Your brain speaks in elements.
When it wants to show you emotion, it gives you water. When it needs to express transformation, it hands you fire. When it's trying to communicate about your foundation, it shakes the earth beneath your feet. When it wants you to understand freedom or thought, it gives you air and sky.
The elements aren't random dream scenery. They're the oldest, most universal language your subconscious knows. Before words, before symbols, before culture, humans understood earth, water, fire, and air. We lived or died by our relationship to these forces. We built civilizations around understanding them. We created gods to explain them.
And your dreaming mind still uses them the same way humans have used them for thousands of years: to explain what can't be explained with words alone. To show you truths about your inner world by reflecting them through the outer world. To take invisible psychological and emotional states and make them visible, tangible, undeniable.
This is your complete guide to understanding how nature and the elements speak in your dreams. How to decode what the unconscious is trying to tell you when it shows you storms, floods, earthquakes, fire. How to read the language written in water and wind, in darkness and light, in the earth beneath you and the sky above.
Because once you understand this language, your dreams stop being random chaos and start being exactly what they actually are: your psyche trying to communicate with you in the most ancient, powerful language available.
Why your brain uses nature to talk about your inner world
Think about why elements and natural forces make such perfect metaphors for psychological states.
They're universal. Everyone everywhere knows what water is. What fire does. What an earthquake feels like. What wind sounds like. You don't need cultural context. You don't need education. You don't need to be told that fire destroys or that water flows. You know it in your bones.
They're powerful. Natural forces are the most powerful things humans encounter. They create life and take it. They build landscapes and destroy them. They're bigger than any individual, stronger than any technology, older than any civilization. When your psyche wants to show you something powerful, it uses powerful imagery.
They're emotionally resonant. Elements aren't abstract. They create physical sensations. You feel the heat of fire. The wetness of water. The instability of shaking ground. The breathlessness of wind knocked from your lungs. Your brain uses these physical experiences to make emotional experiences tangible.
They're transformative. Elements change things. Fire turns solid to ash. Water turns hard to soft. Earth swallows what was on the surface. Wind scatters what was together. When your life is transforming, your dreams show you elements because elements are what transformation looks like in nature.
They operate in patterns. Floods recede. Fires burn out. Earthquakes stop. Storms pass. Darkness becomes dawn. These natural cycles mirror psychological cycles. Your brain uses natural patterns to help you understand that your internal patterns are also natural. Also temporary. Also part of larger rhythms.
Every human culture has used natural forces as metaphors for psychological and spiritual states. It's not something Western psychology invented. It's something humans have always known. The Greeks had their four elements. Indigenous traditions speak in terms of earth, sky, water. Eastern philosophy organizes reality through elemental interactions. Religious texts use flood and fire and earthquake to describe spiritual transformation.
Your dreaming brain isn't being creative or poetic when it uses elemental imagery. It's using the language humans have always used to describe inner experience. The language that goes deeper than culture. Deeper than time. Deeper than individual experience into something collective and ancient.
The four classical elements and what they represent
Water: Emotion and the Unconscious
Water is the universal symbol for emotion. For feelings that flow. For the unconscious mind. For what's beneath the surface.
Why water? Because water behaves like emotion behaves. It flows. Changes shape. Seeks its level. Can be calm or turbulent. Can nourish or drown. Can be contained or can overflow. Can be clear or murky. Can be shallow enough to see through or so deep you can't see the bottom.
Water dreams show you your emotional state. The condition of the water reflects the condition of your feelings. Calm water means calm emotions. Turbulent water means turbulent feelings. Rising water means rising emotions that might overwhelm. Stagnant water means stuck emotions that need to move.
But water appears in many forms in dreams, each with specific meaning. Rain dreams are about emotional release and cleansing. Flood dreams represent being overwhelmed by emotion. Drowning dreams show you suffocation by feelings too big to handle. Ocean dreams point to the vastness of the unconscious itself, depths you can't see the bottom of. Ice dreams and snow dreams reveal emotions that have frozen, feelings that have gone cold and hard.
Water in all its forms is your psyche's way of showing you the invisible world of feeling. Of making emotion visible. Of letting you see what you're usually just experiencing without seeing.
Fire: Transformation and Passion
Fire is change. Passion. Destruction that clears space for creation. Energy that can't be contained. The force that transforms everything it touches.
Why fire? Because fire is the element that most clearly shows transformation. What fire touches changes permanently. Solid becomes ash. Complex becomes simple. What was becomes what it was. There's no going back after fire.
Fire dreams represent transformation happening in your life. Changes that are irreversible. Old versions of yourself burning away. Structures collapsing so new ones can be built. But they also represent passion, anger, energy that's intense and potentially destructive.
Fire can be controlled (candles, fireplaces) or uncontrolled (wildfires, explosions). In dreams, this distinction matters. Controlled fire is passion and energy you're directing. Uncontrolled fire is those same forces that have gotten beyond your ability to manage them.
Volcano dreams are a specific type of fire dream about pressure building underground until it erupts. They point to suppressed anger or energy that's been held down and is now exploding upward. The transformation here isn't chosen. It's inevitable. It's what happens when internal pressure becomes too much for the container.
Fire dreams ask: what in you is transforming? What's burning away? What intensity are you experiencing or suppressing? What passion or rage or energy is active in you right now?
Earth: Foundation and Stability
Earth is what holds you up. Your foundation. Your ground. Your stability. The solid reality beneath your feet.
Why earth? Because earth is what everything else rests on. It's the base. The thing you build on. The thing that's supposed to be reliable, solid, unchanging. When earth moves, everything moves. When earth fails, everything falls.
Earth and soil dreams show you the state of your foundation. Are you grounded? Is your base solid? Are things growing from your foundation or is the soil depleted? Are you planting seeds (starting new things) or uprooting yourself (leaving your foundation)?
Earthquake dreams are specifically about your foundation being shaken or destroyed. They appear when something fundamental in your life is being challenged. When what you thought was solid turns out to be unstable. When your basic assumptions about reality, about yourself, about your life are being called into question.
Earth dreams ask: what are you standing on? Is it solid? Is it nourishing you? Is it depleted? Is it shifting? What would happen if the ground beneath you moved?
Air: Thought and Freedom
Air is consciousness. Thought. Communication. Freedom. The invisible force that surrounds you and fills your lungs and makes life possible but can't be seen.
Why air? Because air is what you need to think clearly. "I need room to breathe" means you need space to think. "Suffocating" means your thoughts are being compressed, your consciousness restricted. Air is the medium of thought and communication. Sound travels through air. Breath carries voice. Words move on air.
Air and wind dreams show you the state of your consciousness and freedom. Can you breathe? Can you think clearly? Do you have space? Or are you suffocating, unable to get what you need to function?
Wind specifically represents thoughts and ideas in motion. Gentle breeze is calm thinking. Strong wind is thoughts that won't be controlled. Tornado or hurricane is mental chaos, everything spinning.
Flying dreams are air dreams about freedom and perspective. About rising above limitations. About seeing from a higher vantage point. About breaking free from what holds you down.
Air dreams ask: can you breathe? Can you think? Do you have the space and freedom you need? Or is something suffocating your consciousness?
Beyond the four: expanded elemental forces
The classical four elements are just the beginning. Your dreaming mind uses the full spectrum of natural forces to communicate.
Lightning: Sudden Revelation
Lightning dreams are about instant change. Sudden understanding. The moment when everything becomes clear in a flash. Revelation that can't be ignored.
Lightning is different from fire because lightning is instantaneous. Fire builds and spreads. Lightning strikes in a second. In dreams, this represents insight that arrives all at once. Understanding that hits you suddenly. Change that happens faster than you can process.
Lightning also represents power from beyond your control. It comes from the sky. From forces greater than you. You don't generate it. You're struck by it or you witness it. This is divine intervention. Fate. Forces that shape your life from outside your will.
Darkness: The Unknown
Darkness dreams aren't about an element but about the absence of light. About not being able to see. About uncertainty, mystery, the unknown.
Darkness in dreams represents situations where you don't have information. Where you can't see what's ahead. Where you're moving through life without clarity or certainty. It's about the fear of what you can't perceive. About navigating when you don't know where you're going.
But darkness also represents the unconscious itself. The shadow. The parts of yourself you can't see. The depths where consciousness doesn't reach. Sometimes darkness in dreams is about what you're avoiding looking at. Sometimes it's about what simply can't be known yet.
Sun: Life Force and Consciousness
Sun dreams represent your vital energy. Your consciousness. Your life force. The thing that makes you feel alive.
The sun in dreams is your personal source of power and vitality. When the sun is strong, you're feeling alive and conscious and powerful. When the sun is weak or blocked, something is dimming your vitality. When the sun is rising, life force is returning. When it's setting, a cycle is ending.
Sun dreams often appear during significant shifts in your energy level, your consciousness, your sense of aliveness. They mark transitions between feeling vital and feeling depleted. Between consciousness and unconsciousness. Between hope and despair.
Moon: Cycles and the Feminine
Moon dreams represent emotional cycles. Intuition. The feminine principle. The unconscious in its cyclical, changing form.
Unlike the sun which is constant, the moon changes. It waxes and wanes. Appears and disappears. In dreams, this represents the parts of you that aren't constant. That cycle. That change with rhythms you don't control.
Moon dreams often appear when you're becoming aware of your own cycles. Your emotional rhythms. Your intuitive knowing. Your connection to patterns that are larger than daily consciousness.
When elements combine: compound forces
Sometimes dreams show you multiple elements interacting or multiple disasters happening at once. These aren't separate messages. They're showing you how forces in your life are combining.
Water and Fire Together
When both appear, you're dealing with contradictory pressures. Being burned while drowning. Feeling rage while feeling sadness. Needing to express while needing to contain. Fire and water shouldn't coexist but in psychological reality, they often do. You can be furious and heartbroken simultaneously.
Earth and Water Creating Mud
When solid ground becomes muddy, your foundation is being complicated by emotion. Feelings are making what should be stable unstable. Emotions are turning solid situations messy. The ground you're standing on is still there but it's harder to navigate because water has mixed with earth.
All Elements in Chaos
Natural disaster dreams where earth, air, fire, and water are all in crisis mode simultaneously represent compound catastrophe. Every system failing at once. Every area of life in trouble. These dreams point to times when not just one thing is wrong but everything is wrong simultaneously.
These are the most overwhelming dreams but they're also honest dreams. They're not exaggerating. They're showing you the scope of what you're dealing with. The full scale of compound crisis.
Specific natural phenomena and what they reveal
Beyond basic elements, specific natural events carry specific meanings.
Storms and Tornadoes
Storm and tornado dreams are about chaos and multiple pressures hitting at once. About situations spiraling out of control. About forces converging into something destructive.
Storms aren't just wind or just rain. They're both plus lightning plus pressure changes plus temperature shifts. Multiple forces creating chaos. In dreams, this represents times when multiple problems are compounding. When it's not just one issue but several interacting to create a perfect storm.
Tornadoes specifically represent energy concentrating into something destructive. All the chaos of the storm focused into one spinning force that destroys everything it touches. This is anger or crisis or change that's gone from diffuse to concentrated. From manageable to devastating.
Earthquakes
Earthquake dreams appear when your foundation is being challenged or destroyed. When something fundamental about your life or your understanding of reality is shifting.
Earthquakes are terrifying specifically because they violate the basic contract of existence: the ground is supposed to be solid. When it's not, when what should be stable becomes unstable, your whole sense of security is shattered.
In dreams, earthquakes point to foundational shifts. Beliefs you built your life on being challenged. Relationships you thought were solid revealing themselves as unstable. Identity cracking. The ground of your being moving.
Volcanoes
Volcano dreams represent pressure that's been building underground, invisible, until it can't be contained anymore.
The key to understanding volcano dreams is recognizing that the eruption isn't sudden. The pressure has been building for a very long time. By the time you see lava, the force has been accumulating in hidden chambers for years.
These dreams point to suppressed anger, suppressed energy, suppressed power that's been pushed down and down until it finally explodes upward. The eruption is inevitable because the pressure was never addressed when it was building.
Floods
Flood dreams are specifically about water that's exceeded its boundaries. Emotion that's escaped containment. Feelings that are now where they're not supposed to be.
Floods aren't just water. They're water out of place. Water that should be in rivers or oceans but is now in houses, streets, places that should be dry. This is emotion overwhelming your life. Feelings invading spaces that should be rational or practical.
Falling
Falling dreams represent loss of control. Loss of support. The moment when what was holding you up disappears and you're in freefall.
Falling is one of the most common human dreams because loss of control is one of the most common human fears. These dreams show up when you're losing ground in some area of life. When support systems are failing. When you're in situations where you have no agency.
Flying
Flying dreams are the opposite of falling. They're about freedom. About rising above limitations. About breaking free from what usually holds you down.
Flying represents transcendence. Perspective. The ability to see from above what you can't see from ground level. These dreams often appear during breakthroughs, during moments when you're breaking free from old limitations, during times when you're experiencing a kind of freedom you haven't felt before.
Drowning
Drowning dreams are about being in something you can't breathe in. Being surrounded by something that should be survivable but isn't. Suffocation by overwhelm.
Drowning is specifically about emotional or circumstantial overwhelm so complete that you can't function. Can't breathe. Can't survive. These dreams appear during times of extreme overwhelm. When you're dealing with more than you can handle. When you're going under.
Seasonal and temperature elements
Snow and Ice
Snow dreams and ice dreams both represent emotional freezing but at different intensities.
Snow is soft covering. Muffling. Simplification. Everything becoming white and quiet and harder to navigate. Snow dreams often point to emotional numbness. To everything going quiet. To feelings being blanketed.
Ice is harder. More extreme. Frozen solid. Ice dreams represent emotions that have gone beyond numb into rigid. Feelings that have hardened. Parts of yourself that have frozen in place. Ice is what happens when emotional freezing goes so far that things can't flow anymore.
Both point to protective shutdown. The psyche going cold to protect itself from pain. The question is whether the freeze is temporary rest or permanent damage.
Rain
Rain dreams are about emotional release. About crying. About feelings that need to come out and are coming out.
Rain is water falling from above. From the sky. From beyond you. This isn't emotion rising up from inside. It's emotion coming down on you. Or emotion that's being released after being held in the clouds.
Rain can be gentle and cleansing or it can be overwhelming and turn into flood. The amount and intensity matters. Light rain is gentle release. Heavy rain or rain that won't stop is overwhelming sadness or grief that you can't shut off.
The ocean as special case
Ocean dreams deserve their own category because the ocean represents something beyond other water dreams.
The ocean isn't just water. It's vast water. Deep water. Ancient water. Water so big you can't see across it. Water so deep you can't see the bottom. Water that contains things you don't know about.
The ocean in dreams represents the unconscious itself. Not just your personal unconscious but the collective unconscious. The depths of human experience. The vastness of what you don't know about yourself and about existence.
Ocean dreams are about encountering forces bigger than you can comprehend. About standing at the edge of mystery. About recognizing that you are small and the unconscious is vast and you will never fully understand or control it.
These dreams often bring both terror and awe. Because the ocean is terrifying in its power and its depth. But it's also beautiful. It's also where life came from. It's also sacred.
Reading the elements in combination
Most dreams don't feature just one element. They show you combinations. Interactions. The way different forces meet and affect each other.
How to read elemental combinations:
Look at which elements appear together. Earth and water? Your foundation is being affected by emotion. Fire and air? Passion is combining with thought or freedom. Fire and earth? Transformation is affecting your foundation.
Notice which element dominates. If there's water and fire but the fire is small, emotion is overwhelming passion. If there's fire and water but the water is small, passion is burning up emotion.
Pay attention to sequence. Does one element appear and then another? Earth first then water might mean your foundation failed and then emotion flooded in. Water first then earth might mean emotion solidified into new ground.
Watch for elements in conflict. Fire trying to burn but water putting it out. Wind trying to blow but earth blocking it. These show you internal conflicts. Parts of you trying to do contradictory things.
Notice which elements are missing. If your dream has earth, water, and fire but no air, you might have foundation and emotion and transformation but no freedom or clear thinking. The missing element points to what's absent in your life.
Intensity matters as much as type
It's not just what element appears but how intense it is.
Gentle versions: Light rain, small fire, gentle breeze, slight earth tremor. These represent manageable intensity. The force is there but it's not overwhelming. You're dealing with normal levels of emotion, transformation, thought, stability challenges.
Moderate versions: Steady rain, campfire, wind, slight shaking. These represent increased intensity. The force is noticeable. Active. Requiring attention. But still within your ability to handle.
Extreme versions: Flood, wildfire, tornado, earthquake. These represent overwhelming intensity. The force is beyond your ability to control or manage. You're in survival mode. The element has become catastrophic.
The intensity in your dream reflects the intensity of what you're experiencing in life. Gentle dream elements mean manageable life pressures. Catastrophic dream elements mean overwhelming life pressures.
Don't dismiss the intensity. If you're dreaming of category 5 hurricanes, you're not being dramatic. You're being accurate about what you're dealing with.
The role of landscape in elemental dreams
Where elements appear tells you which area of life they're affecting.
In your house: Home in dreams almost always represents you. Your inner world. Your sense of self. Elements appearing in your house mean forces affecting your core identity. Water in your house is emotion invading your personal space. Fire in your house is transformation of self. Earthquake shaking your house is identity being challenged.
In nature: Elements appearing in natural landscapes often represent forces that are part of normal life. Not invasive. Just existing. Ocean at the beach is emotion in its natural place. Fire in a forest is transformation happening naturally. These are less about crisis and more about encountering normal forces in their normal environments.
In cities or buildings: Elements appearing in human-constructed spaces represent forces affecting your social identity, your career, your public self. Flooding city streets is emotion overwhelming your public life. Earthquake destroying buildings is your professional or social structures failing.
In unknown places: Elements appearing in places you don't recognize often represent unconscious territory. Forces affecting parts of yourself you don't know well. Water rising in a strange building is emotion in unfamiliar psychological territory.
Your response to elements reveals your coping
How you act in elemental dreams tells you how you're handling forces in your waking life.
Fighting elements: Trying to stop water, put out fire, prevent earthquake. This reveals attempts to control what can't be controlled. Trying to manage forces through sheer will when they're beyond individual power.
Fleeing elements: Running from flood, fire, storm. This reveals avoidance. Trying to escape rather than address. Not wrong, sometimes fleeing is smart. But chronic fleeing means chronic avoidance.
Surrendering to elements: Letting flood carry you, walking into fire that doesn't burn, floating on water. This reveals acceptance. Surrender. Learning to work with forces rather than against them.
Observing elements: Watching from safe distance. This reveals detachment. Could be healthy boundary or dangerous disconnection. Are you protecting yourself or dissociating?
Using elements: Controlling fire, surfing on water, flying on wind. This reveals mastery. You're not fighting the force. You're learning to work with it. To harness it. This is psychological maturity.
Cultural and mythological context
Every culture has elemental mythology because elements are universal human experience.
Greek four elements (earth, water, air, fire) become humors (melancholic, phlegmatic, sanguine, choleric) that describe personality types. Elements aren't just external forces. They're internal tendencies.
Chinese five elements (wood, fire, earth, metal, water) interact in cycles of creation and destruction. They're not separate. They generate and control each other. Your dreams might show this: water feeding wood, wood feeding fire, fire creating earth, earth creating metal, metal creating water. Cycles and interactions.
Indigenous traditions worldwide see elements as alive. As beings with agency. Earth as mother. Water as grandmother. Fire as grandfather. Wind as spirit. Elements aren't metaphors. They're relatives. Teachers. Forces deserving respect and relationship.
Hindu tradition uses elements to describe spiritual development. Earth is the material. Water is the emotional. Fire is transformative. Air is mental. Ether (space) is spiritual. The elements represent stages of consciousness development.
Your dreams draw on this collective wisdom whether you know these traditions or not. The symbolism is coded in human consciousness. You don't need to study mythology to dream in mythological patterns. Your brain already knows this language.
Working with elemental dreams practically
Keep an element journal: Track which elements appear in your dreams and when. Notice patterns. Does water appear when you're stressed? Fire when you're angry? Earth movements when life is changing? Patterns reveal triggers.
Name the force in waking life: When you dream of flood, ask what's flooding you in life. When you dream of fire, ask what's transforming. When you dream of earthquake, ask what foundation is shaking. Connect dream symbol to life reality.
Assess intensity honestly: If you're dreaming of category 5 hurricanes, don't minimize it as "a little stress." If you're dreaming of gentle rain, don't catastrophize it as "overwhelming." Match your response to actual intensity.
Look for the missing element: If you keep dreaming of water but never fire, you might be all emotion with no transformation. All water no fire might mean you're feeling everything but changing nothing. Missing elements point to missing forces in your life.
Notice your response pattern: Are you always fleeing? Always fighting? Always watching? Your consistent response in dreams reveals your consistent coping pattern in life. If it's not working, try a different response in dreams and life.
Use dreams for planning: Elemental dreams often predict what's coming. Smoking volcano warns of eruption before it happens. Rising water warns of flood before it overwhelms. Pay attention to warning dreams. They give you time to prepare.
Honor the wisdom: Elements in dreams aren't problems to solve. They're forces to understand and work with. You don't solve an ocean. You learn to swim in it. You don't solve fire. You learn to use it for warmth and light instead of destruction.
When elemental dreams become urgent
Most elemental dreams are information. But some are warnings that need immediate attention.
Drowning dreams that repeat: If you're frequently dreaming of drowning, you're repeatedly overwhelmed. This is your psyche saying you need help. Professional help. The overwhelm isn't resolving on its own.
Disaster dreams that escalate: If elemental dreams are getting worse, more intense, more catastrophic, the forces in your life are escalating. What was manageable is becoming unmanageable. Address it before it becomes genuine crisis.
Elements where they shouldn't be: Water inside houses, fire in bedrooms, earth opening under your feet. When elements invade spaces that should be safe, your psychological boundaries are failing. When dreams show you this, they're showing you boundary failure that needs addressing.
Your own death in elemental dreams: Dying in elemental dreams usually isn't literal but it's serious. It points to ego death. Identity death. The death of who you've been. This can be necessary transformation but it needs conscious navigation. Get support.
Paralysis in face of elements: If you're consistently frozen, unable to move, unable to respond while elements rage around you, you're dealing with trauma response. Freeze is a trauma state. This needs therapeutic attention.
The gift of elemental dreams
Elemental dreams are gift even when they're terrifying.
They show you forces you can't see otherwise. Emotion is invisible until dreams show you water. Transformation is abstract until dreams show you fire. Foundation issues are conceptual until dreams shake the earth.
They give you perspective. From ground level, flood is just overwhelming. From above, you can see the whole flood plain. The pattern. The scope. Dreams give you the aerial view. The bigger picture.
They connect you to something ancient. When you dream in elements, you're dreaming in the same language humans have always used. You're tapping into collective human wisdom about psychological and spiritual forces. You're part of something bigger than your individual experience.
They force honesty. You can lie to yourself while awake. Minimize. Rationalize. Pretend you're fine. Dreams don't let you do that. When you're drowning in a dream, you can't pretend you're not overwhelmed. When the earth is shaking, you can't pretend your foundation is solid. Dreams tell the truth your conscious mind won't.
They provide guidance. Elements operate by natural law. Water seeks its level. Fire burns until it runs out of fuel. Earth settles. Wind disperses. These natural patterns teach you about psychological patterns. About how forces in you need to move to resolve naturally.
They remind you you're natural. You're not machine. You're not supposed to be consistent and controllable and predictable. You're supposed to have storms and calms. Floods and droughts. Earthquakes that restructure your foundation. You're natural force navigating other natural forces. The elements in your dreams remind you that you're nature, not separate from it.
Final truth about elemental dreams
Your dreams aren't being poetic when they show you water and fire and shaking ground. They're being precise.
They're using the most accurate language available to describe invisible forces. They're translating psychological and emotional and spiritual states into sensory, physical, undeniable imagery.
Water in dreams isn't metaphor for emotion. Water IS emotion as far as your dreaming brain is concerned. Fire isn't representing transformation. Fire IS transformation in dream logic. The element and the psychological force are the same thing in different languages.
Learning to read elemental dreams is learning to be bilingual. To speak both the language of waking consciousness (abstract, verbal, rational) and the language of dreaming consciousness (concrete, sensory, elemental).
When you can read both languages, you have access to information you didn't have before. You can see what your waking mind can't or won't see. You can understand forces operating in your life that conscious analysis misses.
The elements in your dreams are teachers. Guides. Translators between your unconscious and conscious minds. Between your felt experience and your understood experience. Between what you know and what you know you know.
Pay attention to them. Learn their language. Let them show you what they're showing you.
Because they're showing you yourself. Your depths. Your fire. Your ground. Your breath. Your light. Your darkness. Your storms. Your calms.
They're showing you everything you are when you strip away the words and just let the forces speak.
And the forces are speaking. Every night. In the oldest language. The truest language.
The language of earth and water and fire and air.
The language of transformation written in the grammar of nature.
Your dreams are speaking it fluently.
The question is: are you learning to understand?
Explore our other dream guides:
→ Common Dreams
→ Dream Animals
→ Color Meanings in Dreams
→ Spirit Dreams

