Hello Jennifer,I hope you find your stash of money!
Jennifer, anything is possible in an IADC. But the patient and therapist have no control over it. As one of the deceased, Tommy, said to his living friend during an IADC, "Don't fool yourself. The dead are always in charge."
Yes, it is possible to ask questions of the deceased in an IADC and receive answers. Whether the person will want to tell you where the money is or how Uncle Frank died is completely up to the deceased. You can ask, but you may not get an answer.
You asked about deeper, more informational conversations. I would call them shallower, less meaningful conversations. What's most meaningful, and what the deceased are very clear to communicate, is whatever is most important to the grieving survivor, and that is almost always, "I'm OK. I love you and will always be with you. Live a full life." I don't think anything could be as profound and meaningful as that.
Information is really inconsequential. The physical realm is just a vapor. Love lives forever. The circumstances of their deaths are not important to them. Do you know the name of the doctor who delivered you at birth? Or what color the walls of the delivery room were? Of course not. That's how the deceased feel about their birth into the greater reality through death. And so they may not care about or share how they died or the name of the person who killed them. They likely will say, "Let it go. Live your life fully without being preoccupied with things like that. It isn't important."
However, patients do report everything in IADCs, so they may tell you about where they stashed the money or how Uncle Frank died. But they may not. You have no control over it.
Craig