A door of light and a staircase to heaven? Study reveals what you dream about in the final days before death
Scientists have long been interested in what happens in the mind during the final days and hours of life. In recent years, a growing body of research has focused on end-of-life dreams and visions (ELDVs) - the vivid inner experiences many terminally ill people report in the days, or even hours, before they die.
A new Italian study, published in the journal Death Studies, surveyed 239 palliative‑care workers, nurses, hospice volunteers, and psychologists and found that certain themes, such as seeing loved ones, bright light, doorways, and staircases, that reappear again and again.
According to the researchers, “ELDVs carry an important relational potential.” These dreams and visions, they say, can help people approach deeply emotional and existential topics in a way that plain, rational language often cannot.
In the Italian study, professionals reported that terminally ill patients often spoke of being reunited with departed loved ones. Another common motif was imagery of transition: bright light, doorways, staircases, and paths, all of which seem to symbolise crossing from one state to another.
According to earlier work in US hospice settings, “the most commonly seen dreams featured deceased friends and relatives, followed by living friends and relatives,” and these comforting visions often became more frequent as death approached.
Another recalled a patient describing “climbing barefoot toward an open door filled with light,” while others mentioned serene images, such as “a white horse galloping along the shoreline.”
Researchers suggest that these visions may act as psychological or even psychospiritual coping tools, helping people feel accompanied, less afraid, and more ready to let go.
Representative Image
What people dream about just before death
In sleep, the brain is not truly “off.” A dream is a sequence of images, thoughts, emotions, and sensations generated by the mind, and most people dream every night, whether they remember it or not. In the final stages of illness, stress, sleep disruption, and the natural decline of bodily functions can all change how the brain works, making certain dreams feel especially intense and real.According to earlier work in US hospice settings, “the most commonly seen dreams featured deceased friends and relatives, followed by living friends and relatives,” and these comforting visions often became more frequent as death approached.
Why these dreams matter
For healthcare workers, the Italian team noted, “ELDVs emerged as meaningful relational experiences in end‑of‑life care.” One professional told the team, “One patient dreamed of her husband saying, ‘I’m waiting for you,’ interpreting this as a sign of inner peace and acceptance of death.”Another recalled a patient describing “climbing barefoot toward an open door filled with light,” while others mentioned serene images, such as “a white horse galloping along the shoreline.”
Researchers suggest that these visions may act as psychological or even psychospiritual coping tools, helping people feel accompanied, less afraid, and more ready to let go.
Not all dreams are comforting
Some patients described frightening visions, such as a monstrous figure with the face of a parent dragging them down, or other images that reflected deep anxiety about dying or unfinished emotional business. According to the Italian authors, “distressing visions might indicate unmet clinical or emotional needs,” and they say such experiences should be taken seriously, not brushed off as delusions.end of article
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