2- A child learns very early on to make comparisons, and this is one of the things that we never lose. Something is bigger or smaller rather than simply big or small. In dreams size is relative. We might recognise somewhere we know, but find it is larger or smaller than we thought it to be.
It is the size within the dream that is relevant.
3- Spiritually size is irrelevant.
It is more the appreciation of feeling that becomes important.
A ‘big’ feeling is something that consumes us, whereas a ‘little’ perception may be only part of what really exists. [1]
The contrast between fat and thin, or thick and thin, is a subjective evaluation that will often depend on cultural differences.
The issue of size in dreams is dependent on our own personal evaluation.
To be actively reducing an article may mean that we are trying to make a project or task manageable. [2]
How large or how small things look in a dream is a very revealing factor.
For example, seeing yourself as minute might indicate that your self-esteem needs work. Conversely, seeing someone in giant form reveals idolization, sometimes to a dangerous point that a person cannot possiblv live up to in reality. Over- or underem-phasized objects can be interpreted similarly, like a large heart equating to an immense capacity to give and receive love, or a tiny wall indicating something you see as only a very small obstacle to your goals.
Narrow or wide: Narrow might reveal narrow-mindedness, while wide angles show more openness and receptivity. [3]
Size can represent: perceived power, strength, importance, or prominence in your mind (the larger the object, the more you may feel it has these qualities), a particular point in a process (such as a tiny sapling representing an early point in a process, or a huge, dead tree representing the end of a process).
See also: Big, Small, Measure, Bigger, Getting, Smaller, Getting [4]
It is the size within the dream that is relevant. [5]
Line slope Writing which rises shows optimism and cheerfulness; if it sags downwards, it shows physical and mental weariness. [6]
It is more the appreciation of feeling that becomes important.
A ‘big’ feeling is something that consumes us, whereas a ‘little’ perception may be only part of what really exists. [8]
2. The power one has or others have over one.
3. The relative importance of things or events. [9]
