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AI dream interpretation

Understand what your dreams are telling you

A calm, personal reading of your dream — rooted in psychology, symbolism, and spiritual traditions from around the world.

☪ Islam · ✝ Christianity · ॐ Hinduism · ✡ Judaism · ☾ Universal
How it works

Three quiet steps

1

Choose a tradition

Islamic, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, or a universal psychological lens.

2

Describe your dream

Type what you remember — symbols, emotions, people, places, and feelings on waking.

3

Read your interpretation

A structured analysis: symbols, themes, subconscious insight, and reflection questions.

Symbol library

Common dream symbols

Water

Reflects the emotional state — calm water is inner peace, turbulent water signals unresolved conflict.

Snake

Transformation and hidden fear in psychology; an enemy in Islamic tradition; sacred energy in Hindu.

Flying

A desire for freedom and rising above problems. Struggling to stay aloft suggests self-doubt.

House

Almost always the self — rooms map to facets of your personality; the basement, the unconscious.

Being chased

Something you are avoiding in waking life. The pursuer reveals what you are running from.

Falling teeth

Anxiety about appearance, loss, or self-expression — among the most common dreams worldwide.

Why do dreams matter? Dreams are not random noise. For thousands of years, every major civilisation has recognised dreams as a window into the subconscious mind — a space where unresolved emotions, hidden fears, and deep desires surface through symbol and story.

Dream Interpreter draws on classical texts and traditions spanning Islamic ta'bir, Biblical symbolism, Jungian psychology, Hindu Vedic tradition, and Jewish Talmudic wisdom to give you interpretations that are both culturally grounded and personally meaningful.

Describe your dream in as much detail as you remember — symbols, people, emotions, settings. The more you share, the deeper and more personal your interpretation will be.

Questions

Frequently asked

Five lenses: Islam, Christianity, Hinduism, Judaism, and a universal psychology lens drawing on Jung and modern dream analysis.
English, Urdu, Hindi, and Arabic. You can switch language mid-conversation and existing messages translate automatically.
Yes — the interpreter keeps context across up to 15 exchanges per session. Ask it to go deeper on any symbol or theme.
No. No account is required, and your dreams are not stored after your session ends.
Background

Dream interpretation across traditions

Islamic Dream Interpretation (Ta'bir) — In Islam, dreams are considered one of the forty-six parts of prophethood. The science of dream interpretation, known as ta'bir, has been practised for over 1,400 years. Scholars such as Ibn Sirin wrote extensively on dream symbols, categorising dreams as true visions (ru'ya), ordinary dreams from the self, or disturbing dreams. Good dreams are seen as glad tidings; unsettling dreams are to be disregarded.

Biblical & Christian Tradition — Throughout the Bible, dreams serve as a direct channel of divine communication. Joseph interpreted Pharaoh's dreams of seven fat and seven lean cows as seven years of abundance followed by famine. Daniel interpreted King Nebuchadnezzar's visions. Christian tradition holds that while God can speak through dreams, discernment is essential.

Jungian Psychology — Carl Jung viewed dreams as messages from the unconscious mind, using personal and collective symbolic language. He identified recurring archetypes — the Shadow, the Anima/Animus, and the Self. For Jung, working with dreams was central to psychological wholeness and individuation.

Hindu & Vedic Dream Tradition — The ancient Atharva Veda contains one of the earliest systematic approaches to dream interpretation. Hindu tradition distinguishes between prophetic dreams, which come in the early morning hours, and ordinary dreams. A white elephant signals great fortune; fire represents transformation and purification.

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