News

What does it mean when a person who has passed away appears in your dream?

Sooner or later, everyone loses someone close to them – it’s unfortunately, a part of life. However, the passing of specific loved ones can affect us more than we ever envisioned.

For example, have you ever had a person no longer alive appear in your dreams? The meaning behind them appearing in your dreams could be something you never thought of…

Shutterstock

Losing a loved one is very hard, and how you process the grief is up to each person. Some shed many tears, while many become silent and go retreat into themselves.

Others try to avoid the subject or behave outwardly without reaction. But there is one behavior many have in common – having dreams of the loved ones who have passed away. When it comes to what we dream at night, our subconscious is in charge, and if you’ve ever dreamed of a deceased person, it may have meaning.

So, can dreams carry messages from loved ones who have died?

According to Patrick McNamara, associate Professor of neurology and psychiatry at the Boston University School, there is a particular term for dreams about dead people – visitation dreams. It means that the deceased person is visiting you in your dream, or as McNamara explains it: “dreams of the bereaved where the dead appear to the bereaved in dreams and look to be very much alive.”

Shutterstock

The 67-year-old neuroscientist is an active blogger at Psychology Today, under his alias, Dream Catcher. Over the years, McNamara has often shared his thoughts and findings about dreams and their meaning. And visitation dreams usually have a logical explanation, according to him.

They help you cope with your grief, loss, and sorrow.

In one of his blog posts, he talks about a dream he had when his parents passed away. The dream was a so-called visitation dream, and after that, McNamara began to argue that these dreams were a sign of life after death.

“Now if I, an individual who studied dreams with a skeptical scientific cast of mind, could not shake the conviction that I had just communicated with my dead parents, how much stronger must be the conviction of someone with a less skeptical approach to dreams than me?,” McNamara writes.

Shutterstock

Patrick McNamara isn’t the only one who is interested in these dreams, and there have been several studies that dig deeper into this phenomenon.

In 2014, the American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care published a study that examined the impact of grief dreams. The study found that “dreams of the deceased occur frequently, can be highly meaningful and further healing from a loss.”

Themes in the dreams included “past memories or experiences, the deceased free of illness, memories of the deceased’s illness or time of death, the deceased in the afterlife appearing healthy, comfortable and at peace as well as the deceased communicating a message.”

In 2016, a team of Canadian researchers did an analysis of dreams from 76 bereaved middle-aged individuals. According to the study, 67.1% of the bereaved sample said that their dreams of the deceased helped them believe more in an afterlife. Around 70% characterized their dreams of the deceased as “visitations,” and 71% revealed that dreams of the deceased helped them feel more connected with the deceased.

Shutterstock

Psychologist Jennifer E. Shorter from the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology in Palo Alto, CA, has also done research on our brains and what we dream.

In her study called “Visitation Dreams in Grieving Individuals: A Phenomenological Inquiry into the Relationship Between Dreams and the Grieving,” she writes that it’s unknown how many people are experiencing visitation dreams.

But it can happen close to or long after a person has died. In her research, she has concluded that four factors characterize a visitation dream:

1. The people in your visitation dream look like they did when they were alive, although often healthier or younger.

2. The deceased often says something about how they are now, for example, that they are fine.

3. The message in the dream is experienced more telepathically than in the form of physical presence.

4. The dream is often calm and organized, almost harmonious.

Shutterstock

Have you ever dreamed of a loved one who died? What did it mean to you? Feel free to share your experience in our comments section, and make sure to share this article on Facebook if you think dreams can have meaning!

Related Posts

My Husband Threw My Hospital Bag Onto the Lawn While I Was in Labor and Called Me “Dead Weight.” The Very Next Morning, He Walked Into My Hospital Room Holding Another Woman’s Hand, Ready to End Our Marriage—Neither of Them Had Any Idea I Had Secretly Become the CEO of the Company That Was About to Decide Both of Their Futures.

The Morning He Thought He Had WonThe first thing Lauren Bennett remembered after giving birth was not the sound of her son’s cry.It was the click of expensive...

When the ER Doctor Questioned My 16-Year-Old Daughter’s “Fall,” My Husband Said I Was Overreacting and His Mother Claimed Our Child Was Making It Up—By Sunrise, They Were Already Trying to Take Her Away From Me, but Then I Checked the Necklace I Had Given Her and Found My Own Name Inside a Plan That Had Started Long Before That Night

The Night My Daughter Finally SpokeI still remember the exact way the emergency room physician looked at me before he spoke, because there are moments when a stranger’s...

After Four Hospital Visits Found Nothing, My 12-Year-Old Son Woke Me Before Dawn Clutching His Stomach—Then He Pointed at My New Wife and Whispered, “She Knows Why”… That Was When Our New Nanny Stepped Into the Room and Said, “He’s Telling the Truth.”

The Nights No One Could ExplainThe first time twelve-year-old Benjamin Hale woke his father before dawn, Nathan believed it was a stomach virus.The second time, he wondered whether...

At His Luxury Wedding, My Brother Sent Me to the Kids’ Table and Whispered, “You Don’t Belong With Important People”—Then the Billionaire CEO He’d Spent 18 Months Trying to Impress Walked Past Every Executive, Pulled Up a Tiny Chair Beside Me, and Said My Name Like He’d Been Searching the Room…

The Seat in the Far CornerThe first thing my brother said to me on his wedding day was not that he was glad I had come, or that...

My 9-Year-Old Granddaughter Whispered, “Grandma, Mom And Dad Aren’t Away On Business… They’re Trying To Take Everything From You.” I Pretended I Knew Nothing—Until They Came Home To Changed Locks And A Note On My Kitchen Table: “I Know Everything.”

The Whisper in the Upstairs BedroomThe night my nine-year-old granddaughter warned me about her parents, I was standing beside her bed with a quilt folded over my arms.Outside,...

Để lại một bình luận

Email của bạn sẽ không được hiển thị công khai. Các trường bắt buộc được đánh dấu *