Wow, I don't really know how to answer this question...... I used to dream of wolves too and I made a hobby of writing books. My dreams would tell me what ideas I should write in there next. But I grew to loved writing so if you don't like writing make another hobby like drawing them or figuring something out that gets you to work with wolves. If you have your dreams like a story then start to write.
The symbolic meaning of wolves has changed significantly since the middle of the 20th Century, so their meaning as dream images can be contradictory. In the past, wolves were almost universally feared and reviled, so any dream about them would reflect fear, anxiety or even terror. The wolf itself would symbolize danger, particularly evil, predatory danger. However, in recent decades, wolves have come to represent the spirituality of nature, wild innocense, loyalty and protection. So the interpretation of your particular dream depends on the emotions experienced in the dream, whether terror and fear or wonder and joy.
A wolf in a dream represents an untamed aspect or instinct from the unconscious. Usually, the dreamer is required to befriend the wolf, and integrated this untamed aspect into the individual's day to day personality.
To have a dream about a wolf.
Answer:
The dream expresses the dreamer's wild, untamed nature, perhaps with a longing to escape from the restraints of conventional society. Beyond that, the meaning of the dream depends on whether the emotional tone is dark and threatening, suggesting fear or anger, or whether the tone is joyful and exciting, suggesting feelings of freedom and adventure.
It is not possible to suggest a single meaning because wolves mean very different things to different individuals. Wolves used to represent lurking danger, deadly attack, violent death and were viewed as the stereotypical evil predator. Since the popular rise of New Age spirituality, wolves also may represent natural freedom, wild spirituality, loyalty and wisdom. The meaning of your specific dream depends on your own perception of wolves as well as on the emotions you experienced in the dream.
It means that you found someone to take care of you that he/she is always going to be there for you even through the worst times even if it means death for him/her
The meaning of this dream does not hinge on the color of the wolves as much as on what the wolves are doing, what you are doing or seeing, and on the emotions you experience during the dream. Without these factors, one could only offer a random guess at the meaning of your particular dream.
I would recommend reading Drawing the Dream of the Wolves by Whitney Davis.
An accurate interpretation of this dream would depend on more information about what happened in the dream as well as on the dreamer's perception of wolves. In general, wolves are very popular as a New Age symbol for natural power, wilderness, freedom, and loyalty to one's "pack" or family.
It means that you are having a random dream.
I had a couple of them dreams scared the crap out of me. It could mean to watch who you keep close to you becareful they might be wolves in sheeps clothing and ready to turn on you.
It means that you have just dreamt about the Jungle Book.
If by sleep you mean hibernate, the answer is no.
A wolf in a dream represents an untamed aspect or instinct from the unconscious. Usually, the dreamer is required to befriend the wolf, and integrated this untamed aspect into the individual's day to day personality.
To/for the wolves; by/with/from the wolves.
In dreams, birth symbolizes transformations and new beginnings. When wolves are in your dream it can represent being selfish, clever, and evading something or someone. Personally, I feel this dream symbolizes you noticing a darker, more devious side of your personality.
You watch to much Twilight. Watch something that has nothing to do with tribal markings or wolves.
There is no specifically "biblical" interpretation of wolves in dreams. References to wolves are not common in the Scriptures, and they are consistently presented as dangerous and evil. In Isaiah and Jeremiah, wolves are listed among other wild animals of desolate places, while in Ezekiel, wolves are described as vicious and hungry. In the Gospels, false teachers are compared with wolves in sheep's clothing, and they are a metaphor for hostile and corrupting influences in both the Gospels and Acts.