Catch your dreams. Get lucid.
A calm dream journal and lucid-dreaming trainer — a gentle cue before your alarm coaxes you into the dream, and a quiet network of dreamers whose dreams rhyme with yours.
Coming soon · join the first dreamersWhy it exists
Your dreams say more about you than almost anything you do awake — and they vanish within minutes of waking. I Dream Stuff is built to catch them, visualize them, and read them.
A gentle nudge just before your alarm coaxes you toward the dream — then a one-question-at-a-time capture holds it in the first sixty seconds, before it’s gone.
Turn the dream into a symbolic dream-card: one striking image that lets you step back, sit with it, and think harder about what really happened.
Read any dream through dozens of lenses — mythic, psychological, astrological and more — to draw out what it might be saying about you.
And then comes the part we can’t quite explain yet.
Train yourself to wake up inside a dream. Carry a private proof phrase and try to speak it while you’re there. Then we look across the network: who else dreamed something like you did last night — and how close was it? How many landed on the same image, the same place, the same feeling? Anything eerily similar, too precise for coincidence — the kind of overlap that hints at a connection deeper than either of you knew.
A night with the app
Set your alarm. See tonight's shared community scent and the place to hold in mind as you fall asleep.
Bedside Mode glows a soft, symbolic scene with an ambient soundscape that slowly fades to dark.
Five minutes before waking — deep in vivid REM — a subtle sound and shift of light cue the dreaming mind.
A gentle alarm, then a one-question-at-a-time capture that never loses a word.
By day
Lucidity is a daytime habit before it's ever a nighttime event. Lucid is a two-minute arcade game that trains the question into your bones — true-or-false about dreams and sleep, and every so often the only one that matters: am I dreaming right now? Ask it enough by daylight and one night you'll ask it inside a dream. That's the moment you wake up without waking up.
Set the scene at dusk, catch the dream at dawn — and in between, keep the question close.
The hypothesis
A dream is a world the mind builds in the dark — its streets and weather, the faces and the things they say, all authored by you. And any authored world can be read a hundred ways:
◐ Jungian ⌘ Freudian ☿ Ancient & Mythic ⚔ Threat Simulation ◉ Gestalt ⚡ Activation-Synthesis ✶ Astrological
But what if a dream had more than one author? What if two people could build the same world — and wake holding the same proof?
I Dream Stuff is a gentle way to test exactly that.
(It'll probably fail. But that's okay — that's the fun of it.)
A soft audio-and-light cue, timed to the richest REM of the night, faint enough not to wake you but noticeable to the dreaming mind. The doorway to lucidity.
Twelve anchor scents, one shared by the whole community each night. A note in the room ties memory to the dream — and to everyone dreaming with you.
Original, gently animated dream locations to visualize as you fall asleep, each with its own ambient soundscape — symbolic, not literal, a jumping-off place for the imagination.
Capture is built for groggy thumbs and fail-safe saving. Search your whole archive; watch your patterns and lucid rate grow.
An AI reading for each dream, and a deeper reader that finds the threads across your journal — wonder, with its feet on the ground.
A personal star map that grows with every dream, with milestone Seals and cooperative community goals. No streaks-as-pressure, no leaderboards.
Tonight's real moon and the planets riding the sky, a new dream myth each day, and a quiet daily reading for your sign — a small observatory in your pocket.
The thing no one else does
Every dream is read for resonance with others — shared places, shared symbols, the same scent on the same night. Choose a private proof phrase, and the experiment begins: become lucid, and say it to someone in the dream. When two people carry each other's phrase, and both were lucid, you reach the Confluence — the strongest sign yet that you met in a dream.
Two strangers. Two dreams. The same symbols.
"You may have been there together."
How we build it
Free to begin. Bring your own scent, or none at all.
Coming soon · join the first dreamersVIDEO_EMBED_URL in the page source to your YouTube or Vimeo embed link.