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Web & Frontend Development @briancolinger Updated 2/26/2026

Dreaming OpenClaw Skill - ClawHub

Do you want your AI agent to automate Dreaming workflows? This free skill from ClawHub helps with web & frontend development tasks without building custom tools from scratch.

What this skill does

Creative exploration during quiet hours. Turns idle heartbeat time into freeform thinking — hypotheticals, future scenarios, reflections, unexpected connections. Use when you want your agent to do something meaningful during low-activity periods instead of just returning HEARTBEAT_OK. Outputs written to files for human review later (like remembering dreams in the morning).

Install

npx clawhub@latest install dreaming

Full SKILL.md

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nameversiondescription
dreaming1.0.1Creative exploration during quiet hours. Turns idle heartbeat time into freeform thinking — hypotheticals, future scenarios, reflections, unexpected connections. Use when you want your agent to do something meaningful during low-activity periods instead of just returning HEARTBEAT_OK. Outputs written to files for human review later (like remembering dreams in the morning).

Dreaming

Creative, exploratory thinking during quiet hours. Not task-oriented work — freeform associative exploration that gets captured for later review.

Environment Variables

Variable Required Default Description
WORKSPACE No Skill's parent directory (scripts/..) Root directory where data/ and memory/ live. Optional — defaults to the skill's parent directory, which is correct for standard workspace layouts.

Directories Written

The skill writes to these directories (relative to WORKSPACE):

  • data/dream-state.json — Tracks nightly dream count and last dream date
  • data/dream-config.json — Optional custom topic configuration (user-created)
  • memory/dreams/YYYY-MM-DD.md — Dream output files (written by the agent, not the script)

Setup

1. Configure quiet hours and topics

Edit skills/dreaming/scripts/should-dream.sh to customize:

  • QUIET_START / QUIET_END — when dreaming can happen (default: 11 PM - 7 AM)
  • TOPICS array — categories of exploration (see defaults for examples)

2. Create state and output directories

mkdir -p data memory/dreams

3. Add to HEARTBEAT.md

Add this section to your heartbeat routine (during quiet hours):

## Dream Mode (Quiet Hours Only)

Check if it's time to dream:

\`\`\`bash
DREAM_TOPIC=$(./skills/dreaming/scripts/should-dream.sh 2>/dev/null) && echo "DREAM:$DREAM_TOPIC" || echo "NO_DREAM"
\`\`\`

**If DREAM_TOPIC is set:**

1. Parse the topic (format: `category:prompt`)
2. Write a thoughtful exploration to `memory/dreams/YYYY-MM-DD.md`
3. Keep it genuine — not filler. If the well is dry, skip it.
4. Append to the file if multiple dreams that night

How It Works

The skills/dreaming/scripts/should-dream.sh script acts as a gate:

  1. Checks if current time is within quiet hours
  2. Checks if we've already hit the nightly dream limit
  3. Rolls dice based on configured probability
  4. If all pass: returns a random topic and updates state
  5. If any fail: exits non-zero (no dream this heartbeat)

State tracked in data/dream-state.json:

{
  "lastDreamDate": "2026-02-03",
  "dreamsTonight": 1,
  "maxDreamsPerNight": 1,
  "dreamChance": 1.0
}

Writing Dreams

When the script returns a topic, write to memory/dreams/YYYY-MM-DD.md:

# Dreams — 2026-02-04

## 01:23 — The Future of X (category-name)

[Your exploration here. Be genuine. Think freely. Make connections.
This isn't a report — it's thinking out loud, captured.]

Guidelines:

  • One dream = one topic, explored thoughtfully
  • Timestamp each entry
  • Append if multiple dreams in one night
  • Skip if you have nothing worth saying — forced dreams are worthless
  • This is for your human to review later, like reading a journal

Customizing Topics

Option A: Config file (recommended) — Create data/dream-config.json:

{
  "topics": [
    "future:What could this project become?",
    "creative:A wild idea worth exploring",
    "reflection:Looking back at recent work"
  ]
}

This keeps your customizations outside the skill directory (safe for skill updates).

**Option B: Edit script directly** — Modify the `DEFAULT_TOPICS` array in `should-dream.sh`. Format: `category:prompt`

Default categories:

- `future` — What could [thing] become?
- `tangent` — Interesting technology or concepts worth exploring
- `strategy` — Long-term thinking
- `creative` — Wild ideas that might be crazy or brilliant
- `reflection` — Looking back at recent work
- `hypothetical` — What-if scenarios
- `connection` — Unexpected links between domains

Add domain-specific topics relevant to your work. The prompt should spark genuine exploration, not busywork.

## Tuning

In `data/dream-state.json`:

Add domain-specific topics relevant to your work. The prompt should spark genuine exploration, not busywork.

## Tuning

In `data/dream-state.json`:

- **maxDreamsPerNight** — cap on dreams per night (default: 1)
- **dreamChance** — probability per check (default: 1.0 = guaranteed if under limit)

Lower `dreamChance` for more sporadic dreaming. Raise `maxDreamsPerNight` for more prolific nights.
Original URL: https://github.com/openclaw/skills/blob/main/skills/briancolinger/dreaming

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