Age · Baby

Baby Vulture in dreams

The end of a phase being witnessed — or someone in your life waiting for it to end.

In its baby form, the symbol points to a new, vulnerable instance of itself — something that requires care, cannot yet defend itself, and may not yet be ready for the world. Forgetting or losing the baby version of the symbol in the dream is one of the dictionary's strongest signals of neglect.

A vulture in a dream is the dictionary's image of an ending being attended. Vultures in waking life arrive at things that are already dying; in dreams they are the dream noting the same.

This is not necessarily a hostile image. Sometimes the dream is gently confirming that a phase of your life is genuinely over and you can stop fighting it. But sometimes the dream is showing you a person in your life who is waiting for you to fail; you usually know which it is on waking.

Where you often see it. A vulture circling overhead. A vulture on a high branch. The dream uses the vulture for the end of a phase being witnessed — or someone in your life waiting for it to end.

What it is not. A vulture is not always death-as-event. The dictionary reads it as the patient witness of an ending.

Related in the dictionary. Read vulture with graveyard, ruin, and any scene of patient ending-witnessing.

← Read the base interpretation of Vulture

Disclaimer: For entertainment and self-reflection only. Not a substitute for professional advice.