Una interpretación de los sueños que lee tu sueño — no solo busca una palabra
Describe tu sueño con tus propias palabras. Encontramos las imágenes que te son familiares, las explicamos desde la psicología y la tradición popular, y te devolvemos una llave para tus sentimientos, no una profecía ya escrita.
Habla sobre tu sueño
Símbolos de sueños
Un breve glosario de imágenes clave, con un significado psicológico y popular. Toca «leerlo en mi sueño» para probar un símbolo con tu propio sueño.
Water mirrors emotion and the unconscious. Clear, calm water speaks of inner balance; murky or stormy water of anxiety you have not yet put into words.
Popular In folk tradition clear water means renewal and a good path; muddy water, trouble.
Falling teeth are almost always about anxiety and fear of losing control or "face", not the teeth themselves. It surfaces in times of change and being judged.
Popular The folk dream book frightens with loss of loved ones, but psychologically it is about your own vulnerability.
The snake is dual: in fear it is a felt threat or a hidden person nearby; in calm it is transformation, wisdom and renewal (the snake sheds its skin).
Popular In folklore the snake is both cunning and a healing force; the reading depends on what you felt.
Flight is the experience of freedom, rising, going beyond limits. It often comes on a wave of inspiration or a wish to escape pressure.
Popular Folk reading: growth and luck; a sudden fall from flight, fear of not holding onto what you gained.
Falling is loss of footing, fear of losing control or the ground going out from under you. Often about overload and the fear of not holding on.
Popular Folk reading treats falling as a warning, but usually it is the body reacting to stress.
Money in dreams is about energy, self-worth and resource, not literal income. Finding it is a surge of value; losing it, fear of being devalued.
Popular Folk reading: paper money means trouble, coins mean tears; psychologically it is your inner resource.
Blood is life force, passion and kinship. It can mean loss of energy, strong feelings, or that a living, vulnerable part of you has been touched.
Popular Folk: a relative's blood means family; psychologically, vitality and what touches you deeply.
Fire is passion, anger, transformation and cleansing. A steady flame warms; a blaze is emotion out of control.
Popular Folk: a steady fire means warmth and change for the better, a blaze means upheaval.
A child is a new beginning, a vulnerable part of you, your inner child or a "growing" project. About care, responsibility and what is still forming.
Popular Folk: a child means news and small worries; psychologically, beginnings and a need for care.
Pregnancy in dreams is nearly always about an idea, project or new side of yourself being "carried". About unrealised potential.
Popular Folk: pregnancy means gain and news; psychologically, something maturing within.
The dead in dreams are more about closure and memory than death. A part of life, a relationship or yourself that is leaving and asks for farewell and acceptance.
Popular Folk: the dead calling is an anxious sign; psychologically it is an unlived farewell and an inner transition.
A wedding is union — joining two sides: feeling and reason, the old and new self. An important inner contract or a step to a new stage.
Popular Folk reads a dream wedding contradictorily; psychologically it is about union and commitment.
The house is an image of yourself: rooms are facets of personality, the basement the unconscious, the attic memory and ideas. Its state reflects your inner state.
Popular Folk: a new house means change, a ruined one anxiety; psychologically it is what happens inside you.
The cat is independence, intuition and a sensual, feminine side. It can reflect self-sufficiency, or someone's hidden, soft-clawed game nearby.
Popular Folk: a cat can mean deceit or a rival; psychologically, intuition and independence.
The dog is loyalty, friendship, devotion and protection. A kind dog is reliable bonds; an aggressive one, conflict with someone close or with your own instinctive side.
Popular Folk: a dog means a friend, an angry one a quarrel. Psychologically, trust and boundaries.
The spider is about the "web" of situations and relationships you feel yourself in — either creatively weaving your life, or feeling trapped and controlled.
Popular Folk: a spider can mean news or money; psychologically, the web of ties and whether you feel free or caught in it.
Fish are images from the depths of the unconscious: ideas, feelings and intuitions that "surface". A live fish is fertility and renewal.
Popular Folk: a live fish means news and gain; psychologically, intuition and the deep.
Hair is strength, self-image, freedom and attractiveness. A haircut or hair loss is about changing image, dropping the old, or fear of losing strength and appeal.
Popular Folk: hair loss means losses, long hair means strength; psychologically, self-image and change.
Nakedness in public is vulnerability, fear of exposure and being "seen as you really are". Often about impostor feelings and fear of judgement.
Popular Folk reads nakedness contradictorily; psychologically it is almost always vulnerability and exposure.
A chase is what you run from in waking life: a feeling, duty or part of yourself you would rather not meet. What matters is not who chases, but what you flee.
Popular Folk: a chase means worries; psychologically, an invitation to turn and see what you flee.
An exam is about evaluation, self-testing and fear of not measuring up. A classic stress dream, even for those long done with study.
Popular Folk: an exam means a trial; psychologically, self-esteem and fear of judgement.
The moon is intuition, feeling, the feminine and cycles. About tides of mood, the hidden and what shows only in the soul's "night" light.
Popular Folk linked the full moon to anxious dreams and heightened feeling; psychologically, your inner cycles.
The road is your life path and choice of direction. A smooth road is clarity; a fork is a needed choice; a dead end is confusion and searching.
Popular Folk: a road means change and news; psychologically, life direction and choice.
The mirror is self-perception and meeting yourself. About how you see yourself and how honest that gaze is. A distorted reflection is a gap between self-image and reality.
Popular Folk: a broken mirror is an anxious sign; psychologically, honesty toward yourself and a shift of self-image.
A bird is soul, freedom, thought and news. A soaring bird is aspiration and hope; a caged bird is limitation and a wish to break free.
Popular Folk: a bird means news; white good, black anxious; psychologically, freedom and aspiration.
The forest is the unknown, the unconscious and a path inward. A bright forest is growth; a dark thicket is what you are tangled in or afraid to look at.
Popular Folk: getting lost in a forest means tangled affairs; psychologically, unknown sides of yourself.
A train is the course of life and its set direction. Missing a train is fear of missing a chance; riding it, whether you drive your life or are merely carried.
Popular Folk: being late means a missed chance; psychologically, life's pace and your sense of control.
Stairs are movement up or down through stages: growth, career, inner rise or decline. Direction and ease of climbing speak of your sense of progress.
Popular Folk: climbing means success, descending decline; psychologically, the stages of your growth.
A key is a solution, access, an answer. Finding a key is insight and opening opportunity; losing one, a sense that the answer slips away or access is closed.
Popular Folk: a key means a solution and new doors; psychologically, a found (or lost) answer.
A fight is inner or outer conflict, a struggle for boundaries and your place. Whom you fight often reflects the part of yourself or the situation you are at odds with.
Popular Folk: a fight means disputes and change; psychologically, suppressed anger and standing up for yourself.
A cemetery in a dream is almost always about memory, closed chapters and peace, not about death. It is where you visit what has passed — old relationships, a former self, unfinished goodbyes.
Popular Folk tradition made the cemetery frightening, but it is also a place of quiet and respect for the past; psychologically it is about accepting what is gone.
An ex-partner in a dream is rarely about the person and more about what they stood for: feelings, habits, a version of you from that time. The psyche is finishing an unlived chapter.
Popular Folk reads an ex as "changes in your love life"; psychologically it is a conversation with yourself, not news about them.
Childbirth in a dream is about the birth of something new: an idea, a role, a version of yourself you have long carried. It is an image of climax and passage, not a literal event.
Popular Folk read birth as great change and renewal; psychologically it is about the ripe finally coming into the world.
A coffin is an image of completion and the line between what "was" and what "has become". More often about the end of a stage than about death — about what you are ready to finally close.
Popular The folk book frightens with a coffin, but it is also a symbol of final peace; psychologically it is about closure and the line you are drawing.
A funeral is a ritual of farewell. Usually the psyche is seeing off not a person but a finished period, an old habit, or a former self — letting go with respect.
Popular Folk often read funerals "in reverse" — as change and renewal; psychologically it is a healthy, lived-through goodbye.
A church is about the need for support, meaning and inner quiet. It is the image of your sacred space: conscience, faith in yourself, the search for something larger.
Popular Folk: a church means peace and important decisions; psychologically it is a turn toward your values and inner core.
Betrayal in a dream is almost always about trust, worth and the fear of being left — not a real act by your partner. Often it is anxiety about yourself: am I good enough, is this bond secure.
Popular Folk reads betrayal "in reverse" — as a strengthening of the relationship; psychologically it is your insecurity and need for reliability.
An unknown man in a dream is often your active, decisive, acting side (what Jung called the animus): will, protection, ambition. How he appears reflects your relationship with your own strength.
Popular Folk: a man means news and change; psychologically it is the active, masculine part of your psyche.
A boyfriend in a dream is an image of closeness, being in love, and the kind of relationship you long for. Often not a specific person but your need for warmth, acceptance and the romantic side of life.
Popular Folk: a boyfriend means attention and sympathy; psychologically it is your need for closeness and how you live it out.
A ring is a symbol of wholeness, commitment and a bond with no beginning or end. About faithfulness to yourself or another, about a promise and a completed circle.
Popular Folk: a ring means union and a proposal; losing a ring means doubt; psychologically it is about your commitments and wholeness.
Gold in a dream is about true worth, self-esteem and what you consider precious in yourself. Less about riches, more about your inner gold: talents, dignity, light.
Popular Folk: gold means profit, but also "empty glitter"; psychologically it is genuine worth versus show.
A car is about how you steer your life and move toward goals. Who is driving — you or another? Does it run well? The psyche shows your sense of control and direction.
Popular Folk: a car means change and the road; psychologically it is autonomy and whether you drive your own life.
A crash is about a sudden collision: of plans, relationships, parts of yourself. Often a signal of overload, or that the chosen path leads to a conflict you already sense.
Popular Folk: a crash is a warning and trouble; psychologically it is accumulated tension and fear of collision.
A horse is strength, passion and energy that you either steer or barely hold. A tamed horse is will and confidence; a wild one is feelings and impulses breaking free.
Popular Folk: a horse means a good road and news; a black one, anxiety; psychologically it is your vital force and how you rein it.
A cow is about nourishment, care, abundance and the giving, motherly side. About whether you have enough, and whether you can receive care and feed yourself.
Popular Folk: a cow means plenty and wellbeing; a thin one, scarcity; psychologically it is abundance and motherly care.
Mice are small but nagging worries and chores that gnaw from within. About accumulated trifles, fears or fuss that quietly eat your strength.
Popular Folk: mice mean small troubles and losses; psychologically it is minor worries that need naming.
A rat is about distrust, hidden threat or a sense of betrayal nearby. Sometimes it is your own shadow cunning, or fear that someone is acting behind your back.
Popular Folk: a rat means enemies and deceit; psychologically it is suspicion and broken trust.
The sea is the vast unconscious, the depth of feeling and life as a whole. A calm sea is peace with yourself and space; a storm is strong emotion risen from the deep.
Popular Folk: a calm sea is good, a stormy one means change and turmoil; psychologically it is the scale of your feelings.
A river is the current of life and time, your path and whether you flow with it or fight against it. A clear river is the natural course; a turbulent or murky one, obstacles and anxiety.
Popular Folk: a clear river means a good road, a muddy one, trouble; psychologically it is your movement through life and trust in the flow.
Rain in a dream is about cleansing, tears and the release of feeling. Warm rain washes and renews; a cold downpour is sadness and heaviness that needs to be wept out.
Popular Folk: rain means renewal and fertility, tears and relief; psychologically it is the cleansing of feeling.
Snow is quiet, calm and "frozen" feeling. Clean snow is a new page and peace; ice and cold are emotions you have frozen so they would not hurt.
Popular Folk: clean snow means renewal and purity, and change; psychologically it is a pause and stilled feeling.
A wolf is wild, instinctive strength, freedom and, at times, a felt threat. About your ability to stand up for yourself and your own, and sometimes fear of another's or your own wildness.
Popular Folk: a wolf means danger or a strong person nearby; psychologically it is instinct, boundaries and inner wildness.
A bear is great strength that can protect or overwhelm. Often a powerful figure nearby, your own anger, or a might you have either tamed or fear.
Popular Folk: a bear means a strong person, courtship or an enemy; psychologically it is strength, power and whose side it is on.
Cockroaches are obsessive thoughts, small fears and the "bugs in your head" that are hard to get rid of. About what has lodged in the mind and multiplies the moment you look away.
Popular Folk: cockroaches mean trouble, but sometimes money; psychologically they are obsessive thoughts and worries.
Bees are about work, shared order and the fruit of effort. A hive is an image of coordinated life and community; a sting, a small hurt or a sense that your work is being slighted.
Popular Folk: bees mean profit and good work; psychologically it is fruitfulness, the collective and your place in it.
An egg is potential, beginning and a fragile start. About an idea still in its shell, a new possibility you must carry carefully.
Popular Folk: whole eggs mean profit and good news, broken ones, disappointment; psychologically it is fragile potential.
Flowers are about joy, the blossoming of feeling, beauty and gratitude. Blooming ones are what is opening in you; wilted ones, a faded feeling or a missed tenderness.
Popular Folk: flowers mean joy and love, wilted ones, sorrow; psychologically it is the blooming or fading of your feelings.
A candle is about hope, faith and a quiet inner light amid darkness. A steady flame is clarity and presence; a dying candle, fading strength or a hope to be guarded.
Popular Folk: a candle means hope and remembrance; a dying one, anxiety; psychologically it is your inner spark and faith.
A toilet in a dream is about the need to release what is no longer needed: emotions, relationships, duties. Searching for a toilet is a need for private space and the inability to let tension go.
Popular Folk unexpectedly reads a toilet as "money" and relief; psychologically it is release and boundaries.
A door is the threshold between stages, an opportunity and a choice. An open door is an invitation and the new; a closed or locked one, an obstacle, fear or a possibility not yet reachable.
Popular Folk: an open door means new paths, a closed one, obstacles; psychologically it is the threshold you stand on.
A wallet is about personal resources, self-esteem and a sense of security. A full wallet is confidence and reserves of strength; a lost one, fear of losing your footing, worth or self.
Popular Folk: losing a wallet means trouble, finding one, profit; psychologically it is your inner resource and security.
A phone is about connection, the need to be heard, and closeness at a distance. Not getting through is fear of a broken contact; an unexpected call, news from a part of you long unheard.
Popular Folk: a phone means news and conversation; psychologically it is connection and whether you are heard.
A kiss is about closeness, acceptance and merging with something or someone. Often not about a specific person but about reconciling sides of yourself, tenderness to yourself or a pull toward the new.
Popular Folk: a kiss means sympathy and good relations, sometimes flattery; psychologically it is closeness and acceptance.
Tears in a dream are about release and the healing of feeling. Weeping often brings relief even in sleep: the psyche lives out what you hold back awake. Not about grief, but cleansing.
Popular Folk reads tears "in reverse" — as relief and joy; psychologically it is a healthy release of feeling.
A gift is about acceptance, recognition and what you exchange with the world. Receiving is the ability to accept love and worth; giving, generosity and what you are ready to offer.
Popular Folk: a gift means pleasant news and attention; psychologically it is accepting and giving love.
Mud in a dream is about what feels "unclean": guilt, shame, a tangled relationship or a situation you got smeared in. About the need to cleanse and regain clarity.
Popular Folk: getting dirty means trouble and gossip, but mud also means money and fertility; psychologically it is guilt and cleansing.
A pig is a double image: on one side plenty and fertility, on the other what seems "dirty", greedy or excessive in you or nearby. It depends on how you feel toward it.
Popular Folk: a pig means plenty and profit, but also uncleanliness; psychologically it is abundance, or what you judge.
A frog is about transformation and hidden worth behind the plain. The classic "frog prince" image: what seems unremarkable may turn out to be a gift. About change and growth.
Popular Folk: a frog means profit and change, and in fairy tale, a betrothed; psychologically it is transformation and hidden worth.
Lice in a dream are about small but persistent worries and a feeling of guilt or shame that has "settled in" and itches. About what erodes self-esteem from within while you hide it.
Popular Folk unexpectedly reads lice as money and profit; psychologically they are nagging worries and shame to be combed out.
A thief in a dream is about fear of loss and a sense that something is being taken from you: time, energy, a right, a sense of safety. Sometimes the "thief" is your own unlived, shadow part taking its due by a side road.
Popular Folk: a thief means loss or, conversely, profit; psychologically it is fear of loss and broken boundaries.
Preguntas frecuentes
?Do dreams come true?▾
Usually not. In sleep the brain reprocesses the day's emotions, impressions and unfinished business. Sometimes a dream seems to "predict" events simply because it reflects our expectations and fears. We read a dream as a reflection of your inner state, not a prediction.
?How is this different from an ordinary dream book?▾
An ordinary dream book looks up one word and gives a fixed "meaning". We read your whole account: we find the images, factor in the dream's emotion and context, explain through psychology and folk tradition — and say honestly where a symbol is personal rather than from the base.
?What do teeth in a dream mean?▾
Falling teeth are almost always about anxiety and fear of losing control or "face", not the teeth themselves. Such a dream often comes in times of change, being judged, or fear of not holding onto something. It is about your vulnerability, not anyone's health.
?What does water in a dream mean?▾
Water mirrors emotion and the unconscious. Clear, calm water speaks of inner balance; murky or stormy water of anxiety you have not yet named. What matters is what you felt near the water in the dream.
?Does the lunar day affect a dream?▾
The link between the lunar day and dreams is folk tradition, not science. If you give the dream date, we show the lunar day and its associated lore — but only as cultural context, with a caveat. It should not be treated as a forecast.
?Why does the same dream recur?▾
A recurring dream usually points to an unresolved question or a strong feeling asking for attention. The psyche returns the image until the theme is lived through. Tick "this dream recurs" and in the chat we will explore what it highlights.
?Do I need to register?▾
The first reading is free and needs no account. To keep a dream journal, return to past readings and continue the "ask deeper" chat you need an account; unlimited access is on a paid plan.
?Does this replace a psychologist?▾
No. Dream interpretation is a tool for self-reflection, not therapy or medicine. If dreams torment you, wake you in dread or tie to trauma, gently see a psychologist or psychotherapist.