Bird Birds
This a big entry and is in three parts, the general information first part. The second Bird Situations – and the third Different Birds.
The life cycle of a bird has so many similarities with important human stages of growth we frequently use birds to represent parts of our own deeply felt experience.
In general the bird in your dream can depict imagination, intuition, the mind, freedom from restraints, thoughts or hidden wishes or hopes, or your longings to move beyond limitations or boundaries, or even love or a lover. Because the word is sometimes used to indicate a woman, it can have that meaning – i.e. a ‘bird’.
The meaning depends on the context in which the bird appears in the dream. So in some dreams, especially if the bird is flying high, or you identify and become the bird, it can show an expanded awareness or a greater insight into your life and the meaning of your life. This type of dream usually appears as a large bird that can fly high. This is because wider – or spiritual – awareness is like a higher, overall view of things.
Meeting this enlarged awareness may be painful or frightening as we approach it. The enlargement of what you experience is a form of growth and brings new possibilities, all of which can strip away old ways of life and relationship. This expansion of our viewpoint, the uplift of our emotions or mind, can be a link between the world we experience with our physical senses, and the deep world of our often unconscious passions, intuitions and insights.
But in some dreams birds are messengers – For instance a swallow is a symbol of spring, a rooster can be symbolic of a new day (or a new beginning), doves can be symbolic of love, a relationship or peace, and so forth. Both crows and vultures are symbolic of a “death” or the ending of something.
A big or huge bird: The power of the collective mind or unconscious. It shows you leaving the limited view of the three dimensional world most of us are trapped in, and enter a world beyond time and space. Imagine you are going to communicate with a part of yourself that has an unlimited amount of information and influence to share with you. What this dimension of yourself gives you will be in direct response to what you ask. So the question, interest or urgent drive in you will be the factor shaping the response.
It may uplift or be felt as threatening; something that can protect or be felt as a threat. If felt as a threat remember that dreams are like computer game, nothing can actually harm you, see Wider awareness – Dream as Computer Game – Personal Unconscious.
Big birds often appear in dreams and the huge bird in the house means contact with a lesser used ability you have, one of being able to have a wider view of who you are and the world you live in. But it is also an invitation to learn to fly with or separate from the bird. You can learn to fly; it is a great way of overcoming fears.
‘During childhood I learned to fly in a long sequence of dreams. Each linked very clearly to the last. I would go to the nearby churchyard and in the beginning I would run along as fast as I could then jump and just manage to extend the jump by a great effort of will. In subsequent practices I managed to gradually extend the jump for many yards; and eventually I could skim along indefinitely. The next stage though was to extend my flight height, and this took enormous effort of will and body. I made active swimming motions and climbed, but only held altitude with great and constant concentration. With further practice still, this clumsy mode of flying was left behind as I learned to use pure motivation, decision or will to lift me into the air and carry me easily and gracefully wherever I wished. At this stage my flying was swift, mobile and without struggle.’ See Flying
Baby bird: It can refer to your children, or to your own childhood memories. Coming out of the shell is a very powerful experience for us as babies. Facing the enormousness of physical experience with all it wonder and dangers is something we have faced. And don’t live with the belief that babies cannot remember such early memories, because it has been shown they do. See Lumpkin – The Baby Who Became Tony
Bird attacking: Fear of ideas, ideals or opinions; verbal or mental (suggestions or suggestive behaviour) attack by others; fear of going beyond ones narrow boundaries. Be daring and face the restrain that holds you back.
Bird descending: A wider view or experience becoming known to you, or becoming available. In practical terms this may be experienced as inspiration or new insights regarding work or creativity, or a bursting of ones previous views or concepts into a wider insight.
Bird in house: Hope that something interesting or new will enter ones life; a wish for new love; a new idea; an intuition or precognition; a new person or event entering your life; or something trapped in you that seeks freedom.
Black or carrion birds: Because such birds often feed on dead animals, they have the association with death or news of death. This may not be connected with someone dying, but perhaps that some project, love or aspect of yourself is being left to die; feelings or fears about death. Or it could be about something you are unaware of but is on the edge of consciousness.
Bluebird: Especially represents the personality or flight of the soul after death. But it can also show the flight of awareness into new or wider experience. The colour gives it a link with the heavens and it is therefore a symbol of your own ability to reach a wider awareness – the spiritual. See Definition of Spirit.
Useful Questions and Hints:
What way am I relating to the bluebird?
Do I feel anything on seeing the bird?
Have I been meditating or doing something uplifting recently?
Dead bird: Threat to ideals or hopes of freedom; feeling life is only material; ones spirit feeling defeated or crushed. Also a loss of sense of beauty or meaning in life; an ideal or hope has died; a flight of imagination or creativity has fallen.
Eggs in a nest: The nest and eggs are saying that you have created inside of you a sort of womb. not for a baby, but for a huge but unexpressed self. You have a huge but latent potential, it is maybe beginning to show in your present life, but will certainly emerge as the eggs are hatched.
Feather: See: feathers.
Fighting birds: Family disputes; arguments about viewpoints.
Flock of birds: Sometimes shows you feeling a deeply intuitive sense of connection with thousands of others, all being moved by life itself flowing through you. Describing his recovery from feelings of being ill at ease within herself, Gloria writes:
As this occurred I had a wonderful sense of being a lovely bird that has been in some way ill all its life. This meant it never flew when the flock took flight. Instead, to deal with its own difficulty it felt feelings of not wanting to fly like the others, of not wanting to be like them and do the meaningless things they do. But with the healing came the realisation I could fly, and I took wing and joined the flock. Now I am a creature of spirit, which I have always been, and I asked the Light to help me learn the ways of ‘flying’ in the spirit.
It can also point to how you add your influence to others socially.
Flying: Rising above something; an escape from a feeling of being trapped, or some fear; independence; freedom; self expression; ones love or thoughts winging its way to someone. The sexual act – possibly because during sex we may feel released and uplifted.
Hatching from the egg: Our birth and infancy; rebirth. Something new and uplifting coming into your life, or coming to life in you.
In cage: Feelings of being restricted or trapped; holding back love or inspiration; safety in restriction. If there are positive feelings around the caged bird, it might suggest the need to withhold love or freedom, but it could suggest feeling trapped in a relationship, especially if there are two birds in the cage.
Leaving nest: Gaining independence; meeting change or leaving a dependent relationship.
Making nest: Home building; parental urges; partnership if with another bird.
Nest: Home; family environment; security; even the womb.
The baby bird: Our own childhood, as in the following example. The old lady in the second example is once more reference to the mother, who the bird is first connected with before moving on to the difficulty of independence.
Freud said the bird represents the male phallus, and flying means the sexual act. Many languages use the word ‘bird’ to mean woman. In Italy it alludes to penis. The bird is also used to denote a sense of death and survival.
The example shows Pauline using the bird to depict her own urge to be independent of her mother’s influence, opinions, likes, dislikes and decisions. Later in the dream her mother hands Pauline the ribbon to hold, suggesting an offer of independence.
Example: ‘I was standing outside the house of my teens, with my mother. She had a very young bird on a long ribbon and the bird was flying very high in the sky. As soon as she lets go the ribbon, a huge black bird attacks the ribboned one.’ Pauline.
The ribbons are a reference to Pauline’s own girlhood. When she lets go of her girlhood, moving toward independent womanhood, she feels threatened by her internal feelings of guilt – i.e. a child feels guilty if it acts differently to what its mother wants. This is the black bird. To become independent we have to find a way of doing what we wish despite this internalised mother. (Internalised means all the standards, self controls she learned from her life with her mother, she now carries within her as her own urges even if absent from her mother.)
Example: ‘An old lady made room for me to sit at the end of one of the three seats of a bus. As we drove away a very large chicken size baby bird flew in. It had short stubby wings and yellow down, but flew expertly. I believe it first landed on the lady and chirped squeakily. But in it’s squeaks it actually spoke, saying it had lost it’s mother. It sounded as if it were crying.’ Andrew.
This dream is clearly about Andrew becoming aware that at some time he felt abandoned by his mother, and this part of him needs helping to grow into greater independence.
Wild bird: An untamed freedom of feelings and mind. If it has landed on you it shows how a new and wonderful attitude or ability has opened in you. If you feel love for the bird it is what has brought about the change in you – the love of or ability to free yourself so you can fly – you can let you feelings and creativity become enormously more effective.
White birds: We all have several levels or floors of our awareness. The ground floor is our every day awareness, limited to our brains memories, limited to today and this life. But we were all seeds planted in our mother’s womb, and all seed carry the memory of the past growth in them, and our seed is thelatest that started from the beginning if life on our earth. So at the level if that enormous memory, we have enormous instinctive information gathered over millions of years, but only dreams has access to it unless we have dug deep into our awareness. The white birds represent this wider or huge awareness. But access it you need to explore the image of the bird by using Being the Person or Thing
blackbird or black bird Unconscious urges. At times we may relate to enormous waves of feeling in an anxious way, and this relationship of anxiety may be represented by a black bird. The bird may be shown attacking something or oneself because that is how we relate to the emotions or energies – i.e. we feel attacked by them. The black bird can also link with feelings about death, the negative aspect of mother, or something unconscious that we are becoming aware of.
chicken If being eaten suggests nourishment. Otherwise a female, or the female in a male; being ‘chicken’ or scared.
Example: A large cockerel was amongst them and to my amused pleasure began immediately to chase the hens. They all ran madly away. My father was there now and said the chickens wouldn’t lay with that chicken chasing them. I said it wasn’t a chicken that a cockerel, and they would soon calm down. My mother now came. I said the chickens would stop running eventually because the cockerel was bigger than they. She said, no, it wasn’t the size, but the manner and attitude of his approach. She meant it caused an instinctive responses them.
When I explored the dream I realised that of course. I am a cockerel that is inwardly a chicken. I am chicken because I won’t see my own homosexuality. I am chicken because I have made myself a passive female. My mother says it is not the size, its the – inner – attitude. Of course, my inner attitude, as a chicken, is changing. I have been the size of a cockerel, but with the soul of a chicken – female.
The cockeral: a male or the male sexual characteristics; confidence.
The hen: The female, sometimes shown in male behaviout; mother; motherhood; being immersed in motherhood concerns and perhaps not having a life beyond that.
Chicks: This is a reference either to your own babyhood and feelings or events associated with it, or to external baby or babies. This may at times point to vulnerable people or assets.
Example: ‘An old lady made room for me to sit at the end of one of the three seats of a bus. As we drove away a very large chicken size baby bird flew in. It had short stubby wings and yellow down but flew expertly. I believe it first landed on the lady and chirped squeakily. But in it’s squeaks it actually spoke, saying it had lost its mother. It sounded as if it were crying.’ Andrew.
This dream is clearly about Andrew becoming aware that at some time he felt abandoned by his mother, and this part of him needs helping to grow into greater maturity and independence. See Ages of Love
Idioms: chicken feed; chicken hearted; she’s no chicken; cock of the walk; don’t count your chicks/chickens before they are hatched..
crow rook raven Being carrion birds, and so often seen near corpses, they are linked with death or feelings about death; bad news; fear; unconscious feelings. Some people see them as associated with death, mostly because that is how they are used in films. But crows are a group bird and are supportive of their fellows.
It can at times depict the negative aspect of father. The dark intelligence in underhanded people or animals; forces in life that seem to have intelligent direction yet are not outwardly visible.
cormorant Intellectual ideas that have the power to dig deep and bring up unconscious wisdom. Because the cormorant is used to dive and catch fish, it might suggest you are practising some form of introspection or self examination.
crane Inner feelings about wholeness; good luck. The ability to deal harmoniously with the libido or energy within.
cuckoo Wanting to, or feeling your partner is, having sex outside your relationship; pregnant with child from another man than ones partner.
dove Peace; lacking aggressiveness; awareness of one’s potential; religious experience; relatedness. See: religion and dreams.
duck Because a duck can fly and also dive under water it can represent both your ability to raise your awareness, to expand your mind and horizons, and also to look into what is hidden under the surface of life. And its ability to float and swim on the surface of water shows it can survive in the conscious mind.
Idioms can also suggest other meanings such as sitting duck, like a duck takes to water, dead duck and lame duck.
eagle buzzard hawk Sometimes the hunting, providing parent; dominance; a male figure; an uplifting power of feelings or ideas; a protective influence; a threatening influence. Often the ability to develop an integrated vision or perception out of a wide range of experience. This is because the height of the bird and its steady gaze give it unusual perception and wide awareness.
Idioms: Watch like a hawk; eagle eyed.
feather or feathers See: feather.
goose/geese Freedom; your soul; wanderlust; foolishness or group conformity. In some cases you might use the goose as a symbol for life long relationship.
hawk Often a messenger or a far seeing creature. Because it flies high it had an overview of what it surveys. It can therefore signify the spirit or the flight of the soul.
heron A heron is a very still bird and often stands for ages looking into the water. So in your dream it may signify patience and the ability to look deeply into you. As such it may show you things about yourself that are very important.
It catches fish, meaning it brings up things that are usually hidden and are for your personal growth and nourishment. To explore its deeper meaning see Techniques for Exploring your Dreams
owl Because the owl sees in the dark it represents our intuitive sense that ‘sees’ what is happening in the subtle areas of our feeling and experience. This sense ‘feeds’ by watching or acting as an integrating function with the many dark or hidden aspects of our experience and behaviour. Because this part of our mental process is aware of the hidden activities in the depths of our body and mind, it can initiate our conscious self into the mysteries of life and death. If one can imagine having a council of all living things, we would all have in common the drive to reproduce, and there would be huge links of understanding regarding care and rearing of young and perhaps of love for mate. The unconscious seems to have a sense of this synthesis of all life, and the owl, representing it, speaks with this sort of collective wisdom; a wise advisor.
Because the owl as a dream symbol is an actual doorway to the usually hidden side of life, we may sometimes feel fear or danger in regard to it. In some mythologies the owl was connected with death, and might act as a messenger regarding the death of a family member. For instance in Jewish tradition it is unlucky to dream of an owl, but okay to dream of any other bird.
Example: ‘I was standing with my wife at the end of the garden of the house I lived in as a child. We were looking over the fence to the rising meadow beyond. She said, ‘Look at that bird in the tree there.’ On our right, in a small ash tree, an enormous owl perched. It was at least four feet high, the biggest bird I have ever seen. I recognised it in the dream as a greater hooded owl, which was not native to our country. I was so excited I ran into the house to telephone someone – zoo, police, newspapers? – to tell them about the bird. I cannot remember contacting anyone, but felt the bird was there in some way to meet me. Also it was hungry and looking at next door’s bantams. So I wondered what I could give it to eat.’ David P.
This shows the positive side of David’s relationship with his wife. The garden represents the behaviour boundaries which arose from his childhood. But he is growing – the garden – and looking beyond them through his marriage. The amazing bird is the deep feelings he touches because he has a mate like any other natural creature. Out of his mating he becomes aware of drives to build a home – nest – and give himself to his mate. These are natural and are a part of his unconscious or spiritual nature. The bird is a hooded owl which can see in the dark – the unconscious – meaning David is realising things he had never ‘seen’ before. The bird is masked, because David through loving is learning to put his ego aside, which is a necessity for touching the wider dimension of life or the unconscious. The hunger of the bird shows an intimate detail of what David has learned from his wife. She had been working as a waitress and bringing home pieces of chicken for him, saved from her own meal. The spiritual side of David wants to develop this quality of self-giving, which his wife’s love had helped him see.
Idioms: Wise old owl; wisdom of the owl; night owl; owlish – looking wise or solemn. See aura; spiritual life in dreams.
parrot Repeating without judgement what others have said; accepting or copying something without evaluating it. Ability to speak.
peacock Pride; self display; vanity; the desire to be more attractive; sometimes the same as phoenix.
In some cultures the peacock represent the soul or psyche – ones sense of self with all ones individual memories and characteristics. Because the peacock could shed all its beautiful feathers and then grow them again, early Christians saw it as a symbol of resurrection and immortality.
As the peacock is a male bird displaying for the sake of a mate, it can also obviously represent male sexuality in its proud, ostentatious or displaying mode.
Example: There were trees and a grassy patch of ground. A dog was having puppies. But a great flock of small black birds emerged running and skimming over the grass. I heard myself remark, “They are smaller than the others and there are more of them.” Then, from among the trees emerged a large peacock, tail half raised. The dream left me feeling that from small things could emerge something large and beautiful. Mrs E. E.
penguin The penguin hardly ever appears in dreams, or in fact in literature generally, so I have not been able to gather from people’s dreams how they use this symbol. From common associations however, it is likely to represent foolishness; a difficult life situation; coldness in relationships. Because of recent studies of the penguin and the major National Geographic film, the penguin might now depict lasting love and wonderful care and survival skills.
It can also represent something the rare and unusual.
phoenix The ability to find a new impulse, new strength, new growth even in death; the power in oneself to transform the dying, depressed, dark and desperate into new endeavour and growth.
sparrow The ordinary but living parts of you that are special.
stork The soul; symbol of birth or babyhood, and perhaps parenthood; the beauty of the wider awareness of the unconscious.
swallow It promises the ability of a mind that can easily move and shift perspectives and so see different peoples view points, and alo a mind that is intuitive.
swan Grace; beauty; dignity. In mythology often represents the psyche or soul and its connection with a spiritual world; the side of human nature usually hidden because unconscious, often referred to as the spiritual – meaning the consciousness of connection with all life.
The swan in your dream may be linked with an ending of something due to the association with ‘the swan song’ – a final act. It can also suggest amorousness, or the ideal of love in sexuality, and as such may represent virginity or a blend of male and female.
vulture A relative waiting for you to die – or vice versa; people around you trying to live on you – or vice versa; difficult feelings about dependants; an environment of ill will or hopelessness.
white bird Anything white usually depicts thoughts and feeling that are inspirational or uplifting. They are often shown as similar to the white Pegasus, the lower sexual energies lifted into a power of wider awareness.
Wren or very small bird: A vulnerable but exciting intuition – something unusual and valuable entering your awareness.
Example: My dog looked keenly passed me, excitedly. I began to feel a build-up of excitement and “presence”. This feeling of presence became very intense, so that I knew the woman was now here in spirit. It was unmistakable. At the height of this a tiny bird, like a Wren, flew out of a wall or hedge, and I knew this was the spirit of the woman reborn. I knew that all was well, as she was now spiritually reborn.
Useful Questions and Hints:
Idioms: A bird; Charm the birds from the trees; a bird told me; the bird has flown; bird in the hand; bird of ill omen; free as a bird; odd bird.
Is the bird in my dream expressing any of the important stages of growth such as babyhood, leaving the nest, or making a nest?
What quality or attitude is the bird expressing and how does that relate to me?
What is the rest of the dream indicating about the bird?
Definitely try using Talking As and Processing Dreams.
Comments
A medium size yellow bird flew into my house and landed on my lap, the bird wanted me to pet it, it snuggled into me so I pet it, when I pet it, the bird made a noise like it was hurt. THe feeling I got was that the bird was so sweet and happy even though it was hurt it was flying around a bit. I felt sad that the bird was hurt so I found a bird cage in my house and cleaned it up to put the bird in to take it out of the house to go to a vet for help. My husband came home and didn’t want me to take time away from him to help the bird, then I woke up. Please help me understand this. DeeDee
DeeDee – The yellow bird is your soul that loves to be free, to fly and explore, to investigate and know, to go beyond the physical into the wonderful dimensions of mind. It feels pain because it has been contained in a small world, and your desire to take it to the vet is a desire to heal a part of you that has so much sweetness to give.
Your husband can denote the smallness of mind you feel which you are trapped in. Whether it is actually your husband who lives in such small interests, even so you must make an effort to expand.
Tony
I had dream that there was two small blue birds flying around a house, I open the door and a big blue bird flys in and killed the two small blue birds. I then picked up the two small blue birds and started to chew on them, after relizing they ate birds I spat them out. Any thoughts on this please.
Peter – The bluebird usually depicts realisations of an intuitive nature, and usually uplifting ones.
That the big blue bird flew in and killed the two small ones seems to be saying that a much bigger idea or intuitive feeling came and took the life out of the other two small ones. So having realised that this new inspiration was superior the other two lacked life.
Chewing is about chewing over ideas or thoughts, so realising that these are not what you thought they were you spit them out.
Tony
Last night I dreamt of walking up to a large tree, noticed branches growing out I’d the ground surrounding the tree and seeing a bird nest and seeing a dead bird in the nest along with the broken eggshell. I then noticed several other branches surrounding the tree with the same vision, at least 20 or so nests with dead birds and broken shells in them. I remember feeling such despair in seeing this and stating in my dream that I just couldn’t understand what had happened. Any thoughts? It was so vivid and the meaning of the just hatched dead birds is plaguing my thoughts.
Lenny – The tree is the main thrust of your life and its energy – your libido. And something under the earth, in your unconscious has blocked or cut off the flow so that it is now sprouting out where it can.
The nest and the dead birds are another image describing that. Perhaps it means your sexual expression, or even your creative urge has been blocked and so cannot develop to full expression.
The only thing I can suggest is that you use your imagination to find out and even deal with the cause. I suggest you imagine digging down to find out where these offshoots originate from. Leave yourself open to any spontaneous images that occur and work with them towards changing what you find. And feel it if you can.
Tony
I had a dream where I was either laying down looking at the sky or just looking up at a flock of big dark birds in a circular motion about three times. I remember feeling serene by the experience.
I had a dream that I was being driven along a bridge spanning a huge ravine. As I looked to my right, a massive blackbird was gliding in semi-circles, as if it was searching for something. I could not stop looking at it – eventually, the bird noticed me as well and maintained eye contact. I kept glancing between the bird and the road as it flew next to my car, glaring menacingly back at me. As we traveled further, the bird transformed into an entirely black man – even his eyes were black – riding on the back of some indescribable machine or animal. As I reached the end of the bridge, I got out of the van or bus i was in (as if it was a predetermined stop). This birdman landed and began to follow me. The only way I can describe the place I found myself in is as a post-apocalyptic slum – ragged, dying people wandering about, mounds of waste on either side of the road, thick smoke in the air. I noticed that this man kept following me, and I had the intense feeling that he wanted to kill me. I changed course several times until I got to a run-down train station that was still somehow operational. I got on the train and did not see the man again.
Jon – Have you had a brush with depression or dark feelings lately? For that appears to be the theme of your dream. The huge ravine is a deadly place psychologically, but you had a bridge over it, so you must have developed skills to deal with it. Then the blackbird/black man is a sign that a huge unconscious darkness, probably a hurt from childhood that threatened you with death, was hovering near you at the time of the dream. But instead of running away from it with fear you pressed on and found way out of it.
The blackness would have killed the part of you that is coping. Many people go under at such a time. A systematic review estimated the size and burden of mental disorders and other disorders of the brain in Europe in 2010. It found that 38% of the population suffers from mental disorders, and that disorders of the mind account for about 26.6% of the total disease burden. And that is Europe; the figures for the USA are worse, and we live in a sick society. So you are a survivor and you need to give yourself credit for that.
Tony
I dreamed that I went to get my mail and their was a dead blackbird there I was shocked then he opened his eyes and came back to life , what does this mean?
Karen – It shows you being afraid of death – black birds have the association with death.
But your wonderful dream process told you that you should not be frightened, because what has the appearance of death is Life.
Tony
HI, I had a horrible dream that I was being attacked by a white cockatoo and a green parrot and they were ripping off their claws and inserting them under my skin. It was very painful and they did it over and over again and I could not escape. I have felt shaken by it all day today.
I had a dream that I was in this body of water (like a shallow pond or something) and this macaw was chasing after me. I was never attacked, but he did bite me on my chest, and continued to follow me everywhere I went, wanting to hold on to me I guess. I even went into a house (no clue who’s) and the macaw came in under the door! It was at this point that I woke up, and now am intrigued about what it meant, if anything.
Mathew – The pond suggests recent memories or feeling you have immersed yourself in. And the bird – are you sure it isn’t a bird, a human one who is trying to hang on to you?
Other than that a bird could be a worrying though or intuition that really wants to let you know what it is. But I do not get a clue of that from you dream.
Tony
So Im looking to the meaning of a dream that for some reason is sticking with me today. I dont rember it all but I was back home (the place was familiar but the building I was in was not) I rember I was watching somone (unknowen person) doing somthing and he started a fire, the fire jumped onto his back and he was immediatly ingulfed in flames. there were many people there and we were all yelling at the man to stop, drop, and roll (I specificaly rember saying that several times) I couldnt get to the man but someone did they coverd him in a blanket and tackled him. My wife and I were suddenly at my grandparents house in the back yard where fresh new sod was being put down, we layed downin the grass and a bee repeatdly stung me in my head while that was happening a brown hawk or young eagle (Im not sure but hawk is what has been sticking with me) flew down from the fence and nicked my wife in the forhead, no pain or wound was produced, I rolled over to defend her and was attacked by the hawk it landed on my forearm and bit my left pointer finger at the center knuckle ( at this point the dream was like it was really happening) there was a little pain, the bird was not trying to harm me as im sure a bird of such power could eaisly take off a finger; but would not let go of my finger. My grandfather ran off the portch and was yelling dont hurt him hes fussy like that!! he said hell let go just wait a minute. I stoped fighting the bird and he perched on my arm he specifically looked me in the eye and I felt a connection with the hawk. I woke up. its been a little over 2 hours and this dream is still lingering any hint as to the meaning if any?
BlackWolf – The dream starts with you in a situation you know but you are unfamiliar with. In other words it is about something that is facing you, that is trying to get your attention, but you are still unconscious of. The fire is probably something you felt a strong feeling about but then let go of and put out of mind.
The scene with the grass links it with your family and your wife – your relationship with her. It isn’t a terrible thing at all, because the bee and the hawk are simply something that keeps niggling you to give attention to. Grandfather represent family wisdom, gained through generations of experience. Then you have a glimpse of something that is a form of insight – looking at the hawk.
I would suggest sitting and in imagination talking to the hawk, preferably with your wife listening. Don’t ru9ch it, but le things develop, and it can gradually arise in you what it is. The keys are passionate feelings, being in a family atmosphere, with your wife, and something trying to get through to you.
Tony
In my dream I sqeezed a very small bird; bright blue in color from a pore in my cheek. It surprised me and I tried to catch it but it flew away and the dream abruptly ended.
Observations and comments are invited.
Johann – I believe blue birds are very hard to catch, and if you hold onto one it could die.
As William Blake has written:
He who bends to himself a joy,
Does the winged life destroy;
But he who kisses the joy as it flies
Lives in Eternity’s sunrise.
And that is what the dream is about – for the blue bird is an image of your soul taking flight.
Tony
I had a dream last night, It was summer and I had a white long dress. I walked up hill, barefoot, on green green grass. Infront of me was a big white house almost like a mansion. Suddenly I stopped and looked down, there, next to my feet, was a small bush or small tree with many small brown birds.. They cant have been larger than a childs thumb. On the other side of the birds was a man, smiling at me..
Mia – I imagine that this dream left you with a very nice feeling, one you should keep and replay often
You were in white, feeling good and clean about yourself, and climbing up a hill shows you ascending to a new or wider view of yourself. It sounded easy so maybe you have done this before.
Then the bush and the birds – as you must have read on the entry on birds, they are symbols of the enormous freedom of thought, of imagination, or spiritual freedom. In other words of the ability the mind has to recognise it is not limited to the life of the body and its senses. It can lift up and see great vistas in a sweep if it opens its wings. And as you have many of them it says you have a great propensity for a wonderful inner life, even of creative imagination.
And then the man’s face – you can think of him as your true soul mate who can fly with you like the birds. But it is probably not an external person, but your male self that you will or have already married.
Tony
I had a dream a few weeks ago and its been at me since. I was out with family don’t know how many or even who we were packing through what appeared to be a abandoned city going towards the woods there were eagles? picking up people
taking them up and dropping them this I remember very clearly. I was yelling at everyone to take cover but as I remember they were not. I woke up!
also one more.. I was small this one is at least 35 years old. I came out of my childhood home at dawn. the streets were like a golden cobblestone I looked to the eastern sky and I saw all the planets lined up as if I was on a different world and very close it seamed, sidewalks were a grass? animals everywhere. never forgot it.
PJ – You were a lucky one to find a way into Wonderland so early in life. The hard part is finding your way back there.
As for the eagle dream it is a pity about your dream technique. Like may people you believe anything in a dream, such as your eagles, are a force outside you that can do you harm.
If you are honest, what else can there be but your thoughts, beliefs, fears and hopes playing strange games with you while you sleep?
Seriously though, the eagles are threatening because you fear some fear, and in dream they mirror what you believe or fear. And in fact everything in your dreams are forces and talents you have but have not claimed. So instead of feeling the eagles can pick you up and drop you, try imagining being an eagle and know what it is like to fly.
See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/example-15-life-changes/
Tony
My husband had a dream that he was walking myself and our two young kids to the front door of the house; there was a bird nest on top of the porch light next to the door, and as we neared the door he could hear the mother bird become agitated at our approach. When he reached the door the mother bird dove at him from the nest, at which point he awoke with a physical start (he actually ducked, both in the dream and physically). He told me the dream, then rolled over in bed – but I feel disturbed…
I just left a dream about a white and a dark hawk, a chicken coop, water gushing in a house, etc.
I just remembered that when I was in the house in the dream after the water started pouring in from everywhere, I looked down and saw the bodies of two birds laying side-by-side on a hearth-like area. On the left was the body of a turkey and on the right a large chicken.
Thank you!
I had a weird dream that I cannot find the meaning to absolutely anywhere – I dreamt that there was a bird (pigeon) and my 9 month old son crawled after it, caught it and started biting it…… very disturbing dream.
Haley – I see that a child can mean what is happening between you and your man – and your son biting the bird? Do you have any worries about the relationship?
Sorry, but that is all I can come up with. If it is crazy let it go.
Tony