Near Death Experience with Bruce Greyson

httpvhd://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_qBIw7qyHU

Dr. Bruce Greyson, MD
Bruce Greyson discusses how cumulative research into Near Death Experiences challenges both a classical physical view of reality, and an exclusively neuroscience-based view of consciousness.

© 2010 – 2019, Lekatt. All rights reserved.

A Benevolent Virus

A Benevolent Virus

An exciting new novel on near death experiences. It can be ordered from Amazon or found at your local bookstore.

How do you live when you know what it’s like to die?
What happens during that moment when we experience our own death? What inescapable challenges lie ahead for those of us who have had a near-death experience? How do we return to the realm of the living when our understanding of reality has forever been transformed by our brush with death?

A Benevolent Virus follows the spiritual odyssey of two near-death experience survivors as they each undertake to redefine the meaning of their lives in the wake of their ordeals. Ann Richards, a successful television reporter, struggles to come to grips with the truth of her experience even as it threatens to destroy her career and her marriage. Daniel Breton, a former Marine almost mortally wounded while fighting in Fallujah, strives to comprehend the meaning of his near-death experience by recording the stories of others who have journeyed beyond the threshold of their mortality yet returned to the living.

© 2010 – 2019, Lekatt. All rights reserved.

Living after death

Extensive research in the West on the remarkable phenomenon called near-death experience (NDE) undergone by millions of people all over the globe, has revealed startling things about death, dying, afterlife and subtle operation of the law of karma. The experiences largely coincide with Eastern spirituality and world classic on afterlife.

© 2010 – 2019, Lekatt. All rights reserved.

The science of near-death experiences

Head toward the light: The science of near-death experiences

“People are always trying to find a reason to explain it away,” she says. “What usually happens is they can account for one or two of the characteristics, but they can’t account for all of the characteristics. How do you account for a 7-year-old who comes back knowing all about his dead grandfather from England who died in a fire, even though neither of his parents knew about it and the child has never left his own city block? Oxygen deprivation doesn’t account for those things.”

© 2010 – 2019, Lekatt. All rights reserved.

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