recent article in the Daily Mail revealed that dozens of people wrote in to say they believe a “dead” relation has returned as a red-breasted visitor in their garden.
Sarah Voss told the paper that a robin appeared in her garden on the one-year anniversary of her father’s passing. Its singing cheered her up.
TRADITIONALLY, robins are imbued with many symbolic meanings including hope, renewal and good fortune.
TRADITIONALLY, robins are imbued with many symbolic
meanings including hope, renewal and good fortune.
“My dad was a singer in a band when he was young,” she said, concluding that her parent was there in avian form “checking in on” his family.
Sarah’s father passed in March 2022. Two days later on Mothering Sunday, she took her mum to a garden centre, where they found they were being followed around by a robin.
“When we ate in the restaurant, the robin sat outside the window,” Sarah recalled. A few weeks later, a pair began nesting in a tree at her home.
“One would sit right outside the window looking in for hours,” said Sarah. “They didn’t fly away when I was near and seemed really brave.”
Sarah even managed to stroke the bird. She wrote that she likes to think that “this was my dad coming to check in on us and especially his grandson.”
Traditionally, robins are imbued with many symbolic meanings including hope, renewal and good fortune.
In Celtic mythology, the birds are associated with the fire god Lugh while in Christian countries they are often linked to Christmas and the story of Jesus.
Many believe in the saying, “When robins appear loved ones are near.” Their singing can bring a sense of peace and reassurance.
In their natural habitat, robins are territorial, fiercely guarding their territory and nests, reflecting qualities of resilience, courage and protection.
They nest early in the spring, marking them as symbols of renewal, fresh beginnings and optimism.
One mother told the Daily Mirror that on the anniversary of her child’s death she asked her little boy to give her a sign before visiting his grave later that day.
When Marie Robinson arrived at the cemetery in Hampshire she sat down on some grass and was joined by a robin.