DARE TO ASK: Dreaming: What it’s like for the blind

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

Do folks who have been blind since birth have dreams?

R.W.K., 62, male, Jacksonville

Replies

One of my relatives is blind, and I’ve read many times that those who are blind from birth dream mostly in other senses, most notably sound and smell. Because most of them have only very little perception in light, I would assume they don’t really dream in sight at all.

Rick, Los Alamos, N.M.

I lost my eyesight when I was 6 months old, but for the most part, I don’t remember it. Blind people see things in their mind just as anyone else does. It may not look the same as what “seeing people” see, but I still see it — a tree, a car or myself. And when I dream, that is no exception. So the color red to you may be different than my color red, but it’s red to me.

Jordan, 19, blind male, Springfield, Mo.

I went blind at 23, and I still dream the same way I did before losing my sight: with “pictures.” I actually see what I am dreaming about — the way I remember things looking, and much the same way I dreamed before losing my sight. I am not sure if this would be the same as someone who is blind from birth, as they don’t really know what things look like because they have never seen the items. I make a concentrated effort not to forget the sight of things I hold dearest to me, such as the face of my little boy, and the way the snow looks on a crisp December morning.

Samantha, 27, blind female, Brandon, Canada

Experts say

To sum up nearly a century’s worth of detailed studies on whether blind people have visual imagery in their dreams:

Blind after age 7: Likely.

Blind between 5-7: Possible.

Blind between 0-5: Seldom.

Blind since birth: In your dreams.

This is not to say that people blind from birth don’t dream as imaginatively as sighted people. For example, a major study by the universities of Hartford, California and Connecticut of 15 blind adults found that subjects blind from birth used a high percentage of taste, smell and touch sensations to describe the imagery in their dreams: They “felt” the warmth of the sun, texture of a coat or edge of a knife; “smelled” fire, tobacco, aftershave lotion or fresh air; and “tasted” a cigar, cup of coffee or an orange.

“The imagery and sensations in the dreams of the blind are generally continuous with the senses they use in their waking lives,” the researchers noted.

As National Federation of the Blind spokeswoman Pat Maurer put it, what is experienced in a dream varies with each blind person.

“Maybe they wouldn’t picture a chair in the same way a sighted person would, but everyone has been in a chair before, so they have some notion of what it feels like,” she said. “And based on what they believe it looks like, they would base their perception in their dream on that impression.”

Maurer, 54, who lost her sight over time after receiving too much oxygen in her incubator as a premature baby, said the images in her own dreams have faded with the years.

“As a younger person, the pictures were more distinct … now I still see a picture of a person, for example, but I don’t know how close to reality it is.”

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