saying it’s a guide through the subconscious. That resonated.
I cross-referenced the dream details with my waking life feelings. When the jaguar appeared and I felt calm and protected in the dream, my waking life issues felt manageable. When the jaguar was hiding or I couldn’t find it, I felt lost and uncertain about my next move.
What I Concluded: Good or Bad?
So, is the black jaguar a good or bad omen? For me, the practice showed it’s neither a curse nor a magic bullet. It’s an internal barometer. It’s about presence and power.
I realized the black jaguar wasn’t threatening; it was a representation of my own untapped, inner strength that I usually ignore during the day. It shows up when I need to trust my gut, move silently, and use my intuition rather than overthinking everything with spreadsheets.
The practice taught me to stop asking if something is “good” or “bad” in the absolute sense, but to ask: “What does this symbol reflect about my current state?” If the jaguar is strong and present, I have the power I need. If the environment is confusing, it means I’m ignoring my instincts.
Since I started paying attention, I’ve found that when I have a jaguar dream, I wake up knowing I need to be more decisive that day. I’ve started tackling difficult conversations and tasks head-on, leaning into that quiet power the cat embodies. It’s been totally transformative. Highly recommend logging those weird symbols.