Remark: As Christmas attracts nearer and a focus turns to celebrations, holidays and time spent with family members, grief can come into sharper focus.
The season’s emphasis on connection reminds us not solely of who’s current, however who’s absent – the lacking face on the dinner desk.
But some folks could discover moments that really feel unexpectedly completely different, the place they sense the deceased within the room.
Recognized by scientists as “sense of presence” experiences, these fleeting impressions can embrace the sudden whiff of a well-recognized scent, seeing a well-recognized shadow, listening to a phrase related to the liked one, even feeling a comforting contact on the shoulder.
Examples cited within the worldwide scientific literature:
“Once I sat alone on the eating desk, I felt how she put her arm spherical my shoulders as she used to do when she served me meals”
“I began to scent cigar smoke, after which out of the nook of my eye I noticed somebody sitting within the chair. And it scared me, after which I realised it was my grandfather and I felt shocked. Now every time I journey I scent that cigar smoke and that’s how I do know he’s round”
“And, hastily, from nowhere, he appeared! I imply, I simply – a imaginative and prescient of him was proper in entrance of me. I imply, it lasted a cut up second. However, it was there.”
These experiences are much more frequent than many realise. Between 47 p.c and 82 p.c of bereaved people reported them in research cited in a evaluate in 2020. So, why do they happen, and what function would possibly they play in adapting to loss?
As a part of my PhD analysis, I interviewed 26 bereaved people throughout New Zealand, Australia, Canada and america, from a variety of cultural identities and from each non secular and non-religious backgrounds.
Their accounts had been remarkably constant. The sense of somebody’s presence was most intently tied to the emotional closeness of the connection, moderately than to non secular beliefs or cultural traditions. What related their tales was the continued sense of relationship with the one that had died.
For some, the presence occurred throughout moments of emotional want, and so they had been comforted by it. For others, it occurred in locations strongly related to the one that had died. Many reported that these experiences turned much less frequent over time, even after they wished they might proceed.
In a landmark investigation by psychiatrist William Dewi Rees in 1971, nearly 40 p.c of 293 widowed folks in Wales reported sensing their partner after loss of life. He pioneered analysis into bereavement, arguing that these experiences had been frequent, non-clinical, and comforting for a lot of widowers.
Regardless of this, psychiatrists struggled for many years in opposition to the idea of life after loss of life: a way of presence was framed both as a product of hallucination or inherently non secular and supernatural, which left little room for on a regular basis psychological explanations that resonated with the lived expertise of the bereaved.
A significant shift in understanding got here with the introduction of the Persevering with Bonds Concept within the Nineties within the wake of the publication Persevering with Bonds: New Understandings of Grief by Dennis Klass, Phyllis Silverman and Steven Nickman. The researchers and authors considered a ‘sense of presence’ as commonplace or pathological however an indication of the bereaved particular person’s ongoing internal relationship with the deceased particular person.
In my analysis, I’m investigating the mind mechanisms that may underlie the phenomenon.
Early in my PhD, it was necessary to grasp how grief and a way of presence would possibly differ from these reported in non secular contexts or from neurologically pushed phenomena. My work explores the idea that the mind maintains a ‘particular person community’ consisting of reminiscence, emotion and social notion that shops the wealthy associations constructed up round an individual who was important to us.
When an in depth particular person dies, the mind doesn’t immediately replace the community. As an alternative, it must re-learn the way it’s going to keep up the bonds.
This isn’t denial of the loss of life, however a gradual means of adapting to a relationship that’s not bodily. Somebody who could have been sitting throughout from us ultimately 12 months’s Christmas gathering is now absent, however the mind takes time to soak up this alteration into an ongoing internal connection.
On this context, a way of presence may be understood as a short outward expression of an inside illustration – a second when the mind’s saved mannequin of somebody necessary momentarily influences notion.
This concept additionally helps to clarify why grief-related presences differ from neurological phenomena resembling autoscopic hallucinations, the place folks really feel that they’re watching from outdoors of their our bodies, or hallucinations in epilepsy or from sure mind lesions.
Neurological presences are likely to really feel unfamiliar or unsettling. In grief, against this, folks nearly all the time recognise the presence as belonging to the particular person they misplaced. That distinction – acquainted versus unfamiliar – is essential and factors to the function of attachment, reminiscence, and that means in shaping the expertise.
To research these concepts additional, I’m at present conducting an electroencephalogram (EEG) examine, measuring mind exercise to grasp extra about how the mind responds to completely different folks inside a person’s social circle.
Early work suggests that every relationship prompts its personal distinct particular person community.
Understanding these patterns could make clear why some folks proceed to really feel the presence of somebody shut after loss of life – and the way the mind sustains necessary relationships with those that are not with us bodily.
Sense of presence experiences could replicate how we supply significant relationships ahead. Exploring these moments extra totally, and speaking about them extra overtly, could assist us higher perceive a standard a part of grieving – particularly at a time of 12 months that highlights the significance of connection.












