I woke up at four in the morning again today, staring at the ceiling and thinking about my old man. It’s been three nights in a row now. In the dreams, he isn’t doing anything special; sometimes he’s just sitting in his favorite worn-out armchair, or he’s handing me a wrench while I’m trying to fix a leaky faucet that doesn’t exist in real life. I decided to sit down, grab a coffee, and actually figure out why my brain keeps hitting the replay button on these “dad dreams.”
What happened when I started digging
First off, I had to be honest with myself. I grabbed a messy notebook and started scribbling down every detail I could remember. I realized these dreams didn’t feel like scary ghost stories; they felt like unfinished business. I spent the whole morning looking into why this happens to so many of us, and it turns out, our brains are just really bad at letting go of the people who shaped how we see the world. Here is what I found after looking at my own life and talking to a few buddies who go through the same thing.
One: You are looking for a backbone. In my dreams, I’m usually stuck or confused, and my dad just appears. I figured out that when life gets messy—like when I’m worried about my mortgage or a project at work—my brain conjures him up because he was the guy who always had the answers. It’s not actually him; it’s my mind trying to find that inner strength I associate with him. I’m basically looking for a “boss” to tell me everything will be fine.
Two: The “Unfinished Talk” syndrome. This one hit me hard. I remembered a stupid argument we had years ago about something trivial. Even though we moved past it, my brain keeps bringing him back because I feel like I didn’t say enough “thank yous” or “I’m sorrys.” If you keep seeing your dad, you might be holding onto a conversation that you never got to finish, and your subconscious is trying to write the ending for you.
Three: You’re becoming him. The other day, I caught myself making the exact same grumpy face he used to make when the TV remote didn’t work. It’s scary. Sometimes dreaming about your dad is just a mirror. You are hitting a stage in your life where you’re taking on his habits, his responsibilities, or even his flaws. My dreams started getting more frequent right as I started taking on more “adult” roles at my job. It’s like my brain is saying, “Hey, you’re the man of the house now, deal with it.”
Four: Big changes are coming. Every time I’ve had a major life shift—moving houses, changing careers, or even getting married—the “dad dreams” ramp up. Dads represent the old rules and the foundation. When you’re about to jump into something new, you dream of the guy who taught you how to walk. It’s a survival instinct. You’re checking back with the “original manual” before you start a new chapter.
Five: Pure, simple grief. This is the one we try to ignore because we want to be “tough.” Sometimes there is no deep, hidden psychological secret. You just miss the guy. I realized I hadn’t visited the cemetery or even looked at old photos in months. I was so busy being “mature” and “穩重” (as my friends say) that I forgot to just be a son for a minute. My brain had to force me to see him in my sleep because I wouldn’t let myself think about him during the day.
After I wrote all this down, I felt a lot lighter. I didn’t need a fancy therapist or a textbook to tell me I was “broken.” I just needed to acknowledge that my old man is still part of my internal hardware. I took a walk, grabbed a beer he used to like, and just sat on the porch for a bit. The dreams didn’t stop immediately, but they stopped feeling like a haunting and started feeling like a routine check-in. If you’re going through this, stop overthinking it. Your brain is just trying to process the man who helped build you, one dream at a time.