Tag: dreamwork

Dream-based entries exploring symbolism, emotional patterns, and subconscious themes — the backbone of this archive.

  • Clown Boss, Borrowed Passwords

    Clown Boss, Borrowed Passwords

    The Dream

    Preparing
    to go somewhere—
    tidying my space,
    donating little dolls
    to a friend’s daughter.

    I was stacking slats—
    grouping them carefully,
    organising everything.

    Then I noticed:
    two photos
    of my old boss
    on display—
    he was pulling
    a silly face.

    I laughed.

    No photos of my partner,
    but here was my boss,
    grinning
    like a clown.

    Later,
    I asked —
    two former workmates,
    and an ex-boyfriend—
    for their passwords,
    so I could
    do some work
    for them.

    The Meaning

    donating
    Things I’ve nurtured but no longer need to keep. There’s movement. Release. Making space for what’s next to come.

    sorting
    I’m not lost—I’m sorting my inner life into neat piles. Not chaos—IKEA for my soul. Functional, intentional, slightly exhausting.

    the clown boss
    Romantic sentimentality? Gone. Absurd, outdated power figures? Still getting shelf space. I laugh at it, sure—but I also haven’t taken the photo down either. It’s a joke, but it’s also still taking up space.

    password requests
    I’m trying to access old systems— asking for keys to identities and relationships that aren’t mine anymore. Maybe I still want to help. Maybe I still think I’m needed. Or maybe I don’t know how to stop trying to work for people who don’t need or appreciate my energy?

    What Lingers…

    What if laughing at power is still a form of reverence?

    What if what’s passed on isn’t safe, but still finds a way through?


    Marginalia

    When we consider ancestry, it’s impossible to ignore how much our environments and relationships shape who we become. What we pass on—and what we no longer need—isn’t always fit for purpose. Sometimes it’s not even relevant and other times downright harmful.

    That’s a big responsibility. Our seemingly unimportant behaviours and offhand remarks can leave lasting impressions. Our words and actions hold weight. I explore this more in The monster inside.

  • The Alligator in the Hallway

    The Alligator in the Hallway

    The Dream

    Living in a house
    with another family.

    It was decorated
    in the Addams Family style—
    I loved it.

    We’d just bought
    a new alligator
    for the hallway.

    I was turning some lights off;
    it was too bright.

    I picked a man
    to partner with.

    I knew
    he would be a good father
    to my children.

    Old work colleagues
    joined me at the house.

    We were happily reunited—
    jovial.

    I was getting ready
    for a lecture.

    I was so late.

    As I entered the hall,
    everyone
    was leaving.

    The Meaning

    the alligator in the hallway
    My inner beast has become a decorative accessory. Having finally got a grip on that energy, I’ve placed it front of house. This indicates I’m not hiding the more fearful elements of my personality and whilst they’re no longer in control of me, they serve as a warning to all who enter.

    turning off the lights
    I’m managing the energy in my space. Too bright? That’s overstimulation. I’m not seeking clarity at all costs. I don’t need every corner of my psyche floodlit; mystery and shadows are part of the package now.

    choosing a father
    Intentional choices, not just for romance, but legacy. I’m not dreaming of being saved, I’m choosing a reliable co-pilot. 

    old work colleagues
    Reconnecting with past versions of myself, or perhaps reconciling with abandoned parts of my identity. It’s jovial, not regretful. These are my professional ghosts, and now they’re guests in my new kookie home.

    missing the lecture
    I’m scrambling for something—knowledge, approval, relevance—and yet I’m arriving too late. Everyone’s leaving. There’s a fear inside of lost time, of missing out.

    What Lingers…

    What if taming the inner beast doesn’t mean hiding it?

    What if wisdom doesn’t come from the lecture hall, but shows up in hallways and hindsight?


    Marginalia

    Looking back on this dream, it has the cringe energy of “Welcome! Come on in,” followed immediately by “Watch the alligator—he bites.” I explore this a bit more in my poem What I Carry Isn’t All Mine.

    It takes time to feel okay with the parts of yourself that aren’t exactly socially smooth—like dropping truth bombs or asking questions that make people squirm.

  • This Path Used to Be Shared

    This Path Used to Be Shared

    The Dream

    An old boyfriend—
    he was hanging around,
    following me,
    trying to charm me.

    He was asking
    would I change anything?

    I told him,
    “I may have done things differently…
    but I would have made
    the same choices.”

    I had my son
    in the car.
    I’d moved on now.

    I was in a new home,
    tidying house,
    nurturing its garden.

    The landlord came.
    She pointed
    to a plant I was growing—
    the water didn’t meet
    the gold rim on the glass.

    I laughed at her.
    I had more important things
    to worry about.

    She was rambling
    on and on
    about god knows what.

    She went off
    to inspect the house.
    I followed her.

    I complained
    about the damp—
    behind the wardrobes,
    and the kitchen cupboards.

    An old client stood next to me.
    We were watching yarrow rods
    drying in a dim-lit hut.

    He spoke
    about a new venture.

    I was going to offer my services—
    but I never bothered.

    He was flaky.

    His voice trailed to nothing.
    He sheepishly walked away,
    apologising
    for not employing me before.

    Overlooking my garden,
    there was land I owned—
    just beyond the boundary.

    I accessed it
    using next door’s path.

    I looked over.
    I couldn’t be sure—
    was it my land anymore?

    There were others on the land—
    a group of children,
    people farming.

    I walked
    to take the path.
    It looked like
    it wasn’t shared anymore.

    It was fenced now.
    Before,
    it had been just a path.

    I must check the boundary lines
    on the deeds
    before I question this,
    I thought.

    So I sat,
    chatting on the fence
    with a friend.

    When I stood
    on the other side—
    on the shared path—

    it felt strange.

    The Meaning

    an old boyfriend
    Charming but expired. I’ve evolved now,  turned my back on old patterns and taking responsibility for the choices I’ve made. I have my son in the car. I’ve moved on to something more meaningful.

    the landlord
    I’m over superficial measures of success. Instead I’m concerned with what’s at the core of things and where there is rot, I’m not afraid to point it out.

    ex clients and yarrow rods
    There’s deeper, more intuitive work to be done. I could pitch my services to this client, but my energy is not for rent. He slinks off, the ghost of empty promises and politeness, and I’m fine about that. My priorities are changing. 

    paths and ownership
    Uncertainty about taking space in a place that shares access. Ambiguity looms so I sit on the fence as I try to resolve ownership, direction, and belonging.

    What Lingers…

    What does belonging mean when the map and the memory don’t match?

    What if old paths don’t need to be reclaimed, only released?


    Marginalia

    After this dream, I discovered that dried yarrow stalks were once used in the ancient divination practice of the I Ching. Intrigued, I followed the thread until I found myself creating my own I Ching set from locally sourced material, sparked by Yarrow by the River. If you’d like to know more about my relationship with yarrow, you can read my story Yarrow | The Forging of a Shield.

  • How to Survive a Storm and Still Talk Shit

    How to Survive a Storm and Still Talk Shit

    The Dream

    A sea liner—
    a group of women with me.
    The captain struggled
    to steer the ship
    through a storm.

    The women—
    they wanted to lay mattresses
    on the floor,
    to soften our fall.

    I persuaded them not to—
    the mattresses
    would make us
    more unbalanced.

    I suggested: clear the room.
    When the ship loses control,
    at least we won’t fall
    on broken glass.

    On land.
    The UK coast, somewhere.
    Cold.
    Sharp.

    I saw a penguin
    on the hill—
    I knew:
    this was a bad sign.

    A scream behind me:
    Run!

    I ascended the hill,
    up a narrow,
    steep,
    slippy,
    snowy path.

    A tsunami approached.
    Something else too—
    a wild animal
    I never saw,
    but I knew
    was there.

    Later, at a friend’s house,
    before going out
    for the night.

    I poured a glass of wine.
    I smoked a cigarette.
    (I haven’t smoked in ten years.)

    My bestie complained
    about the dog
    bringing ‘field poo’
    into the house.
    (She meant mud.)

    I was talking,
    enjoying good company.
    I stood up and said:
    “I have to get ready,
    or we’ll never get out tonight.”

    I explained:
    “Once you change
    the way you see the field poo,
    you’ll feel differently.”

    “It’s not field poo.
    It’s the sustenance of life.
    It’s alive.
    It feeds us.
    Everything comes from it.
    Everything
    goes back
    to it.”

    The Meaning

    the sea liner and stormy sea
    A group of women = my school community and the instability that surrounds it. The mattress? More imbalance disguised as cushioning. For me, I insist on practical, proactive safety measures. Let’s not get cut by the glass that will inevitably smash. This reflects how I face chaos: instead of pretending I can soften the impact, I tidy my emotional room instead.

    the penguin and the tsunami
    A penguin? On a UK hillside? Even in the snow, this bird is out of place. The avian equivalent to an elephant in the room. And the voice behind me? My subconscious knowing there’s a reason to run. I don’t go side ways, I go up the steep hill, the hardest but safest route away from the danger. The tsunami? Overwhelming emotions. The wild animal? Anxiety, the always-present invisible stalker.

    wine, cigarettes, and mud poo philosophy
    Back on dry land: wine, friends and old bad habits. I return to the comforting ritual of “getting ready,” but with a TED Talk to my bestie on how actual shit is a life source.

    I’m full circle in this dream. I’ve weathered the storm. Ran hell for leather away from my anxiety, uncomfortable emotions and finally relaxed with a glass of wine and a fag whilst recounting that ‘shit’ is a matter of how you frame it.

    What Lingers…

    What if survival isn’t the end, but the beginning of something softer?

    What would it look like to stop bracing for impact and start making space to live?


    Marginalia

    A day or two before this dream, I woke with a sudden memory of yarrow, which prompted me to start taking it. This was the first dream I had after drinking yarrow tea—just days after leaving school—and clearly, my brain was trying to process what had happened. This dream marks the beginning of my log.

  • Yarrow | The Forging of a Shield

    Yarrow | The Forging of a Shield

    I’m afraid this story isn’t logical.
    How could it be, when it’s about how a herb—
    Yarrow, to be exact—initiated me?

    She barged into my psychic sphere and unpacked her bags.
    I didn’t invite her, but I didn’t stop her either.
    She guides you through transformation.
    Then slaps you if you get cocky.

    She’s not here for laughs or snacks.
    She demands attention.
    Commitment.

    If Valerian splits the ground to the underworld,
    Yarrow cracks the sky to insight.

    When I began training as a herbalist, I started with an apprenticeship on the Isle of Arran.
    This wasn’t some cute wellness gig—
    it was survival.

    My body had gone rogue,
    serving up a cocktail of autoimmune chaos I couldn’t soothe.
    My mind? Gone.
    Packed a bag.
    Left a note:
    On vacay. Back… maybe never.

    I wasn’t on a journey to find myself.
    I was trying to stitch myself back together.

    There were two immersions on the island.
    Each time, we were asked to choose a herb to walk with.
    The first time, I chose Dandelion.
    The second time, I walked with Yarrow.

    Actually, let’s be honest—I’m pretty sure the herb chose me.
    I’d never even heard of Yarrow.
    I’d wanted to walk with Valerian, but she ghosted me.
    Instead, Yarrow stepped in.

    I didn’t know it then, but Yarrow is the herb that moves you forward.
    Most people think the hard part is making a decision—
    but the real transformation begins when you act on it.
    That’s where Yarrow thrives.

    When I met her, I was at the end of my apprenticeship.
    My mind had already left the building.

    I can’t package my experience into something tidy.
    That’s not how it works for me—
    or, I suspect, for anyone who walks with herbs.

    I know, I sound like a barn pot, don’t I?

    So I’m going to share it here—raw.
    These are my notes.
    No logic.
    Just sensation, memory, and myth,
    woven together into what I learned about Yarrow during our time together on the island.

    It started with a tea tasting.
    I closed my eyes.
    And here’s what came to me
    as the tea settled in.

    A thousand yellow trumpets morph into a million brains,
    skulls and faces.
    This is war.

    Breathing dragon fire,
    licking.
    Barbed claws.

    Power. Strength.
    Brain,
    nerves,
    blood,
    lungs.

    A thousand hands.
    Gripping.

    Mythical creature—multiple heads.
    Is it Medusa, or Cerberus?

    Transformation through trauma.
    Owning one’s fate.
    Reclaiming power and narrative.

    Absorbing external energies without being consumed by them.
    Protection from those outside forces.
    Transcendence from trauma—sexual trauma.

    Love incantations—guide me.
    Flowers are sweet—
    notes like valerian and basil.

    Yarrow essential oil:
    lifts up, up, and away.
    Cutting through.

    Tastes like butter—Werther’s Original.
    Then green, floral, soapy.
    Astringent aftertaste.
    Draws down.

    Medusa had claimed her place as an ally,
    and from what I gathered from the other herbalists,
    she was a formidable force to have on your side.

    The next time yarrow appeared, it was in a dream.
    I rarely remember my dreams—only the ones that matter.

    It was the final weekend at my new herb school.
    I’d made the difficult decision to leave,
    the result of a slow-burning misalignment.
    Unfortunate, but necessary.

    That weekend, I felt it again:
    the soft creak of one door closing behind me,
    and the aching pull of another not yet open.

    With nothing more than a vague recollection of her presence,
    I knew: when I got home, I would need to walk with her again.

    So I did.

    I brewed a cup of Yarrow tea—this batch, foraged from the Holy Isle,
    still held its vibrant colour and sharp scent.
    I scorched the feather-like leaves with hot water,
    steam unfurling from the cup as I waited.

    When I poured the pale liquid, her scent hit me:
    that familiar buttery sweetness—her herbal trickery that draws you in,
    right before she cuts you with bitterness at the back of your throat.

    That night, as I settled down, I felt a weight lift as I exhaled.
    The past few months had been exhausting, unrelenting.
    I was finally ready to leave them behind.

    For the first time in a long while, I was looking forward to what came next.

    That night and over the following weeks, I walked with Yarrow each night before bed.
    She initiated me into a series of dreams—
    dense with symbols, saturated with meaning. (you can read the first one here).

    And Yarrow?
    She came back, night after night.
    A guide from the threshold.

    I dreamed of Yarrow sticks drying on a large, circular rack inside an old hut.
    The room was dark, filled with smoke; a fire glowed in the shadows.
    And yet, I felt relaxed—welcome, even.

    I remembered that Yarrow had once been used for divination,
    though I’d never looked deeper.
    That dream nudged me forward.
    Curiosity took root.

    I learned that Yarrow was used in the I Ching—one of the oldest divination systems in existence.
    The ritual is deliberate: fifty sticks, a careful casting, an almost meditative process.
    Yarrow was chosen for her protection and her ability to reveal what lies beneath.

    I decided to try.
    I didn’t have real Yarrow sticks, so I made do with old prayer sticks from China—
    relics from a time when I was sleep-deprived and stressed
    but with lots of stamps in my passport.

    I asked:
    What do I need to know?
    Nourish yourself. The future is auspicious.

    Then came the knock—Amazon.
    Two books: one about nutrition, one on fermentation.
    Of course.

    Yarrow had whispered, and now she was talking.
    I’d been lost, listless after leaving my school.
    I missed mentorship.
    I was cheering my nine-year-old on,
    but craving someone to do the same for me.

    I almost reached out to an old tutor.
    But the message from the oracle was clear:
    Stop looking outwards. You’ve got what you need. Start there.

    Yarrow had called me,
    and spoken to me in a very specific way.

    It now felt rude not to revel with her in the ridiculousness of it all.
    Here she was—having sprung from a cup of tea,
    haunted my dreams,
    and now taking up a whole conversation through the I Ching.

    And not just some vague interpretation like the Tarot, either.
    Oh no.

    She was even slapping my wrist when I asked stupid, naive questions, like
    “Should I use this gift in service to others?”

    The answer loud and clear:
    Don’t run till you can walk, newbie…
    and ask me anything else dumb and I’ll ignore you altogether.

    I learned that while Yarrow might not let me be frivolous in her company…
    she can be snarky as hell when the situation requires.

    When I dreamt of yarrow again, I was asking a woman:
    “Where can I find yarrow growing wild?”
    “By the river,” she said.

    I thought it best to keep my eyes peeled for a patch near a river—
    large enough to make a full set.
    You know, like you do when a herb is haunting your dreamscape.

    That weekend, I was starting training.
    I’d made the decision to volunteer as a mental health peer supporter—
    another new door about to open.

    I was finding it difficult to park for free,
    so I’d pulled up a few streets away.
    I got out of the car and started walking toward the branch.

    Nice garden, I thought.
    Bet Yarrow is in here, I pondered…

    And with that—she appeared.

    A huge, fat bunch, loosely tied into a bushel.
    Contained, or so someone had hoped.
    But failing—spectacularly.

    Yarrow presented with intent.

    This wasn’t just about Yarrow or the I Ching.
    This was about casting. Properly.
    The old way.

    I did a double take—and laughed out loud.
    The river was metaphorical.

    It took me weeks to build the courage.
    I knocked.
    No answer.
    Classic anticlimax.

    So, a week later, I posted a note to the homeowner.
    It felt like a ridiculous question to ask, but—
    please, could I harvest their Yarrow?

    I left my number on the letter and crossed my fingers.
    A few days later, I received a response:
    Of course you may.

    This story isn’t over.
    I still need to harvest this Yarrow.

    But I already know what she’s teaching me.
    The shield is not something you find.
    It’s something you forge—through rupture and return.

    Being human means living with uncertainty.
    It’s not about having all the answers—
    just a persistent tug to go this way,
    and the courage to trust that pull.

    So I ask.
    I cast.
    And Yarrow walks beside me.
    Shield at the ready.
    Snarling when I get cocky.