Dreams about Dead People

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Dreams about People We Know who have Died

Dreams about a Dead Person

How can We Talk to the Dead and They can Talk With Us?

Dreams about a Dead Husband or Wife

Dreams about a Dead Mother

Dreams about a Dead Child 

Summary of after death experience

What Happens When Our Body Dies?

Coming back to earth 

The Journey Through Death and Back

Journeying Beyond Dreams and Death

Dreams about People We Know who have Died

Dreams in which dead people appear are sometimes expressive of our attempts to deal with our feelings, guilt or anger in connection with the person who died; or our own feelings about death. When someone close to us dies we go through a period of change from relating to them as an external reality, to meeting and accepting them as alive in our memories and inner life.

It is wise to understand something before you read what else has been said. For instance, a single cell, which is a seed from which all life forms evolved from, doesn’t become old or die because it is immortal, for it keeps dividing and doesn’t die. In dividing it constantly creates copies of itself, but as it does  so it gathers new experience, it changes what is copied, so becomes the ‘seed’ for multi-cellular organism. We all started from the original one cell, and we, you and I,  are the result of gathered experience.

As adults we believe we are complete and whole. A seed is a return to the source of life and it/our beginnings under the sun. Consciousness on our planet started in the slime of creation, the slime we return to, to procreate. And from that slime which is a vehicle for our seed to exist in, our awareness goes through the whole process of evolution as we develop in mother’s womb, the dividing of cells, the forming of structure and organs, the creation of a creature with gills, and on to a human type form ready to breathe air, carrying your seed onwards.

As one textbook states, “A human is not constructed like a modern office building, as cheaply and efficiently as possible. . . but rather like an ancient historic edifice to which wings and sections were added at different times and which was not modernised until it was almost completed.” See Levels of the Brain

In doing so it uses many of the things that Life or Nature learnt from past life-forms that it  uses in dealing with human life. As an example plants use very clever system with bulbs and other root systems. A bulb can grow a new flower each year and each flower is a totally new and unique thing. The the flower dies and its essense or experience is drawn back into the bulb, and next season another unique flower emerges. This hold true for humans too.

Our present personality has never existed before. It lives with a new brain that doesn’t carry old memories. Searching within its own experience and memories it could never find memory of any past lives because our present brain has no connection with the past seeds, yet our seed is the collection of man, many lives lived. Tendencies, unaccountable fears or talents, give the clue to these past selves.  See Mushrooms

These past lives are not remembered easily because the new soul that developed in the new body had no past connections because it has a new brain. The soul or personality is built from the local memories stored in the new brain. So, memories of the past can only be attained by a deep awareness of our core awareness.

So, dead people can simply be people from our past. Considering that the major part of our learning and experience occur in relationship to other people, such learning and experience can be represented by characters from the past. For instance a first boyfriend in a dream would depict all the emotions and struggles we met in that relationship, and what we learned from it or took away from it that still influences present relationships. Therefore dreaming often of people we knew in the past would suggest that past experiences or lessons are very active at the moment, or we are reviewing those areas of our life. A woman who had emigrated to Britain from a very different cultural background frequently dreamt, even twenty years afterwards, of people she knew in her native country. This shows her still very much in contact with her own cultural values and experiences.

Example: ‘My husband’s mother, no longer alive, came and slid her arms carefully under me and lifted me up. I shouted ‘Put me down! Put me down! I don’t want to go yet.’ She carefully lowered me onto the bed and disappeared.’ E. H. – In this example the dreamer is feeling fear about being carried off by death.

Example: ‘A dark grey sugar loaf form materialised. This pillar lightened in shade as I watched. It didn’t move. I began to think it was Mrs. Molten who died in 1956. The feeling grew stronger but still the colour lightened. Then it bent over and kissed my head. In that instant I knew it WAS my mother. An ecstatic joy and happiness such as I have never known on earth suffused me. That happiness remained constantly in mind for the next few days.’ Mr M.

Here the dreamer has not only come to terms with his mother’s and his own death, but also found this inner reality.

Example: ‘A couple of months ago as I was waking I felt my husband’s arm across me and most realistically experienced my hand wrapping around his arm and turning toward him which I had done so often in his lifetime and saying ‘I thought you had died. Thank God you have not.’ Then I awoke alone and terribly shaken.’ Mrs I. – The example both shows the resolution of the loss, but also the paradox felt at realising the meeting was an inner reality.

A critic might say this is only a dream in which a lonely woman is replaying memories of her dead husband’s presence for her own comfort. Thus her disappointment on being disillusioned. Whatever our opinion, the women has within her such memories to replay. These are a reality. The inner reality is of what experience was left within her from the relationship. Her challenge is whether she can meet this treasure with its share of pain, and draw out of it the essence which enriches her own being. That is the spiritual life of her husband. The ‘aliveness’ of her husband in that sense is also social, because many other people share memories of the same person. What arises into their own lives from such memories, is the observable influence of the now dead person. But the dead also touch us more mysteriously, as in the next example. See: Dead Husband or Ex

Example: In a recent news program on television, a man who survived the Japanese prisoner of war camp in Singapore had been given a photograph of children by a dying soldier he did not know. The man had asked him to tell his family of his death, but did not give his name. The photograph was kept for forty odd years, the man still wanting to complete his promise but not know how. One night he dreamt he was told the man’s name. Enquiries soon found the family of the man, who had an identical photograph.

Dreams about a Dead Person – General Meaning:

This can represent some area of your life that has ‘died’. It can refer to death of feelings, such as hopelessness in connection with relationship and the loss of feelings about someone; the depression that follows big changes in your life such as loss of a loved partner, job, or child. It can also reflect the sense you have of your life in general, that it is without the stimulus of motivation and satisfaction, as when one feels oneself in a ‘going nowhere’ relationship or life situation. The dead person in the dream may link several of these feelings together, as symbols often represent huge areas of our experience. So the dead person my be a part of oneself you want to leave behind, to die out.

Some dreams are so clearly about the person who died. Here is an example of such a dream by a young child.

With his brothers and friends he went to bathe in a mill pool. He was only four or five at the time, and could not swim. In the recklessness of their-play, one of the children pushed him into deeper water. At that moment, the mill gates opened and water rushed through carrying him along. He was drowned – but some adults who were hastily called to the scene managed to pull him out and revive him.

As his father carried him home in his arms, the boy talked about his mother, who had died some years earlier and at first his father smiled at his story.

The boy said that as he went under the water he felt himself sinking down and down into darkness. Then there was a change and he felt himself rising up slowly until at last he rose to the surface.

He was in a huge sea. Around him, other people were also surfacing, and all were being gradually washed towards the nearby shore. There on the beach, people waited, and greeted those who were brought to them by the sea.

And as he himself drew near there on a small promontory were his grandparents waiting to welcome him – and in front – his mother, and she bent to draw him into her arms. She took hold of his hands and as she did so, a cross around her neck swung before his face. Sparkling in it were seven stones. But at that moment, something seemed to pull him away, and he sank into the sea and at last awoke on the riverbank.

The other half of the Story

At the conclusion of the story, his father’s condescending smile vanished. They were now at home and his father left the room, obviously deeply moved. Only years later did he tell his son the other half of the story.

The boy’s mother had died when her son was tiny and she had died on her birthday. For many weeks before, her husband had saved for a special present which he had kept secret. On her death, heart-broken, he had crept down to the coffin in the middle of the night, unscrewed the lid and given the present to his dead wife. It was a cross with seven stones, and the secret of it had been buried with her.

Putting together a picture of many such death experiences, we can begin to see a general view of what it might be like, what it certainly is for some, to die.

First of all comes a lessening and eventual disappearance of bodily sensations. Although all pain and physical awareness goes, most people are still conscious of their physical surroundings and of other people. In fact they often watch their own body breathe its last struggling breaths.

Usually people see themselves in a body, but it’s sometimes more perfect than the body they have just left. Their perceptions are nearly always enormously heightened in many ways. There seems to be no sensation of gravity or weight – the whole room or area can be seen instantaneously, as if with circular vision, and there is an awareness of the thoughts and emotions of those present.

See Talking with those who have passed on

Dreams about a Dead Husband or Wife:

Many dreams of dead people come from women who have lost their husband. It is common to have disturbing dreams for some period afterwards; or not be able to dream about the husband or wife at all; or to see the partner in the distance but not get near. In accepting the death, meeting any feelings of loss, grief, anger and continuing love, the meeting become easier.

But as with the example above, there are many cases where people meet their dead in dreams and have tremendous assurance.

Dreams about a Dead Mother:

As with other ‘dead person’ dreams they usually show how we are working out or unfolding our relationship with them. They can be wonderfully confirming of continued existence.

Example: ‘A dark grey sugar loaf form materialised. This pillar lightened in shade as I watched. It didn’t move. I began to think it was Mrs. Molten who died in 1956. The feeling grew stronger but still the colour lightened. Then it bent over and kissed my head. In that instant I knew it WAS my mother. An ecstatic joy and happiness such as I have never known on earth suffused me. That happiness remained constantly in mind for the next few days.’ Mr. M.

Dreams about a Dead Child:

When our child dies it is one of the most heartbreaking experiences we can meet. Sometimes it takes years to adjust to what has happened. Not only is the adjustment emotional and psychological, but also your way of life is often built around the person you have lost. Therefore the changes we meet can be enormous. However, we each have enormous resources of healing and ability to meet the new if we can access them. Very often there are experiences we have, or dreams, that continue our relationship with the child. Unfortunately we live in a culture that often denies the possibility of this.

The example below shows how this can be possible.

For instance, Dr. Morse, in his book Closer to the Light, tells of a mother who came to him because she hadn’t slept properly for 1041 nights after the death of her son. She showed him a picture of her son, but Dr Morse was suddenly called away to a ward emergency. Having dealt with the sick baby, he was writing up the notes and a nurse who had been helping said to him, ‘Who was that person who came in with you? Is he a student?’

Morse did not understand what the nurse was talking about as nobody had come into the hospital with him. As he was trying to find a pen for the notes he was writing he pulled out the photograph of the woman’s son. Immediately the nurse said, ‘That’s him. He kept trying to get your attention’.

When he returned to his office Morse asked the mother if she had ever been contacted by her son after his death. She said, ‘Oh yes. After he died, for several nights he would stand at the foot of my bed and tell me he was alright, and that I should stop crying. But that was only a crazy dream.’ However, such things are not crazy dreams, but insights into a greater reality.

After her conversation with Dr. Morse the woman slept properly for the fist time in nearly three years.

Summary of after death experience

Because after death we are still in a dream like existence, we tend to create around us those things we expect to see or experience. So someone who has no previous information about death may wander around for awhile confused. A Christian may see Christ welcoming them, so the beginnings are very varied, and a Buddhist might meet Buddha, or a Muslim might see Muhammad. But there is some sort of life review. This is about harvesting all of value from the life experience. Not only do we gathered the lessons we learned from our life, but we also relive it moment by moment, feeling and reviewing our own feelings, but also the feelings we engendered in others. But because we are no longer living a life in three dimensions and time, it will be an all at once experience, not stretched over time.

This can be quite a trial considering the life we have lived. But it is not a judgement from outside us, but a self judgement of the quality of our life. We need to pass through this because after death we have left the physical world and moving toward the spiritual. We can see this as the Big Self; the Self with Enormous Love. But there is an enormous transition taking place at death. We lived within a body, and now without it we have to be ready for life without it in what is called the spirit world. That is why the life review is necessary. All our earthly experience has to be put through a transformation to make it fit for a wider life. The wider life works through universal connections, and the less we personally can connect with the universal the less fit we are for the universal life.

Something that I have noticed is that some people believe, and therefore experience, that ‘heaven’ is exactly like life on earth except better. They see it as having houses and living much the same way. But that is not really the whole truth, because just as our body grows and changes, so do we in the after death state.

It seems as if there is a great difference between existing in a body and surviving in the grand world of the spirit. For in the spirit world there has to be found something that will link the life with giving and receiving from others, and of course the integration with a greater purpose.

Many people say they go along a tunnel toward a great light, and then a great spirit leads them through life review. Others go through a door to the light, and others go up a flight of grand stairs.

Having lost their body and its appetites there may be a period of adaptation to a life in a world without boundaries. Also because the spirit world is similar to the world of dreams, you create around you an environment made up of your own inner state. So if you are full of hate, murderous impulses and selfishness, you create a world like that is usually called hell. We are not ‘cast into hell’ we create it ourselves.

The same with heaven, it is created out of all the attitudes and ideas and feelings that are in harmony with the way the universe works or is. As a friend told me after his death, “I cannot escape myself. This is because everywhere I look is like a mirror. Every direction I find a reflection of me. It is  three-dimensional. It doesn’t matter if I look up or down, left or right, all I see are expressions of who I am.”

At first one will look much as you did at death, except if you are old or ill, then you have quickly gained a more youthful and healthy appearance.  But of course that is only your physical shape, and you will create that because that is who you think you are. But a great and probably slow swing over will occur. Because your body is gone, and you are moving toward the spiritual being that has always stood behind your life and witnessed it and given it impulses to try to live out, so gradually you may lose any sense of being male or female.

It is possible some people will not make it that far, but will go into a sleep state until their next life in the body. But if they can maintain consciousness as they meet these changes they will slowly become a greater being, and have an awareness that could be seen as super human, touching all around them. This is why some dead relatives come back to us in dreams and visions and tell us things they would never have normally been capable of knowing.

Another conversation with a dead friend stated some of this:

I seems to me that things are different for me now. I feel something that is difficult to understand. I seem to be getting  less and less of the me I knew; yet at the same time more of who I am. More of me is being lost, but at the same time more of me is being gained. A strange paradox.

Then there is the going beyond even more barriers toward what can be called real spiritual awareness.

In the next region, one sees how the person’s life has accorded not only with their own Self, but with the ‘true being of the world’. We see ourselves as we exist, in or out of harmony with that world consciousness, that essence of all beings, sometimes called God or the Christ, or Krishna, or Buddha. Here is the judging, the self judging, of the ‘quick and the dead.’

And finally, in this withdrawal, the seventh region is reached, ‘quick or dead’, asleep or awake to the highest in us. ‘The man stands here’ says Steiner, ‘in the presence of the “Life-kernels”, which have been transplanted from higher worlds, in order that in them they may fulfil their tasks.’ These ‘tasks’, expressing through the self, mediated by the soul, and materialised by the body, usually motivate us unconsciously. In this region, if consciousness remains, we know ourselves as the whole cosmos of sun, moon, planets, and stars; as all beings, creatures and kingdoms. When we look at these through our physical eyes, we are looking at our own wholeness. The ‘Life kernel’ is the doorway to other ‘cosmic beings’. ‘The life between death and a new birth, and is really a living through the world of stars: but this means, through the spirit of the world of stars,’ not the physical stars. See What Happens When I Die?

Coming back to earth

Having made this ascent to the innermost of our nature, the essence of the whole cosmos, there now comes for most of us, a return to a fresh physical experience.

There awakens a ‘desire’ or direction, to perfect one’s own being and that of the earth. ‘Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven,’ is an impulse from this region. Depending upon what fruits were brought to each region, this descent enables certain things, qualities or strengths to be ‘claimed’ from each level of our being. A new spiritual ‘seed’ or ‘germ’ is fashioned which will play its part in fashioning our body. The essence of the future personality chooses the hereditary line and its parents. Steiner says the parents provide a seed bed of physical substance, impregnated with their own characteristics of body and psyche. At conception, the material substance is broken down into the germinal level of chaos, in which all physical form is dissolved. The spirit ‘germ’ of the new being takes hold of this.

At birth the ‘germ’ of the future personality and body, is clothed with physical substance drawn from the parents, along with inherited temperamental qualities. Working with these as materials is the essence of the past life and death experience. This spiritual impulse, takes the ‘model’ given by the parents, and works into it the pattern it brings from its central experience. So there comes into being, through life and death, another life upon the earth.

Just as there was a reliving of life at death, so just prior to birth there is a reliving of death. ‘He sees a tableau which this time displays all the hindrances he must remove, if his evolution is to make further progress. And what he sees becomes the starting point of forces that he must carry with him into a new life.  See Life and Death; Steiner Life after death

Another conversation with a dead friend provided the following information.

I am in process of creating a new life. But this is something like a work of art, not however, as we think of it with brush and paint. I felt it like a constant rise and fall of possibilities and forms that I, the Spirit I, was giving birth to. As one rose it expressed a certain quality, and this was in some way compared, or its harmonic compared, with all that existed in the changing spiritual and physical world. There was as yet no total interface between what was being created in this way, and what was expressed by the changing worlds. So I was gradually sifting the emphasis of all it contained from life experience and its possible future connections with physical life, moving toward a harmonic unity. It was explained to me that the unity would be a real connection with time, place, parents and the life that would emerge from them. When that harmonic unity was made the new life would begin.

Useful Questions and Hints:

Have I dreamt of any dead person?

How did I react to the dream?

Can I accept that we have an inner world?

See Inner World Techniques for Exploring your DreamsQuestions

 

Comments

-Jenna Parry 2012-11-22 15:19:50

I keep having dreams of my dead nan, where I only have a limited time with her as she has to leave me, this may be cause she died of terminal cancer. In the dreams I usually end up crying and wake up crying and I always ask her what heaven is like and why she has been given the chance to visit us.

-kristine 2012-11-17 4:48:34

Hi Tony,

My uncle died 2 months ago. after a month and half since he died, i dreamed that me and my mom were in their house for his funeral (but i did not see him in my dream, but it was clear that the setting was his funeral) then in my dream his only grandchild said ” only 9 days left then happy days will be gone because everybody will be going home” , then i find my self crying and my auntie (the wife) comforted me, telling me everyhting will be ok, then i told her, auntie i should be the one comforting you.

Few weeks after that dream, I dreamed of my uncle again, but this time he is alive, and it was my cousin (his daughter) who is dead (but she is still alive) , in my dream the reason of her death she was murdered. and my uncle came and talked to me to help them from her daughter’s death.

I hope you can help me what these dreams means. thank you very much.

    -Tony Crisp 2012-11-18 11:18:47

    Kristine – Quite an unusual dream and one not easy to answer.

    Well there can be two answers to your dream. The first one is that it is a warning about the murder of your cousin. I have seen such dreams before and within weeks it was a fact. But sometimes if you pray for her deliverance it can sometimes be changed.

    The other possibility is that your cousin represents part of you. If that is so there is no fear of being murdered, but it does suggest you are neglecting a part of yourself. I do not know what you associate with your cousin so I cannot guess. You could try – http://dreamhawk.com/dream-dictionary/practical-techniques-for-understanding-your-dreams/#TalkingAs to find out.

    Tony

-Rea 2012-11-12 8:37:19

10-Nov-12
I dream about my sister she died 2 months ago. Me and my sister walking together in a long road and she’s very happy when we’re walking together, but we can’t reach the place she pointed to me. Reply?

    -Tony Crisp 2012-11-12 10:36:46

    Rea – Dreams such as yours are a mixture of a communication from your sister, and your own understanding. See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/questions/#SymbolDream

    I see the way your sister is pointing is the way to heaven. It seems difficult to reach, but it is as near as your own heart – if you stopped your minds waterfall of activity.

    Tony

-Mary 2012-11-10 17:06:48

I had a dream about my father in law chasing me. Ive had dreams about him since his death. Once i woke up terrified becausae i dreamt of him choking me to death.

    -Tony Crisp 2012-11-11 10:14:20

    Mary – All that you are doing is to scare yourself with your own fears. In the world of dreams our most intimate fears and longings are given an exterior life of their own in the form of the people, objects and places of our dream. Therefore our sexual drive may be shown as a person and how we relate to them; or given shape and colour as an object; or given mood as a scene, something that haunts our memory shown as a ghost or demon. Our feeling of ambition might thus be portrayed as a business person in our dream – our changing emotions as the sea or a river; while the present relationship we have with our ambition or emotions is expressed in the events or plot of the dream. So your father in law is probably your own fear of death put into you dream to illustrate your fear.

    Read what I say carefully: “I was dreaming and aware of a man who was haunted and possessed by fear, and that he desired to slip away into the nothingness, in which he lost any awareness of self. But I banged and shouted and he became more ‘present’. I then felt I had to confront whatever was the source of the powerful ‘haunting’ that was pulling him into losing himself. I turned away from the man and saw just to my right a short distance from me an animal that was the ‘haunter’. It was a mammal of no particular type – a bit like a mixture of dog, rat and guinea pig. It seemed very ordinary and tame, and stood looking at me. I walked toward it and stretched out my hand. It was a tan colour with short fur and gave a feeling of being okay to approach, so I touched it to stroke. This was okay and I was thinking there was no problem when the creature leapt at my throat in a flash of movement and ripped my throat out.

    This sounds disturbing but I simply observed this and thought to myself that stroking and trying to be friendly was no way of dealing with this thing. It was as if I was in command of the imagery in that I simply formed another body. The creature ripped out my throat again and dived into my body to eat it. I woke at this point and went for a pee. When I went back to sleep I carried on with the dream. The only way that felt as if I might deal with the creature was to have the state of not having any goals, and not feeling panic at it’s attacks. In fact apart from the gory imagery, there was nothing to be frightened of, as the creature was only attacking my dream image of myself. As I wasn’t identified with this, it couldn’t hurt me. That was the end of the dream.”

    I use this as an image of how we are so identified with our dream image and the dream image of our body that we will always be the victim of our own fears until we realise that it is just our own fears we are dealing with. Please read http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/questions/#FaceFear

    Tony

-Carol Ann 2012-11-07 15:16:42

Dear Mr. Crisp
I dream about the dead alot. I am older now and alot of people I loved some older some younger have passed on. I loved all of them dearly and I am not afraid when it is my turn. I miss all of them terribly and can’t wait to see them again. I believe in the Lord and love Him so much can it be that I am in a hurry to leave this life? I would never take my life I am not depressed but I do look forward to being with the Father and Son of all Creation. This world can be so cruel I am not I am a giving heart full of love . Whats going on with me? I also talk to animals in my sleep and I am always trying to take care of them. Am I crazy?

-Kayla 2012-11-02 3:13:48

Hi, I just wanted to know about my dream that i had just over a year ago. I was dating this guy at the time that didnt exactly treat me the greatest. Around the time him and I started to fall apart, my father who had passed away when I was 13, appeared in my dream telling me that my current boyfriend was going to hurt me, and that him and I should not be together. Now I have never had a dream about my dad since his passing, or since this one time. I just want to know why exactly this had happened.

-lisa 2012-11-01 19:47:48

i dream of dead people… i always have. sometimes i dream it b4 they die sometimes after. i just dreamed of my sisters husband bruce. we were not close…i think he may have a message for someone else but i hate the dreams so much i usually wake myself up from them.

-latasha 2012-10-31 15:39:48

I had a dream about my older sister that passed away 8 years ago. She had a terminal illness and at the end of her life she was fragile, pale and had lost her hair. In my dream she was sitting on my kitchen sink. She looked so healthy and had her long curly hair back. I was aware that she was dead in the dream. I was talking to her but she didn’t talk back she only smiled. The only time she spoke was when I asked her what she was doing here and her only reply was “don’t worry I’m always here”. I still feel so guilty bc i wasn’t there for her.

-Marziyeh 2012-10-29 21:17:46

Tony !
why you didn’t answer my question? i sent you my dreaming on 16th of October but i haven’t got any answer yet.
what is the reason for it please let me know

-Kiki 2012-10-28 16:36:50

My grandparents passed away over 20 years ago and in the beginning, I would have dreams of my grandmother floating and looking very happy and I would be on my knees in a lot of pain trying to reach out to her. She lived with a lot of pain due to arthritis in her knees. My health began to deteriorate after their passing and I felt as if I had her pain with me. In other dreams later on, things seemed normal and then the last dream I had of them, I could only see their bodies, but I couldn’t see their faces and I struggled to see their heads and feet. My grandparents were very important in our lives and I still terribly miss them, but I haven’t dreamt of them in a couple of years. Any comments would be appreciated.

-Tracy Cartier 2012-10-23 20:52:34

I am in a casual relationship with a man. I dreamt of his late wife but confused me a bit as she wanted to know why we, myself and her husband were havent this sneaky relationship. Whatever the explanation I gave her, she was happy and left it at that. I cannot recall what I had mentally said to her.

-Sarah 2012-10-23 12:41:32

Since as long as I can remember I have had odd dreams about things that have or were about to happen. Every now and then Ill dream of the dead and how they died. I just figured they were just dreams from eating before sleeping messing up my thought pattern. But once again last night I dreamt I was in a yard by the woods. There was this long pathway I stopped to think how beautiful and thats when I noticed a figure running at me. I got scared and ran into a borded up shack on the yard. Inside I noticed a little girl with no expression on her face. She had long hair and big dark eyes. When I asked her mame she said rosie. She could not of been more then six or seven. She was badly beaten with marks on her neck and backside. She said she wasnt leaving until she found her mother. When I woke up I had a bad nosebleed but still managed to gogle the little girls name under murder cases. Sure enough one popped up that matched. And not to be mean but when I finally saw her face the same only not dirty. Im highly freaked out I dont know these ppl but Im starting to wonder have my dreams always been just scary dreams or is there more to it then Ive realized all these years? Is it possible for the dead to find me in my sleep? People I dont even know?

    -Tony Crisp 2012-10-28 15:32:35

    Sarah – In your sleep you are in a completely different world that the one you are used to in the body. We only manage to associate a small part of this world with the images we understand from our waking life.

    Sir Auckland Geddes Becoming suddenly and violently ill with gastro-enteritis he quickly became unable to move or phone for help. As this was occurring he noticed he had an ‘A’ and a ‘B’ consciousness. The ‘A’ was his normal awareness, and the ‘B’ was external to his body watching. From the ‘B’ self he could see not only his body, but also the house, garden and surrounds. He need only think of a friend or place and immediately he was there and was later able to find confirmation for his observations. In looking at his body, he noticed that the brain was only an end organ, like a condensing plate, upon which memory and awareness played. The mind, he said, was not in the brain, the brain was in the mind, like a radio in the play of signals. He then observed his daughter come in and discover his condition, saw her telephone a doctor friend, and saw the doctor also at the same time.

    Here Sir AG was suddenly put into conscious sleep, in which he was no longer handicapped by space and time. “He then observed his daughter come in and discover his condition, saw her telephone a doctor friend, and saw the doctor also at the same time.”

    So your awareness is spread out and can receive anything it wishes. You must have a talent or an ability to deal with the dead. Why don’t you develop it instead of wondering whether there is more to it – there is. See http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/levels-of-awareness-in-waking-and-dreaming/

    Tony

-Margie Long 2012-10-23 1:20:26

I dream about my sister, my aunt , mother in law and father in law, they are all deceased. the dreams are not bad and very short dreams. all whom I miss dearly! In my dreams my sister is always doing something that she loves, cooking and loving children!

    -Tony Crisp 2012-10-28 13:51:01

    Margie – I feel that the dreams are mostly about the good memories you have about your family. They show how important it is to keep this part of your inner life alive. Without it you would be more likely to feel lonely or lost.

    Tony

-Linda 2012-10-22 13:06:12

my sister was murdered in 1994, I had a nightmare where she was all dressed up, and I went to hug her, when I put my arms around her, and her body felt like rock and she was laughing in my face and wouldnt let go of me.I dont know what this means, I will NEVER forget it.

-vicky 2012-10-21 17:14:32

I sometimes dream of my mum; sometimes it’s a cuddle. The last time we went to her for dinner with my two girls who were young (they are 28 and 30) then my son was there at the age he is now (23) Even after 26yrs i miss her so much Sometimes i smell her perfume and feel her only i know what does this mean

    -Tony Crisp 2012-10-28 10:07:10

    Vicky – It means that your mother is close to you at that time. The problem is that we are almost blind because our senses cannot register most of what is around us. You can see less than 1% of the electromagnetic spectrum and hear less than 1 % of the acoustic spectrum.

    So when you smell her perfume take a listening attitude and see what thoughts come to you spontaneously. Also see http://dreamhawk.com/dream-encyclopedia/questions/#TalkingDead

    Tony

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