Man, I was stuck. Really stuck.
Look, usually I’m all about grinding, right? I push through the block, I find the answer. But a few months back, I hit this wall where everything felt like wet cement. I was moving, but getting nowhere. My projects were fine, the money was coming in, but inside? Dead silence. I felt like I was waiting for something massive to break, but I didn’t know what the hell I was waiting for.
I kept telling myself to just meditate harder, or read another book, or just suck it up and get back to work. But nothing moved the needle. I was just churning water, wasting energy. You know that feeling when you’re technically successful but spiritually hollow? That was me, all day, every day. That’s when the dream hit. And trust me, it wasn’t some cute little symbolic fluff. It was loud, scary, and absolutely jarring. I remember sitting bolt upright in bed, heart hammering against my ribs, just drenched in sweat. It demanded action.
Catching the Meteor: The Dream Itself and the Instant Interpretation
I usually forget my dreams the second my eyes open, but this one? It was like a movie reel burned into my retina. I was standing in this massive, empty desert. Everything was brown and gray, totally desolate. I felt totally alone, just kicking dust.
Then, BAM. This light—not white, but this deep, electric blue—slammed down from the sky. It wasn’t slow and graceful like those nature channel meteors you see floating by. It was fast, violent, and it cratered the ground maybe 20 feet away from me. The sound was deafening, the air pressure shifted so hard it felt like my teeth rattled.
When the dust cleared, the crater was smoking. And the thing that hit? It wasn’t a rock. It looked like a giant piece of polished black glass, pulsating with that insane blue light. And I just knew in the dream that this wasn’t about destruction. It was about impact. That impact was me, hitting a new reality. A serious, disruptive change was coming, and I had to stop avoiding the necessary mess it was going to make.
My Interpretation Practice: Hunting the ‘Impact Residue’
I didn’t just shrug it off. When something that loud hits your subconscious, you have to follow it. I spent the next morning researching everything I could about meteors in mythology and dream symbolism—not the cheesy pop psychology stuff, but the deep, old meanings. They always represent an abrupt message from the divine, a quick, forceful shift in fate. The message was clear: no slow progress, only sudden shifts.
So, I started what I called my 7-Day Impact Residue Hunt. This is where the practice part really kicked in. I needed to move from the feeling of the dream to tangible action. I needed to intentionally look for where the universe was sending its own mini-meteors into my life.
I grabbed a fresh notebook—had to physically buy one, digital stuff felt too sterile for this—and I laid down three non-negotiable rules for the week. I wrote them down in big, messy letters and taped them above my desk:
- I must identify and record three things every day that feel like an “impact” (a sudden, unexpected event, good or bad, that breaks my routine).
- I must journal honestly about the resistance I feel towards any necessary change those impacts suggest. I had to name the fear.
- I must spend 15 minutes absolutely still, watching my mind, specifically looking for the “blue light” (the sudden, undeniable flash of truth or clarity).
Man, the first few days were rough. I kept thinking, “This is silly, I’m watching for blue light?” But I stuck to the routine. I physically forced myself to sit down every morning before coffee and every night before bed. I was dragging my butt through the journaling, but I was doing the reps.
The Pivot: When the Meteor Symbol Started Making Practical Sense
Around Day 4, the weirdest thing happened. I wasn’t finding huge, dramatic impacts, just little stuff. A random phone call from an old colleague offering a contract I had always dreamed of but was too intimidated to pursue. A mechanical failure in my main work computer that forced me to completely reorganize my file system and streamline my processes. These were minor impacts, but they were breaking the monotony and forcing me to handle situations differently than I had before.
Then, Day 6. That blue light finally hit. I was writing about how resistant I was to taking on that new gig because it felt too big, too much responsibility, and suddenly, the realization slammed me. The meteor wasn’t coming to hurt me; it was coming to shatter the old shell of what I thought I was capable of. The huge spiritual change wasn’t a gentle evolution; it was a violent, necessary reset button.
I realized the desert in the dream was the environment I had created for myself—safe, predictable, and utterly dead. The meteor was the immense energy required to make the dead soil fertile again. It was the universe telling me to stop waiting for perfect conditions and start embracing necessary chaos. I had to initiate the change myself, using the energy of the dream as fuel.
The Realization and Moving Forward
I pulled the trigger on that new contract opportunity. It was scary as hell. I had to restructure my whole daily routine, hire a new assistant to handle the basic admin stuff I hate, and basically learn three new software systems. It was a complete overhaul, messy and overwhelming, exactly like a crater.
If I hadn’t processed that dream, if I hadn’t committed to that seven-day observational practice, I would have defaulted to my old habits: playing it safe, making excuses, and saying no to the difficult, high-growth road. But because I pushed myself to identify the impacts and the resistance, I was ready for the sudden shift.
The meteor, interpreted practically, means stop waiting for permission to change. It means when the opportunity for major spiritual or professional growth shows up, it won’t look pretty or comfortable. It will look like a fiery rock tearing into your comfortable routine. So if you’ve been feeling that deep, quiet stagnation, and a weird, loud symbol shows up in your dreams, don’t just note it. Practice it. Force the action. Because that huge spiritual change? It’s not knocking gently. It’s slamming down, and you better be ready to dig in the dust.
