dilettante
Well-known Member
- Location
- Michigan
It's ok over the years i've read so much pro and con i was just curious what more balanced view would look like. Thanks for trying.
People who are judged clinically dead and are resuscitated or revived after a brief interval with memories of what they have experienced, according to Bruce Greyson, who has studied the phenomenon,
“..typically report exceptional mental clarity, vivid sensory imagery, a clear memory of their experience, and an experience more real than their everyday life; all of this occurring under conditions of drastically altered brain function under which the materialist model would say that consciousness is impossible … There’s a sense of the person’s thoughts being much faster and clearer than usual, and finally there was a life review or panoramic memory where their entire life seems to flash before them …. Typically emotions reported during the NDE [near death experience] include an overwhelming sense of peace and well-being, a sense of cosmic unity or being one with everything, a feeling of complete joy and a sense of being loved unconditionally…”
And he continues:
“One of the things about NDE that interests me as a psychiatrist are the profound after-effects that people report, a consistent change in values that don’t fade over time. Near death experiencers report overwhelmingly that they’re ‘more spiritual’ after the experience, they have more compassion for others, and a greater desire to help others, a greater appreciation for life, and a stronger sense of meaning or purpose in life … An analysis of their medical records shows that mental functioning is significantly better in those people who come closest to death. Many NDErs experience a panoramic life review, not just visual images, but elaborate events, sometimes the entirety of that person’s life.”
Such experiences are reported iin many cultures, and have been commented on since at least the fifteenth century. In a British study, involving a five year retrospective and a one-year prospective study, the majority (70%) of caregivers had witnessed ‘end-of-life experiences’ in their patients before death; and the number may be greater, since previous unawareness of the phenomenon in staff and relatives alike may lead to under-reporting. These experiences differ from drug-induced hallucinations, and delirious states, and occur in clear consciousness.
Thank you, tho there was no info for me. I've read extensively about this as well as other so-called paranormal experiences, since my early teens.Finally, here you go. Beginning on Kindle page 1670 of The Matter With Things by Iain McGilchrist:
Somewhere he goes on to say while he thinks this is a rich field for research, he cannot himself take this on too. He admits he himself has not experienced it but he remains fairly agnostic, neither writing them off nor extolling them.
Also my friend here @Stoppelmann worked in end of life care and may (or not) care to add something from his experience.
Thank you, tho there was no info for me. I've read extensively about this as well as other so-called paranormal experiences, since my early teens.
Not only can NDE experiencers undergo profound changes in their general attitudes and perspective, behaviors can change as well. Family and friends often notice these even if the person has not talked about the experience, they notice differences in what upsets and what engages the person, what makes them cry and what brings out a laughs.
Not sure this qualifies as NDE because I felt I was getting better at the time. I was hospitalized for emergency surgery when I was 40. I spent three weeks there mostly with tubes.
One night I had a vision of floating near the door of the room and looking down at myself in the bed. Odd thing is that it was in the room 2 doors down.
Two months later I returned for another surgery and they put me in that other room 2 doors down. It was a short stay and I recovered in due time.
This is the first I've heard about them D. @feywon Have you ever heard or read about them?
Not sure this qualifies as NDE because I felt I was getting better at the time. I was hospitalized for emergency surgery when I was 40. I spent three weeks there mostly with tubes.
One night I had a vision of floating near the door of the room and looking down at myself in the bed. Odd thing is that it was in the room 2 doors down.
Two months later I returned for another surgery and they put me in that other room 2 doors down. It was a short stay and I recovered in due time.
This is the first I've heard about them D. @feywon Have you ever heard or read about them?
"I sometimes wonder if mysteriously missing then returned items that some (including DD and myself half jokingly) attribute to fairies are friendly spirits playing with us."Couple of thoughts on this:
First just the joking 'mopping an unpleasant enough chore when you have the physical body to easily do it, why would anyone disembodied want to?' Tho one of our spirits silently observed me me closely whenever cooked or baked from scratch, the way a person from another culture or era might to look for similarities and differences.
Secondly, electrical things like lights, radios and other devices (eagerly awaiting first paranormal stories involving handheld, wifi enabled devices) take less energy, focus than moving or manifesting objects (the latter are apports).
I sometimes wonder if mysteriously missing then returned items that some (including DD and myself half jokingly) attribute to fairies are friendly spirits playing with us.
"I sometimes wonder if mysteriously missing then returned items that some (including DD and myself half jokingly) attribute to fairies are friendly spirits playing with us."
We stay it's the trolls.![]()
The reason i said 'half jokingly' is because invariably if one of us says "Not funny fairies. I need ______.". Within moments we find it some very visible place we'd already looked. And since my surgeries in 2014 it can no longer be attributed to my eye issues.
"where something doesn't fit my own take it is better to simply admit I don't know and if anything comes uo to convince me, there'l be less back tracking to do." Well put, and exactly my attitude.I've always dismissed out of hand NDEs but that really long book I finally finished reading convinced me that where something doesn't fit my own take it is better to simply admit I don't know and if anything comes up to convince me, there'll be less back tracking to do. There was actually a section on NDE's which wasn't an argument in favor or against but basically making the case that there was some reason to consider at least. I could extract an excerpt off my Kindle if you'd be interested.