This blog is more than an account of Near Death Experiences. It ponders in detail the tough questions of life. Who are you, and why are you here in this physical world? What happens when you die, and is there a judgment? However, most anything could appear here. This is not a news blog, archived posts are just as relevant as new posts. Check the boxes at the top of the page for the Contents, Contact, Forum and other links.
The following quote is from “Emmanuel’s Book II, The Choice for Love,” compiled by Pat Rodegast and Judith Stanton.
There is also a Book I and a Book III. I like this one the best, but all are excellent. Emmanuel handles the tough questions about life in a loving and instructive way. This is the type of book that you read again and again.
I want to remind you that those who commit suicide recognize immediately the futility of what they believed was the final act of self-destruction and escape. They gather quickly all the details of what happened. Then the wisdom and love that is there instucts, directs, and sends them back to the planet.
The longing for death can, when it comes from remembering, be a voice from Home. When it comes from a desire to escape then I’m afraid it’s only that.
A new book by Colm Keane examines the experiences of Irish men and women who have had brushes with the afterlife.
In Colm Keane’s new book, The Distant Shore, he speaks to 70 Irish men and women about their near-death journeys, visions and premonitions.
In October 2009 I received hundreds of phone calls, emails and letters from people who had encounters at the edge of death. Many came from Irish Independent readers who were responding to an article I had written about near-death experiences. The article was based on a No 1 bestselling book I had at the time called Going Home.
Near-Death Experience NDE Story
of Mellen-Thomas Benedict
Journey Through the Light and Back
In 1982 I died from terminal cancer. The condition I had was inoperable, and any kind of chemotherapy they could give me would just have made me more of a vegetable. I was given six to eight months to live.
Pamela Reynolds Lowery, 53, died on March 22, 2010 of heart failure at Emory University Hospital. She was truly a brave person. This video is about the surgery Pam underwent to fix a brain aneurysm in 1991. The surgery was successful, and Pam Reynolds became famous for her near death experience.