OH wrote: There is such a lot about our mind and the abilities that we don't understand, and it is one of the subjects that I never tire of reading about the amazing things that happen to people.
I echo that.
As most know I'm relatively quietly (here anyway) an atheist and spiritual/supernatural skeptic. But I am fascinated by the stories, mainly to dismember them, but have also experienced enough similar weirdness to understand why we get so convinced of their supernatural origins.
My rough view is that those who most want and need to believe and maintain connection are the ones most likely to have NDEs or accept that others have them.
I can only present my own story as proof that the supernatural is not the only thing in play. Our own minds are where these things happen.
I had been 24/7 full on carer for my mother for too many years when it go too much and I had to put her into aged care or kark before her.
She had been there only a few weeks or so when I heard her call me. It woke me but I shrugged it off and was drifting off again when she called louder and rang the little bell she had. Well that was enough to get me to the door before I told myself, again, that no, she wasn't in the bedroom, she was 'up the hill.' I heard her call again that night but didn't get up. Must have seemed a pretty good omen that something was going wrong but I figured they would phone me as I told them to if she was ever taken really bad and I was only minutes away..
I phoned the hostel when I got up to check on her only to be told she was eating breakfast and had spent a quieter than usual night.
She wasn't dead. She wasn't calling me. It had nothing to do with her at all. I was letting her haunt me 3 years before she died!
There is no doubt that I 'heard' those calls, they woke me up right? But
I heard them, she didn't make them. Something in me triggered it, not supernatural causes. There's a lot more we don't know than do about how the brain works. I'm not betting any money on spirits just yet.
There is all kinds of kinky research being done into the physical causes of mind and mental processes and findings that mitochondria carry a kind of halflife and 'memory' of their own. These 'seem' to be what give people in deep anaesthesia, or even those clinically dead, 'memories' of experiences during that time that they couldn't possibly have remembered or registered with normal brain function.
It's an interesting concept and explains an awful lot of we accept as spiritual enlightenment. Presumably this little trick operates all the time and may be where instinct and deja vu lives. Knowledge we carry that was never learned and can't be explained.
I like it anyway, fits my views better than 'spritual' stuff. But the scores aren't in so no 'winners' yet.
For all that I believe nice folk see and are convinced by things and are being 100% truthful, I still can't accept their conclusion.
I think of Kerry Packer whom Aussies are well familiar with but was a big, pragmatic, noisy, brutally straight talking multi billionaire who practically ran the joint. He surrounded his life and business with his own massive bullsh*t free zone and I really admired that.
He was snatched out of death's doorway and later interviewed to relate his experience with near death. Paraphrased.. 'it just went black, and believe me, there's nothing out there, not a **cking thing!' I'm more inclined to accept Kezza's testimony on that.
