The night doesn’t lie. When he appears in your dreams, it’s not random, and it’s not harmless. It shakes you, confuses you, leaves you waking up with a tight chest you pretend not to feel. You tell yourself you’re “over it,” but the dream says otherwise. Something unfinished is knocking at the do… Continues…
What you see in those dreams is not a mistake; it’s a mirror. His face, his voice, the way he looks at you there—these are fragments of your own unspoken feelings, still searching for a place to land. Your mind gives them a stage when your defenses finally fall asleep. That’s why it feels so real, so intrusive, so unfair.
You don’t have to chase him, and you don’t have to hate yourself for missing him. But you do have to listen. Ask what part of you still feels unseen, unloved, or unanswered. The dream is not asking you to go back; it’s asking you to go inward. When you begin to grieve honestly—without performance, without denial—the dreams often soften. Not because he leaves you, but because you finally stop leaving yourself.