Man, when people talk about “dream interpretation,” they usually think it’s some kind of fortune telling or weird psychology class. They figure you look up “snake” in a book and it tells you your uncle is going to screw you over. That is utter garbage, seriously. If that was the goal, I would have tossed the whole idea out years ago. The real goal of digging into what your brain spits out at night is figuring out what your next actual move should be, especially when you feel like you are totally paralyzed during the day.
I started this practice because I hit a wall, a real ugly one. It wasn’t about money or family stuff—I had a good income, things were stable. The problem was the job itself. I was managing a huge project, something I built from the ground up, and then, around five years back, the company decided to do a massive internal shuffle. They didn’t fire me, they didn’t demote me, but they moved my entire team under this guy, Mark. Mark was, to put it mildly, an absolute drain. He didn’t understand the work, he changed things just to prove he was in charge, and he spent all his time micromanaging the wrong stuff.
I spent six months fighting that system, trying to salvage the project, trying to talk sense into higher-ups. It was like trying to argue with a brick wall soaked in incompetence. I was stuck. I couldn’t quit because the money was too good, but I couldn’t stay because I was physically starting to get sick from the stress. I didn’t know what to do next. I felt like I was standing in the middle of a burning building, but all the exits were locked. That paralysis, that’s what made me grab a cheap notebook and start writing down every single scrap of my dreams.

The Practice: From Chaos to Clarity
My initial goal wasn’t “find my destiny.” My goal was simple: Find the escape route.
I started logging everything. I mean everything. The weird colors, the nonsense dialogue, the fact that my teeth kept falling out. For the first two months, it was just junk. I tried following the online guides—”if you see water, it means emotion”—but that crap was useless. I realized the symbolic stuff was secondary, maybe even irrelevant.
What mattered were the feelings and the actions in the dream.
I dumped the symbol books and focused on the verbs:
- What was I doing?
- What was trying to stop me?
- How did I feel when I woke up?
I noticed a huge pattern quickly. The moment I started preparing for a big, painful meeting with Mark the next day, I would have the same recurring dream. It wasn’t about being chased by a monster, it was about being trapped in a huge, windowless office building, trying to run but finding my feet stuck in thick, black molasses. The emotional takeaway wasn’t fear; it was pure, unadulterated frustration and powerlessness.
I started connecting that dream feeling—the molasses frustration—to my waking life. The dream wasn’t telling me Mark was bad; the dream was screaming that my current environment had robbed me of all agency. The true goal wasn’t to fight Mark; the true goal was to regain total control over my movement and my time.
Finding the True Goal
This realization changed everything. I stopped looking for a new job like the old one. My subconscious wasn’t asking for a lateral move to a nicer corporate prison. It was demanding freedom.
The success I finally achieved wasn’t interpreted from a single, grand dream; it came from the crushing repetition of that molasses nightmare. It was a giant, blinking neon sign telling me: “You need sovereignty, dummy.”
I finally got off my butt, started calling up old contacts, and decided to jump headfirst into freelance consulting. People called me nuts. They said, “You’re trading a stable 401k for total uncertainty.” And they were right, it was terrifying. I walked away from a huge salary. But the moment I handed in my notice, the molasses dreams stopped. Gone. Poof.
It’s been four years since then. The workload is intense, the income fluctuates wildly sometimes, and I handle all my own admin, which is a complete pain. But I am the one deciding what project to take, who to work with, and when to work. The dream interpretation goal, for me, was never about predicting the future; it was about defining the present action needed to achieve a state of being I didn’t even know I craved. My goal was autonomy. I found it by listening to the frustration, not the symbols.
So, forget the books. Find the repeated feeling in your nightmares. That feeling is screaming about the goal you need to achieve in your waking life to make the nightmares stop. Go find it, and then don’t just think about it—execute the escape plan your brain already wrote for you.
