About
A dictionary of dreams
Oneero gathers what dreamers, mystics, and psychologists have made of the images that visit us in sleep - and lets you read them side by side.
Where the symbols come from
Humans have been reading their dreams for as long as they've been having them. A snake, a flood, a falling tooth - the same images recur across centuries and cultures, and almost every age has had its own confident account of what they mean. Oneero collects those accounts in one place: a growing catalogue of dream imagery, each symbol traced through the traditions that have tried to interpret it.
Every tradition, side by side
We don't pick a winner. A single symbol might carry a Jungian reading, a Freudian one, a cultural or religious inheritance, and what neuroscience now suspects is happening in the sleeping brain - so we lay them out together and let you decide which one rings true. Dreams are personal; the meanings should be yours to weigh, not ours to dictate.
Interpretation, not prophecy
Oneero is a reference, not a fortune teller. Nothing here predicts the future, diagnoses a condition, or stands in for medical, psychological, or professional advice. It's a way to think about your dreams with a little more company and a little more history - a starting point for curiosity, not a verdict.
Free to wander
The catalogue is free to read, in full, without an account, so anyone curious at 3am can search a symbol and read what the ages have made of it.
Synthesis, for the whole dream
Dreams rarely arrive as a single symbol. Synthesis is our members' feature: gather the images from a dream into one basket and let it weave them into a single, holistic reading - one interpretation that accounts for the snake and the flood and the locked door together, rather than three entries read in isolation.