top of page
Search

Why Do People Share Dreams?

  • Writer: Bernard Beitman, MD
    Bernard Beitman, MD
  • Jun 22
  • 1 min read

Stanley Krippner on dream telepathy, synchronicity, and the hidden connections between minds.


Can two people share the same dream — or dream images that seem to point toward the same event?


In this episode of Connecting with Coincidence, Bernard Beitman, MD speaks with Stanley Krippner, one of the most respected voices in dream research, consciousness studies, and transpersonal psychology.


For decades, Stanley has explored the boundaries of human awareness with unusual depth and courage. His work has touched dreams, hypnosis, shamanism, creativity, parapsychology, anomalous experience, and the many ways human beings may be connected beyond ordinary explanation.


In this conversation, Stanley and Bernie explore earthquake dreams, synchronicity, telepathy, mystical experiences, near-death experiences, and the possibility that some dreams may participate in forms of connection that extend beyond conventional models of mind.


Meet Stanley now on the Connecting with Coincidence podcast:



About Stanley Krippner


Stanley Krippner, PhD, is an American psychologist, author, and internationally recognized authority on dreams, consciousness, hypnosis, shamanism, and anomalous experiences. He served for many years as professor of psychology at Saybrook University and was director of the Dream Laboratory at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York.


He has authored or edited dozens of books and has received multiple lifetime achievement awards for his contributions to psychology, parapsychology, and consciousness studies. His work is known for bridging scientific research with cross-cultural and Indigenous perspectives.



Have a meaningful coincidence to share? Visit The Coincidence Project and tell your story.


Looking for more coincidence content? Check out all our other fascinating podcast guests in our Connecting with Coincidence library of episodes.


 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page