Man, let me tell you why I even started this whole thing. It wasn’t because I suddenly got all mystical or started reading dusty old psychology books. Nah. It was a complete disaster in my life that kicked it off.
A few months back, I had a total burnout. My job—the one I’d been grinding at for ten years—decided to pull the rug out from under me. Not fired, not laid off, they just decided my whole department was “redundant.” Just like that. After a decade of loyalty, I was basically told, “See ya.”
I was sitting there, staring at the wall, feeling like I had just wasted the last ten years of my life. Zero direction. I started having these intense dreams. Not sexy dreams, not scary ones, but weirdly comforting, simple dreams. My grandmother, who passed a long time ago, kept showing up. Sometimes she was just sitting in her old kitchen, sometimes she was knitting, sometimes she was giving me this look like, “What the hell are you doing with your life?”

It messed with my head. I’m a practical guy. But when the same face, especially a face connected to that deep, core memory stuff, keeps showing up when your life is in the toilet, you start wondering. I looked up “grandparent dreams” online. Jesus H. Christ. It was a swamp. Half of it was fortune-teller garbage, the other half was academic speak that made my head hurt. So I figured, screw it. I’ll make my own damn list. My own practice run.
The Grunt Work: How I Dug Up the Dirt
My first move wasn’t reading books, it was talking to people. I went straight to the source. I hit up every friend, every cousin, every person I knew who’d admit to remembering a dream about their dead or alive grandparent. I told them: don’t clean it up, don’t try to interpret it, just tell me exactly what happened. I didn’t care if it was boring. I needed raw data.
I started with my small circle, then I jumped into a few online communities—the kind where people are comfortable just spilling their guts anonymously. Over maybe three weeks, I collected nearly 400 separate dreams. It was a massive haul. I didn’t worry about quality yet. I just dumped every single one into a massive digital text file, one dream per line.
This is where the real work started. I stopped looking at the full dream. I only looked for the action. What was the grandparent doing? I started highlighting the verbs. Was Grandma cooking? Was Grandpa driving? Was someone just sitting quietly? I went through those 400 lines piece by piece, highlighting, tagging, and then copying the dreams into new, separate files based on the action.
The Patterns That Jumped Out
After about a week of slogging through that mess, five core, repeatable scenarios kept popping up. They were the most common. If someone dreamed of a grandparent, it was usually one of these five things. I called them the ‘Big 5.’ These are the ones I wrote down and started correlating with what was happening in the dreamer’s life at the time.
Here are the common scenarios, straight from my notes:
- The Silent Observer: The grandparent is just sitting there, maybe watching you, maybe looking out a window. They don’t speak, they don’t move. They are just present.
- The Fixer/Mender: Grandpa is always fixing something. A broken watch, a leaky pipe, a cracked engine. He’s busy repairing shit, sometimes something that isn’t even broken in real life.
- The Kitchen Comfort: Grandma is always cooking, baking, or setting a table. It’s warm, the food smells great. You might eat, or you might just watch her.
- The Road Trip/Driving: You are in a car, and the grandparent is driving. Maybe you are going somewhere specific, maybe you are just cruising. But they are at the wheel, and you are the passenger.
- The Giver of Objects: They hand you something. It might be a strange coin, an old ring, a key, or a letter. You get this physical thing, and often, you don’t even know what it is for.
Connecting the Dots—The Real Shocker
The final part of my practice was trying to figure out if these dreams were random nonsense or not. And this is the part that actually blew my mind and gave me my answer about the job loss, and why Grandma kept showing up.
The dreams were barely ever about the actual grandparent. They were about what the grandparent represented to the dreamer. It’s like your brain uses the image of that trusted elder as a shortcut for something else.
For example, every time someone dreamed of The Fixer/Mender (Grandpa fixing a watch), the dreamer was going through a massive problem with their job, their health, or a relationship that felt “broken.” The dream wasn’t a warning, it was their own mind telling them, “Slow down. This is fixable. You have the inherent resources to mend this mess.”
When I had my own recurring dream of my grandmother just sitting there, The Silent Observer, turns out I wasn’t waiting for a message. I was waiting for permission. I was waiting for someone else to tell me what to do next with my life. My mind was just presenting the image of my grandmother—that symbol of unconditional approval and security—and telling me, “Look, I’m here. You don’t need my instruction. Just figure it out.” It was a representation of inner peace and the knowledge that I had the time and grounding to start fresh, even after the old gig went bust.
That whole practice—the collecting, the sorting, the correlating—took me a good couple of months, man. It didn’t get me a new job, but it settled my head. And that’s usually the first step to anything good happening, right?
