Dreaming of Death

For the shorter Dream Dictionary entries see Death and Dead and also see the series Life and Death.

Links to section headings:

Dreaming of our own deathWe can deal with our feelings of deathYou can continue contact with the dead through your dreamsSome dreams are showing the state of those we love after deathDeath can represent a fading or dying of some aspect of youDreaming of a dead bodyThe death is someone we knowDeath of oneselfTalking with those who have passed onThe walking dead or rigor mortisDancing with or meeting death or dark figureDeath of someone close to us


In every moment of our life we face the possibility of death. It is not surprising therefore that the subject of death figures in many dreams. As with any major life event, in our dreams we meet death in various forms as part of our attempt to develop a working relationship with it. Such dreams enable us to become aware of what our deepest fears or feelings are regarding our own death, or the death of someone we love or know. But they also have the possibility of showing us what our fullest inner wisdom or intuitions are about what it means to die.

If we cannot meet the spectre of death, then our ability to live a full life will be diminished. At every turn death faces us in one way or another, and if we have not met and transformed fear into wonder, then we will be paralysed in expressing freely and lovingly to what life offers.

We have to remember though that what we first meet in dreams about death are the family and culturally inherited images and ideas of what death is. For instance Western culture gradually developed a view of the world based on early scientific theories. Namely that life is purely physical, and so there can be no survival of ones personal awareness at death. It is a view gradually being eroded by findings in quantum physics, and is not shared by many other cultures. The skeleton in the image below typifies this Western view of death. But the view in older cultures is that life continually flows through birth and death, as in the second illustration. (See: the book The Field, that examines latest findings in quantum physics in an understandable way).

Dreaming of our own death

In the example below the dreamer does not face any great fear of death itself. The strongest feelings are of loss. Over a period of time the dreamer may move beyond such feelings of loss into exploring other possibilities of death.

I was due to be executed – what for I don’t know. I was not especially afraid of this, but my most vivid feelings were of great sadness at the people I was leaving behind, and for all the things I wanted to do in life, but would not now be able to. Then at the end I was watching myself being hanged. D.

This theme of facing death is quite frequently met, and it often leads to confronting what we really want to do before the end of this present life; what we want to express, say or give to those we love or are involved with; and what we want to achieve. So such a dream may wake us up from spending too much time in trivialities.

Examining many dreams dealing with death, it is noticeable that some dreamers are stuck in fearful or grief laden feelings, while others move on into a positive relationship with the ending of life. The difference appears to be centred on what level of emotion the dreamer can tolerate and accept, and how daring they are. Many people, on meeting death in their dream, awake with feelings of pain, fear, or dread. If they could fully meet those feelings they would pass on to develop a very different experience of death in their dreams. The following dreams illustrate this.

A young woman told me she had experienced a recurring nightmare of a piece of cloth touching her face. She would scream and scream and wake her family. One night her brother sat with her and made her meet those feelings depicted by the cloth. When she did so she realised it was her grandmother’s funeral shroud. She cried about the loss of her grandmother, felt her feelings about death, and was never troubled again by the nightmare.

The dreamer in the following example meets her feelings through the actual events of the dream.

My mother in law died of cancer. I had watched the whole progression of her illness, and was very upset by her death. Shortly after she died the relatives gathered and began to sort through her belongings to share them out. That was the climax of my upset and distress, and I didn’t want any part of this sorting and taking her things. That night I dreamt I was in a room with all the relatives. They were sorting her things, and I felt my waking distress. Then my mother in law came into the room. She was very real and seemed happy. She said for me not to be upset as she didn’t at all mind her relatives taking her things. When I woke from the dream all the anxiety and upset had disappeared. It never returned.

We can deal with our feelings of death

Each of us meet our feelings and fears in different ways, and the next waking dream shows a very full meeting with death and its possibilities.

I knew I was dying and it was incredibly real. So real I wept deeply because I knew this was the end of everything and I would lose my children. All that I had created in life would be at an end too. But there was nothing I could do about that and I died. Then I seemed to be at a slight distance watching my dead body, and I saw my father, who had died some years before, come and carry the body over a threshold into a heavenly meadow. There a resurrection took place. My dead being was given new life. And the new life came from all that I had given to others, and all I had received from others, during my life. That was my spiritual life that survived death. A.C.

As can be seen from this beautiful experience, the dreamer meets the depth of feeling connected with the final ending of life, and then moves beyond it. So the last part of the dream is not an avoidance of pain, but an acceptance of the finality of death and how it is transcended by giving ourselves away to others, and receiving from them.

Because dreaming about death is a very frequent theme, and has many aspects, you must look at any death dream you have had and see each part of it in context with the other parts of the dream. For instance the context of death in the first example is connected with hanging and final loss. In the second it starts similarly but ends quite differently.

You can continue contact with the dead through your dreams

There is yet another level connected with dreams about people we have known in life. This next dream and exploration of the dream shows how we can continue contact with the dead.

Yesterday my wife told me I had been calling out in my sleep, obviously dreaming. She said I had been calling my mother. She described it not as a cry of pain or anger, but as if urgently trying to get my mother’s attention.

My mother had died shortly before this dream, so I tried to explore the feeling of calling to my mother and experienced a spontaneous waking dream of my mother being in something like an old people’s home. She was very withdrawn and non communicative, and as I explored the feeling of this I sensed she felt as if she had been abandoned and felt resentful and angry about this.

She had died from multiple strokes and so was not aware of her process of death. I could see that in fact she had not been abandoned, but was in a place where she was creating her own environment through her emotions and attitudes. I attempted to communicate with her but she refused to respond at all, and I was unsure if she really was withdrawn to a point where she couldn’t hear me, or if she was angry and so not responding. So I called to her aloud and said she must realise she was dead, not abandoned. She had failed to realise her new condition and so through resentment from feeling we had all left her, had created a growing isolation and barrier to being with others. I explained that if she remembered something of the love she had given and received in life, this would release her from the bondage of her loneliness, and bring her into contact with many people who wanted to be with her who were dead.

But some experiences give us a much clearer example of contact with our dead. The following is taken from the writings of D. Stanilav Grof and is a personal experience he met.

“In one particularly unnerving session a young man suffering from depression found himself in what seemed to be another dimension. It had an eerie luminescence, and although he could not see anyone he sensed that it was crowded with discarnate beings. Suddenly he sensed a presence very close to him, and to his surprise it began to communicate with him telepathically. It asked him to please contact a couple who lived in the Moravian city of Kromeriz and let them know that their son Ladislav was well taken care of and doing all right. It then gave him the couple’s name, street address, and telephone number.

The information meant nothing to either Grof or the young man and seemed totally unrelated to the young man’s problems and treatment. Still, Grof could not put it out of his mind. “After some hesitation and with mixed feelings, I finally decided to do what certainly would have made me the target of my colleagues’ jokes, had they found out,” says Grof. “I went to the telephone, dialled the number in Kromeriz, and asked if I could speak with Ladislav. To my astonishment, the woman on the other side of the line started to cry. When she calmed down, she told me with a broken voice: ‘Our son is not with us any more; he passed away, we lost him three weeks ago.’”

Some dreams are showing the state of those we love after death

I believe the following dreams can really give a wonderful picture of this.

I walked around the corner, looked into the room my son was in when he was living here just a few months ago. He was in his bed, on the opposite side he slept on, alone, and sick. His face was pale white with large red areas on his cheeks from fever, he had a thermometer in his mouth which he removed to say, “Ma, Im really sick.” Maybe he also said he feels terrible, I cant recall that specifically. Most people dream their loved ones smile, or tell ,them they are ok… this dream made me cry, and feel fearful for him.

Despite the difficult feeling the mother felt in response to her dream of her dead son, it describes very clearly a stage of after death experience, the burning up of physical desires.

The next dream is even more clear in its symbolism.

My mother in law just passed on Aug 7th, 2010, she had cancer, and the process of her dying went rather quickly, we are a very close knit family, and my husband, sister inlaws, and especially the grandchildren are really having a hard time wuth her passing. However I had this disturbing dream last night. In this dream, I was in a small soft lit room, and in this room around the 4 corners of the wall, there were framed pictures of my mother in law from a baby until adulthood even pictures of when she was ill before she passed….. She looked up at me and it was my mother in law, her eyes were bulged and red, and she had tears coming down her face.

The pictures on the wall shows a full life review. This is recognisable what happens when you die. Of course it can be disturbing, after all you are reliving every moment. Phyllis Atwater, who is an expert on near death experiences, and who has experienced them herself, says, “For me it was a total reliving of every thought I had ever thought, every word I had ever spoken, and every deed I had ever done; plus the effect of each thought, word and deed on everyone and anyone who had ever come within my environment or sphere of influence, whether I knew them or not (including unknown passers-by on the street).”

The fever shown in the previous dream is caused by the loss of a physical body. Without  body we lose all physical desires, and that can be very difficult for some. It is like burning up of those desires that link you material life. There are other stages that we go through that you can read about in Rudolph Steiner’s Philosophy of Life and Death.

My 20 year old son, Max, died less than a month ago.

I had a strong feeling when I first learned of his death that he had remained “earth bound”. I can’t describe it exactly, but I felt very strongly that because his death was sudden and he wasn’t ready to go that he hadn’t moved on to the other side.

I have prayed for a sign from him and he came to me in my dreams the past two nights.

The first night he said he wasn’t dead and I couldn’t convince him otherwise. He even said that he wouldn’t be ready to go for another “year and a half”. But I got to hug him and feel him and it was him.

Last night he came to me at my house. He was sitting at the kitchen table and we just talked for a few minutes before I brought up the fact that he HAD to go into the light. He got a bit angry. Then I told him that I knew about the drugs in Utah and he hung his head in shame. Then I told him he overdosed. At first he disagreed, I began to think about things that I could show him that would make him understand…like stuff from his funeral, but then he understood. Like he knew what I was thinking and was kinda like “don’t bother, I get it.”

I started to cry and we hugged and I began to tell him about all the books that I’ve read on the afterlife so that he wouldn’t be scared. He hugged me and asked me if our souls would always be together and I said yes, that if you’re close on earth that means the souls always stay together.
We left my house then and went to the other side. He was leery of going so I told him that once he got there he would probably see grandma Josephine and grandma Jean and that Baxter, his old dog, would probably even be there.
I went further in with him, to try and find the souls he was meant to be with so that he wouldn’t be scared.
As we looked he began to feel more at ease. Drifting away from me and looking for himself.

Then a crashing booming voice said something, I don’t remember what, but I knew I had to leave. So I went back to the tunnel that we had come in through and Max came, with another young man, about his age, they were wildly happy….riding what kinda looked like skateboards, but not. He took me back through the tunnel. He said he understood and that the other soul that was there with him was his friend and that they wreak havoc on the other side playing pranks and acting rambunctious.

I started to cry and he hugged me so tight and I told him I loved him so much and he whispered in my ear “I will see you soon”. He was completely calm and not upset anymore…like someone saying, “see you tomorrow”…like time wasn’t a big deal.

I watched him skateboard away with the other soul and he turned back and gave me a huge smile and waved and I felt all over that he understood everything now.

The tunnel began to close in…getting smaller and smaller at his end of it so I had to turn around and walk through my side because I had to come back.

I knew, even in the dream that I had helped him get there.

Was this my sons spirit? Did I help him? I feel it was…and waking up today I feel better. I miss him terribly but I feel like he is safe and where he should be.

I put the above dream in because it is so clearly a healing dream. I know from personal experience what it is like to meet and know the joy you felt in helping your son. I know also that we are almost hypnotised into believing that when someone dies that is the end of them.

Death can represent a fading or dying of some aspect of you: Dreaming of death is often not about the end of your or someone else’s life, but a means of showing how some aspect of your outer or inner life is fading, lost, or being superseded by a changed approach, so may be shown as dying.

Other possibilities are that your love or drive to achieve something might die, and be shown as death in your dreams. The change from adolescence to puberty, or maturity to old age, is also often depicted in a dream as oneself dying. In this case it is a past way of life and identity that is passing away.

Dreaming of a dead body: This shows another aspect of death in dreams. Lost opportunities or unexpressed potentials in you are frequently shown in this way. All of us unconsciously learn attitudes or survival skills from parents and others, or we have a talent or gift that has got buried, denied or even killed out by events. If these or other facets of our personality are unrecognised or ‘buried’ they may be shown as dead. Sometimes we have killed the child or teenager in us because of difficulties or trauma at those ages, and these may be seen as a dead person in your dream, or even a corpse you find buried.

Some death dreams may show the awakening of new life in the dreamer. For instance, Sue explored a dream in which she was told her baby had died. She woke shaking with grief and tears. When she explored the dream she felt it showed her becoming alive enough to feel the grief of past pain, and the death of her hopes and love in a relationship that had just ended. She had suppressed her pain for so long. In now coming alive enough to feel her emotions, she was feeling at last that something she previously loved had died in her.

If the death is someone we know: Sometimes, as in the example below, this shows a desire to be free of someone; or unexpressed aggression; perhaps one’s love for that person has ‘died’. We often ‘kill’ our parents in dreams as we move toward independence. Or we may want someone ‘out of the way’ so we do not have to compete for attention and love.

During my teens I was engaged to be married when I found a more attractive partner and was in considerable conflict. Consistently I dreamt I was at my fiancé’s funeral until it dawned on me the dream was telling me I wanted to be free of him. When I gave him up the dreams ceased. Mrs D.

Death of oneself: Death is an extremely important event facing all of us, and yet it is a mystery, so we often experimentally confront and explore it in our dreams. A dream about ones own death may also show a retreat from the challenge of life, or a split between mind and body.

The experience of leaving the body is sometimes an expression of this schism between the ego and ones life processes.

Other possibilities are to do with the death of old patterns of living – one’s ‘old self’, the loss of the boundaries that limit your awareness to an identity connected only to your body. This latter is usually a willing surrender of self to the process.

The next examples depicts what was mentioned above. It is a way of reminding ourselves to do now what is deeply in us before we die – especially regarding love.

I dream I have a weak heart that will be fatal. It is the practice of doctors in such cases to administer a tablet causing one painlessly to go to sleep – die. I am completely calm and accepting of my fate. But I suddenly realise I must leave notes for my parents and children. I must let them know how much I love them, must do this quickly before my time runs out.’ Mrs M.

Talking with those who have passed on: I know from personal experience what it is like to talk as the apparently dead to the living. This is because I had an extraordinary out of body experience. I had suddenly felt as if I were shooting upwards and experienced a feeling of coming out of pressure and was now free – like a cork out of a bottle. Then I was awake and looking down at my sleeping body and suddenly felt terrified (I realised afterwards it was terror that I was dying). Then I remembered reading about experiences such as this and was laughing uncontrollably through release from terror. Then I was travelling across the German countryside where I was living, curled up with my knees to my chest, and found myself standing in our sitting room at home in London.

It was such an astonishing experience I stood in shock looking down at my body, feeling it and trying to understand. My body felt solid and real and I was dressed in outdoor clothes not my pyjamas. Then with great enthusiasm I looked up and saw my mother sitting alone knitting, our Alsatian dog lying asleep in front of the gas fire. I felt sure my mother would see me because I felt physically present and absolutely and vitally awake in a way I had never experienced before. So I called out to her, “Mum, look what has happened.” She stopped knitting for a moment but obviously didn’t see me or hear me. So I felt if I shouted this would reach her. “Mum” I shouted, “look it’s me Tony”.

There was no obvious sign that she had heard me, but two things did happen. One was that I saw or realised that she had an upstairs side of her and a downstairs side. Her upstairs (conscious) side had no awareness of me, but her downstairs side (unconscious) gave me a wonderful welcome and I had the awareness of us knowing each other in a formless love. Then at the same time my dog must have heard me shout because he woke and came rushing to me and was so full of love for me he rushed around where I stood barking and showing his joy. I later heard from my mother saying she had had been alone that night as my father was out, and she had seen the dog get up and bark and jump around for no apparent reason.

I learned enormous and important lessons from that. I realised that having no physical body the human living cannot usually hear us. They need physical sound to know we are present, but yet another part of her knew and responded. So I saw that if she had thought of me and spoken to me I would know, even though she might not be able to hear my reply – unless she was a medium or learned to listen to thoughts. The reason being that in the body most people cannot communicate via thoughts.

Since then I have learned more and see that whenever we think of the dead with warm feelings we are immediately in their presence. So all you need to do is to imagine them and talk to them, as if you would if they were there physically. Talk to them saying whatever it is you want to communicate. In dreams you will be able to receive their answers. I learned also that my dog could hear and see me, and that he loved me.

I know it sounds simple but it is. Communication with the dead is easy, but we make such a big thing of it. Remember that at death we have no physical organs to speak through, so it all has to be done through thoughts. Also that at the level of thoughts we create huge difficulties by what we think. So a thought such as, “I am not a medium so I cannot talk with my dead son” is like a brick wall that we have created and cannot get through. Thoughts and imagination are incredible powerful and are real at the level of dreams and the dead – and of course our own inner world.

I think that reading this book would help you to clearly tell you about the after death state. http://www.amazon.com/Closer-Light-Melvin-Morse/dp/0804108323/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1307353595&sr=1-1-fkmr0

The walking dead or rigor mortis: Aspects of the dreamer that are denied, perhaps through fear.

Dancing with or meeting death or dark figure: Facing up to death and experiencing or exploring possible ways of relating to it.

Death of someone close to us: As explained above, this often refers to ones own feelings or talents that have been hurt, denied, or ‘killed out’ by events and your response to them. The following example illustrates this.

‘My son comes in and I see he is unwashed and seems preoccupied and as if he has not cared for himself for some days. I ask him what is wrong. He tells me his mother is dead. I then seem to know she has been dead for days, and my two sons have not told anyone. In fact my other son has not even accepted the fact.’ Anthony.

Anthony is a divorcee. Processing the dream he realised the two sons are ways he is relating to the death of his marriage – the children’s mother.

Although the unconscious has a very real sense of its eternal nature and continuance after physical death, our conscious personality seldom shares this. Also we all we all carry within us ideas, behaviours, talents and ways of life from those now dead. The farmer today unconsciously uses the collective experience of humanity in farming. What innovation he does today his children or others will learn and carry into the future.

This aspect of a life beyond the physical is shown in many dreams. For instance a man I knew dreamt of walking with a friend of his. As they walked they came to a river. The friend crossed, but the dreamer was unable to. Even in the dream he felt crossing the river meant his friend had died. Some time later he discovered that his friend had died at about the time he experienced the dream.

As the dream points out, the friend died, but continued another type of life ‘across the river’.

A woman told a similar dream to me. Her teenage son came down to breakfast looking very unhappy. When she asked him why he said he had a dream that deeply disturbed him. In it he was walking with a friend and the friend walked through a door. When her son tried to follow he could not pass through the door. They could not find a rational explanation for the dream, but on arriving at school, her son heard that his friend had been killed in a motorbike accident on his way to school.

The river and the door are often used in this way, suggesting a change to another dimension of life usually unreachable by the living.

Idioms: Dead and buried; dead from the neck up/or neck down; dead to the world; play dead; dead to the world; dead tired; drop dead; stone dead; at death’s door; brush with death; death wish; kiss of death; sick to death.

Useful questions:

What feelings about death does this dream highlight?

If I imagined the dream being carried forward, how would I change it? (For help doing this see Taking the Dream Forward.)

Am I changing and my past self dying?

If this is someone I know what are my feelings about them – and where are those feelings arising in me at the moment?

What part of myself have I killed?

Did an aspect of my potential get buried or killed in the past – if so what?

See: Life and Death; Life After Death; The Archetype of Rebirth or Resurrection - Life and DeathAn Amazing Near Death ExperienceDeath and DreamsLevels of Awareness in Waking and DreamingNear Death Experiences Journal.

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Comments

-Anna from Italy 2012-02-28 19:15:31

Dear Tony, I’m feeling very scared because of a dream I had 2 years ago.
On the first of April 2010 one of my uncles died. It was a sudden and bad death, that kind of death that I hope not to have.
My uncle and I had things in common, especially with regard to the personality.
3 months after his death I had this dream. It was all dark and there was a man that I recognize as my uncle but I cannot say he was really my uncle because the face was different. My “uncle” was talking to another man, I don’t know who this man was, and I was looking at them but sometimes I entered in the body of this man, then I went out, then again I entered in his body.
When I was inside this man my uncle said:”We will see us again in 812 days”. His face was stern.
Then I woke up. I didn’t want to know the date of this meeting and even if I didn’t forget this dream I left it behind because I didn’t like it. But 3 weeks ago I reminded that dream, so I take the diary where I wrote it, I decided to count the 812 days (the date is the 22nd-23rd of September 2012) and I read also something that I completely forgot: my uncle told me also the place of this meeting (a little city near where I live).
The most terrifying thing is that the name of this city is also the name of the street where I’m moving..and 2 years ago I didn’t know I would have moved!
Is it the day and the place of my death? Or is there any other interpretation?
Just help me if you can. Thank you.

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-Sherri 2012-03-01 22:02:08

strange. My dream of my own death held none of these experiences. I wasn’t afraid, grieving, no pain. I just knew I was going to die and in an instant I was dead and floating. It was quiet, I was floating, no thought, no form, no lights, I only thought of those things when I awoke.

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-Alice 2012-03-06 18:05:26

I had a dream just now that really freaked me out.
It all started with me sitting at a desk in my living room with my moms boyfriend of about 9 years, and he was talking about me getting a ride home that night. Getting a ride home has grown to be a big issue with him for some reason; he thinks its not okay for my mom to help me out a bit even though I have done so much to help her and her boyfriend out by giving them thousands of dollars and such. He said I couldn’t get a ride home tonight and that I would have to figure it out myself, and I responded saying “Whatever.”
Right after I said that, he stood up immediately and walked behind me to the couch where my mom was sitting. She said ‘Hi’ to him, and then all the sudden I heard crashing, like someone had fallen over. Feeling nervous, I didn’t look around right away, wondering if maybe Mark had knocked her over to kiss her or something, I dunno. When I did turn around however, he had thrown her to the ground and was strangling her, while facing me. Then I woke up. The thought of being around him makes me nervous now, and I try to not talk to him as much as possible. What does my dream mean?

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-rebecca 2012-03-11 17:45:40

tony… i would appreciate it if you could help. for the past few nights my dreams have been so vivid, first i dreamed that i had a baby, then the night after i dreamt my mother had a baby but it died so i gave her my baby which she didnt want and when i took it back my dog had killed the little girl. i then dreamed that my cousin had passed on… but it didnt tell me how in the dream and was talking to my late grandmother who had told my cousin that she will come and see me when i least expect it, then last night i dreamt that an old aquintence from years ago had passed on via suicide. i dont know what to make of these dreams they have never affected me so much but it is really starting to frighten me now.i would really appreciate it if you could help me.

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-Kayla 2012-03-26 8:34:36

I had a very unsettling dream about my own death. I had climbed through a whole bunch of metal tunnels and shafts with another girl. She kept messing up and putting us in danger. After we made it out my father applauded us on our success. Awhile later I was with the girl again and was talking about what happened when I noticed something strange. The miniature x-ray, which I conveniently held, showed that the girls’ heart was different then a humans. I immediately started to tell her it was okay, I wouldn’t tell anyone when she killed me. It happened mid sentence and I would feel my body being filled with something else (fluid, or maybe melted?). After my death the dream carried on and I could see my own body mutilated with the eyes melted out in almost a green acid. For some reason I woke up not upset over what had happened, but with understanding and indifference.
I’ve always had vivid violent dreams, but never something is morbid and about myself. I’d like to hear some thoughts as to what the dream could mean as I have been uneasy about it all day.

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    -Tony Crisp 2012-03-26 11:43:35

    Kayla – I see the dream as a period in which you matured and grew up. The girl wasn’t messing up, but purposely putting you in danger to see how you handled it. Obviously you did well as you got approval from the father you carry in you.

    The x-ray was there because during the trials you had developed a whole new way of seeing life, and the girl was actually a part of your own self – see http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/autonomous-complex/

    I believe the acid effect was probably due to you having developed this new view of life and to know and feel a difference in your ‘heart’. And of course any real change in you kills the old you, eats it away8 because the new view cannot exist along side it.

    Death is usually a normal part of dream life. It happens several times in our development – the death of our child self as it becomes adolescent; the death of adolescent self as it merges into adulthood.

    Tony

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-Catherine 2012-03-28 22:39:37

Hi Tony,

I had a dream last night in which I was murdered. I am not sure how or why, but I was allowed 10 days to carry on as though I was still alive. Everybody could hear and see me and touch me, but my real body was in a house in a forest. I thought I had a list of clues to my death, but it turned out to be a list of songs that were all the thirteenth on their album, proving that my friend whom I had suspected of killing me was just making me a playlist of some sort. I was disturbed by being dead until I discovered it was not my friend who had killed me. After that I did not care who had killed me and felt peaceful until I realized I only had a very short time left before I was no longer able to communicate with alive people. I went to my boyfriend and explained to him that I was dead and that I my 10 days were almost up and I had to leave. His initial response was to question whether or not I had been dead the last time we had sex (which I did not see happen in my dream, but my answer to him was yes). I felt ashamed of that, but he was not angry. He instead began to cry. I also started crying, but was trying to explain to him where my body was. He wanted to go get it, but I begged him not to because I had been dead for a while and I didn’t want him to see/smell my body like that. I woke myself up crying next to my boyfriend and it took a minute to convince myself I was not dead. All throughout the dream I would go back and see my dead body, looking for clues as to what had happened. I started out the dream alive as well, but I did not see/feel/witness the murder, I just was all of a sudden dead with the knowledge that someone had killed me. The dream left me with a deep feeling of sadness, but I am not sure if that is how I should feel considering there were parts of my dream in which I was accepting and even parts when I was happy and relieved to know my friend had not been at fault. If you have any insight, it would be very much appreciated!

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    -Tony Crisp 2012-03-29 9:30:50

    Catherine – Such dreams are usually about something you have repressed or put-down in yourself, and are important to deal with.

    It seems as if your relationship with your boyfriend has probably brought the realisatioin nearer to consciousness. It is usually an important part of you that, through your upbringing was not given the opportunity to live, or was actually suppressed by family. I had something that was dead and buried that I had to revive and bring back into my everyday life. Please see http://dreamhawk.com/news/dream-yoga/ as this will explain some things about dreams often we do not know.

    It is, in the end, ourselves who are the murderer, although it at first seems it couldn’t be us, and we cleverly disguise it because to see it clearly all at once what we have done to ourselves would be an emotional shock. The fact that the body was in a house in a forest again suggests that it is hidden in your unconscious. Also for your boyfriend to see the body would be a shock mostly for you, because you would not want to expose yourself so quickly. See http://dreamhawk.com/inner-life/the-unconscious-2/

    I suggest that if you wish to meet and help the dead part of you to be given life you should imagine yourself – while awake – entering the dead body in your dream. Obviously it might be something you have never done before, and it may feel strange. But it is the most direct way of discovering what is behind the dead you. So please try using http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/acting-on-your-dream/

    Tony

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-Naty 2012-04-21 14:53:17

Hello tony can you please help me with this dream I can’t it’s scaring me? I was with my brother seeing a video game or something like rock band or something. Then all of a sudden alot of tiny skeletons came out in a form of a band, I found them kind of cute. Then the singer tiny skeleton started singing a rock song and she sounded like a chipmunk and it made me laph. All the other band members of tiny skellintons started dancing and making a show. All of a sudden I was in a form of a taller woman skellinton with long hair than the rest of the band and I started to dance with another taller man skellinton who apparently was my crush and we both was dancing to the music of the tiny skellintons band. We apparently all was having fun.

But when I woke up I woke up kind of scared and understanding the dream can you please help me understand this dream???

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    -Tony Crisp 2012-04-23 9:12:35

    Naty – As you said, you were probably viewing a video game – and dreams are just like a computer game. All the images you saw were just like the game. You can be killed, chased, and yet at the end of the game/dream you are still unhurt.

    So you were enjoying you imagination but then you got frightened about the images of skeletons. But there was no need to. You can imagine/dream anything you like, that’s how creative people think up crazy things. See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/dream-yoga/

    Tony

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-Heather 2012-05-02 17:53:07

Hello Tony,

My Father-in-law passed away from cancer 4 days ago and today is the funeral. Last night I had a dream that my husband and mother-in-law were at the funeral with me in a big church. My mother-in law was looking for my father-in-law in his casket. I looked to my right and saw him lying there. My mother-in-law and I turned the corner and saw my father-in law up close in his casket. I looked down at him and he started breathing then he turned on to his side. I looked at my mother-in-law and told her to cal 911 and that I was going into the church for my husband. When I was going down the aisle in the church a man was in my way and I noticed it was one of my father-in-laws buddies who passed from cancer a couple of years ago. He seemed annoyed that I needed to get by in a hurry but I explained that my father-in-law was still alive. His friend seem happy about this and let me by to get my husband. when I brought my husband back to see my father-in-law my father-in-law was sitting up and looked like he always did and I said to him you were dead and he replyed I saw nothing but I heard everything. I said well I guess that is because you are alive now and he said I guess so. Then I said you must have gotten rid of the lung cancer and that I saw it coming out of your nose ( in reality my father-in-law did have his tumor come out of his nose from his lung when he was dying in Hospice) he said yes that is why he feels better but now he is giving the cancer to me. I got upset and said that’s not nice why would you do that? He smiled and laughed and said i’m just kidding. I woke up right after this and I was sweating pretty bad then heard a grinding noise coming some where in the house. I woke my hsband up to check out the noise but never found out what it was. I would really like to know what all this means? It was so vivid and real.

Thank you

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    -Tony Crisp 2012-05-04 9:43:21

    Heather – Often our dream images are a mixture of what we feel or think and the impressions – in this case from your father in law – that you received. So he was not actually sitting up in his coffin, that is how your dream images translated it. But it does sound as if he does not really understand that he is dead, and so the call for the 911, because he probably feels he has recovered from his illness and doesn’t realise he is dead.

    But his dead friend who passed two years ago will soon help him to realise what has happened.

    Your sweating may have been because you were dealing with meeting death and struggling to understand it. And the grinding noise could be from an unknown something going on – probably a psychic phenomenon.

    Tony

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-Nikki 2012-05-10 18:11:31

For the past three nights I have been dreaming of my husband dying. I never know how he dies in the dream, but I have never been so upset in my dream. In my dream I lay on top of his grave and occasionally I dig his coffin back up and open it and hold him and cry. I have never had a dream feel this real in my whole life…what does this mean?

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    -Tony Crisp 2012-05-13 9:41:55

    Nikki – This could be a way of keeping your husband safe. I know that isn’t logical, but at least you know where he is. Because it seems you have an awful fear of losing your husband through death. Women know that usually women live longer than men, and I see in a number of women’s dreams signs of this fear. So your dream is both a way of facing that even when and if it comes.

    But you might find it helpful to develop a life independent from your husband – to be more independent emotionally. A friend lost her husband after 50 year of marriage, and she found that she didn’t know anything about how to run her life. She had been a good wife, and had to learnt to make friends, to go out by herself and every little thing.

    Tony

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-Tony Crisp 2011-09-01 13:12:12

Heather – It all started with your grandmother, and grandmother’s represent the intricate web of cultural and family influences, physically and psychologically, that your body and personality arose from. The personal associations with that person need to be explored to really understand.

And then your father was involved so you have a stream of influence that came from the grandmother. It seems as if you are very attached to your father = although in a dream it is not the actual father but your feelings and sense of what he means to you that are the real meaning.

The sense of loss is enormous, and so I wonder if it is one of those dreams that are a way of getting you used to being independent of him. It is quite a business to become independent of someone yu have depended on and love- yet life pushes one toward growing up.

Independence starts at birth and it is an enormous journey to achieve it.

So I think that is what your dream is about. Driving the wrong way alone a one way road suggests you have very strong feelings and are in an emergency situation. Some people as they move toward independence kill their parent in their dreams – much to their horror.

Tony

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-crystalist 2012-01-06 3:46:19

hi, i had been dreaming of my mother who passed away in june last year. In those dreams, she has been telling me she missed us and I am always holding onto her and crying out loudly, telling her how much i missed her. She would always respond by crying too and telling us to take care and that she missed us too. Is that all real? The dream I had last night was so real – its like a dream within a dream: after my mom cried I woke up and realised its a dream, but i can sorta feel that my mom actually walked into my rm and touched me, moments later in reality i woke up from my dream and realised its only a dream. i was so disappointed that its only a dream, but at the same time hoped that she really was there and touched me. What does all these dreams mean?

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-Tony Crisp 2012-01-06 8:32:58

Crystalist – What do you mean, “… disappointed that it was only a dream”!! 

Dreams occur at a level of our awareness that is totally real but at a different and much more expansive level that waking awareness. Could you have communicated with your dead mother while awake, and feeling so much emotion?

Yes, it sounds true to me that you met and communicated with your mother. However most people have never actually explored their dreams and so do not understand the way they work. Communication takes place in thinking and feeling, not in sound made by your physical mouth.

Also it helps to understand how dreams form their imagery. So it can help if you realise that just as your eyes do not directly allow you to see, but nerve impulses are sent to the brain where they are translated into living pictures, so thoughts are also translated into images as in our dreams. Nothing we sense in the world is directly known, but it is all impressions that are translated into a sense of smell, sight, hearing, etc. So the eye receives reflected light from an object, which is translated into nervous impulses, which is then received by the brain which translates what are formless nerve impulses into what we feel we see.

So do not be disappointed but realise you have a great gift. See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/dreaming-of-death/#Talking

Tony

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