
Cognitive-emotional processing
Emotional tone lens
Starts from the feeling that stayed after waking, then checks whether the scene carries the same mood. This lens reads tone, not fixed symbolism.
Passport field
Emotional pattern
Answer three short prompts about a single dream. Viberole analyzes the entry and returns a gentle, non-diagnostic signal you can save to Passport or structure further in Reflect.
Scene, emotion, and the question that stayed with you.
Pattern matching turns the entry into emotional tone, tension, and next-step clues.
Carry the result into Reflect, Passport, or a safer conversation start.
Analysis know-how
Each card is a different reading tradition applied to the same dream entry. Together they form the signal in the test above, without turning the dream into one fixed meaning.

Cognitive-emotional processing
Starts from the feeling that stayed after waking, then checks whether the scene carries the same mood. This lens reads tone, not fixed symbolism.
Passport field
Emotional pattern

Jungian interpersonal reading
Looks for reachability, distance, role pressure, family expectations, or conflict with a specific person without naming a single dream meaning.
Passport field
Relationship tension

Jung-inspired amplification
Tracks doors, water, phones, houses, and paths as motifs in your scene. It explores personal association, not a dictionary definition.
Passport field
Relationship tension

Behavioral dream continuity
Reads what the dream body kept doing: arriving late, searching, hiding, losing something, or trying to reach someone.
Passport field
Action pattern

Guided self-reflection
Treats the unresolved question as the most important clue and uses it to suggest the next Passport step instead of a verdict.
Passport field
Suggested next layer

Continuity hypothesis
Connects the scene to waking-life themes such as work pressure, decision fatigue, belonging, or unfinished business.
Passport field
Conversation suggestion
Free analysis runs all six lenses with structured pattern matching. Gold plans add AI synthesis on the same schema. Signals are guidance, not diagnosis.
Read trust boundariesThese editorial guides offer multiple reading angles. When you are ready for a signal tied to your scene, use the test above or return here after reading.
Ex-partner dreams are common after breakups and during new relationships. Read emotional processing, attachment, and symbol angles without treating the dream as a verdict.
Read guideRoughly two thirds of adults report recurring dreams. Learn stress triggers, unmet needs, habit-loop mechanics, and practical ways to change the script.
Read guideMissing a flight, an exam, or an event in a dream is a classic stress dream. Read temporal anxiety, perfectionism, and what to audit while awake.
Read guideUnknown rooms, messy houses, and endless corridors are spatial metaphors for identity and boundaries. Read transition, clutter, and discovery angles.
Read guideTeeth dreams are common and emotionally loud. Here are practical reading angles, two real scenarios, and a path to your own dream signal.
Read guideBeing chased in a dream often reflects pressure you are running from while awake. Read scenarios, lenses, and how to build your own signal.
Read guideFlying dreams can feel freeing or unstable. Learn how to read agency, escape, and tone without reducing the dream to one symbol.
Read guideFalling dreams often arrive with a jolt. Read them through control loss, emotional tone, and waking-life continuity instead of one fixed symbol.
Read guideFree dream analysis test
Step 1 of 3: Describe the scene
Start with the scene. Honest detail makes the signal clearer.
One paragraph is enough. Include the place, people, or action that stayed vivid.
What this test returns
Emotional pattern
Maps the emotional tone that stayed after waking.
Relationship tension
Surfaces relationship or role tension inside the scene.
Action pattern
Turns repeated action into a practical next-step clue.
Free analysis runs on structured pattern matching. Paid plans unlock AI synthesis for the same signal schema. Your dream text is not saved from this preview.