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April 1,
2005
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Newsletter |
Vol. 04 No. 04 Ed. 1 |
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The
Near-Death Newsletter
is a free semi-monthly newsletter from this website which is emailed
to subscribers every 1st of the month and on every
15th of the month. The mission of this newsletter is
to inform, enlighten, entertain, and aid the public
in understanding the latest in all things concerning
the NDE
and related phenomena by promoting
IANDS
(International Association for Near-Death
Studies), NDE_researchers,
experiencers,
multimedia resources, and
events. Disclaimer: This newsletter is not
affiliated with IANDS; but the creator of this
newsletter, Kevin
Williams, is a member of IANDS who is dedicated
to the IANDS mission.
IANDS is the premier organization for NDE
research. Membership gives you access to subscribe
to their prestigious
Journal of Near-Death Studies and their
newsletter
Vital Signs. You can
join online right from their website. Get
connected with the people and organization which
will likely provide the world with the evidence of
our survival after death. |
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Archive of NDEs in the News
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Read all the major news articles
concerning the NDE and related phenomena
from 1995 to current. This is a
permanent archive to ensure that these
news articles will always be available
on the internet. The Near-Death News
section of this Near-Death Newsletter
will soon be available in syndication so
stay tuned! |
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(March 31, 2005) |
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Have you had a cardiac arrest in the past 6 months?
Do you know someone who has? Qualified individuals will participate in a
doctoral dissertation study on the experience of surviving a cardiac arrest. If
you are: age 40 - 95, a survivor of a cardiac arrest in the past 6 months, not
currently hospitalized, please call John to find out more: (619) 948-4564
Qualified participants will receive a new
Life-Style 2000
Activity Monitor and $25 compensation for their time. [Read
more] |
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(March 3, 2005) |
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A child's near death experience enables her to
perceive unseen dimensions and to interact with the dead ... I learned to fly to
the ceiling turning flips in the ether like a trapeze artist. I looked down on
my body as it lay sleeping. I stretched the perimeters of my room until it felt
smooth to me. I let it curl in upon itself like a nautilus shell. I walked on my
"nautilus shell" room leaving footprints as if it were wet sand. Then the room
would quickly unwind, spinning me along with it until I ended up in the far
corner of the ceiling. This dizzying ride was one of my favorite games. As time
passed, I realized that I saw the world in a way that others didn't. I saw
people and things that others could not see. I told my parents about these
people and things. They patronizingly listened to my "stories," and then they
smiled and assumed that I had imaginary friends and some outlandish ideas. [Read
more] |
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(March 30, 2005) |
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For example one night ... in trying to
resuscitate a young heart attack victim ... He says the man
was shocked nearly 30 times ... with no result and finally, he cracked the man's
chest open and began actually pumping the man's heart with his hand. We were
performing an internal massage and as this was happening I felt something on the
back of my hip. I thought at first perhaps it was one of the nurses leaning over
me or something so I looked over my shoulder and when I looked over my shoulder
there was no one there ... and then obviously I turned to my right and realized
it was the man's hand and he had it on my hip and he was looking directly at me. [Read
more] |
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(April 2, 2005) |
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Those familiar with the near-death phenomenon,
particularly the tunnel with a bright light at the end of it and a usually
benign figure who comforts the dying person, might find commonality with the UFO
abductee tales and other flying saucer encounters over the years. The near-death
experience is mystical, and can be dealt with along theological lines, or with
the help of William James' "The Varieties of Religious Experiences" and more
recent tomes such as Raymond Moody's "Life After Life" ... Our point here is to
note that the tunnel of light might give a clue to what is going on in the dying
episodes and the UFO kidnapping encounters, and this might involve offputting
scenarios to some: time-travel or parallel universes. [Read
more] |
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(March 25, 2005) |
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Precognitive dreams - dreams of things to come - are
common among young adults who are expecting a child, said Parrish. It has been
her experience that expectant couples seem to be more open to precognition about
the health, name and even sex of their unborn baby ... After a near-death
experience at age 23, Rev. Carol Parrish initiated a spiritual mission that led
her to found Sancta Sophia Seminary, an esoteric Christian educational
organization. The seminary assists students in discovering the "Christ-Within"
and prepares them to serve humanity. [Read
more] |
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(April 1, 2005) |
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“By that time, I was completely in a coma,” he said,
recalling that his stomach felt as hard as wood. The doctor had told his parents
that David might or might not make it until the next morning. Stacy claims
today, that he had slipped out of consciousness from the food poisoning and
began an out-of-body experience that lasted until the third day, Easter Sunday
and then came to. “It was like I was in the most beautiful place I had every
been in my life,” he recalled. “I had no desire to come back." ... But what was
most significant, Stacy indicated, was that the experience had changed his life.
“I had a deep desire [after that] to seek after God's ways,” he explained. [Read
more] |
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(March 31, 2005) |
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Doctors freeze man who nearly drowns, bring him back
to life. A Christmas holiday vacation in Mexico was nearly tragic for Dan
O'Reilly and his family. But after a near-death experience - and groundbreaking
medical procedure that brought him back to life - O'Reilly is a grateful, lucky
man ... He showed no signs of life. Attempts to revive him failed and doctors
said, he was without oxygen for about 45 minutes ... "This gentleman was
critically ill," said Joseph Varon, the first physician who examined O'Reilly.
"Basically, he was almost dead to the point that I was about to declare him
brain dead." [Read
more] |
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(March 6, 2005) |
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A terminally ill cancer patient who tried to end his
life with drugs prescribed under Oregon's assisted-suicide law awoke three days
later, alert and talkative, his wife said. David Prueitt, who had lung cancer,
took what was believed to be a fatal dose of a barbiturate prescribed by his
doctor in January. He fell into a coma within minutes, but woke up three days
later, said his wife Lynda Romig Prueitt. Prueitt's wife told The Oregonian
newspaper that he asked, "Why am I not dead?" Prueitt, 42, lived for two more
weeks before dying of natural causes at his Estacada home, about 35 miles
southeast of Portland. [Read
more] |
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(March 3, 2005) |
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Animal experts admitted yesterday they had no
explanation for a spate of what appear to be canine suicides – all from the same
spot. At least five dogs have jumped to their deaths from a bridge over a burn
at Overtoun House in the past six months. In the most recent case, a woman out
walking her dog watched in disbelief as her pet suddenly vaulted over the
parapet and plunged 40 feet to its death. Joyce Stewart, a leading animal
behaviourist ... said the pattern of deaths at the bridge was abnormal. She
said: "Dogs are very able to gauge the heights and depths they can safely jump.
Some people will say this is very spooky and would look for another reason. "I
have never heard of a dog committing suicide. Often if they know they are going
to die, they might go into hiding, but I have never heard of them actually
taking their own lives. [Read
more] |
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(March 14, 2005) |
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Using techniques he had learned in health class and
from watching the Discovery Health channel, he cleared the moss from his
grandfather's mouth and gave him two breaths on the steep bank. Then he ran. By
the time he got back to the pond with his grandfather's friends, Watson had slid
back into the water. Only his face was showing. They waited for paramedics. They
prayed. Watson said he remembers watching his friends and grandson hover near
his body. It was like an out-of-body experience, he said. [Read
more] |
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(March 17, 2005) |
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After a near-death experience on Duxbury Beach in
August 2002, Michael Carr has made sure the device that saved his life is
available to as many Natick residents as possible. Since Carr suffered a sudden
cardiac arrest and was revived with an automated external defibrillator (AED)
two years ago, he is making it his personal mission to get these small machines
into as many public buildings as possible. Carr and his family recently donated
four defibrillators to the town's elementary schools that did not have one.
Thanks to their generosity, Memorial, Bennett Hemenway, Brown and Johnson
schools all are equipped with defibrillators. Now every public school in Natick
is prepared in case a child or staff member experiences sudden cardiac arrest. [Read
more] |
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(February 4, 2005) |
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Her handset had received a text message from her
dead husband ... Just before his death he had sent her an affectionate text
message. Subsequently her daughter traveled to Mauritius to sort out his affairs
and while there sent a text back to her mother. When it arrived, buried away in
the daughter's own text was the loving message her husband had previously sent.
The woman treasured this message but it had disappeared again a few days later
when she switched the phone back on again. She was heart-broken, but then
suddenly the exact same message arrived for a second time. It transpired the
second message coincided with her daughter returning to England and switching
her handset back on again. The [network] might have viewed the original text as
unsent and delivered the message again. But how on Earth the two messages got
mixed up remains a mystery. [Read
more] |
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(March 13, 2005) |
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Afterlife Telegrams, a non-profit making
organization, asks those who wish to contact a dead relative or friend for a
"donation" of $5 (£2.60) a word. The message is then memorized by a terminally
ill volunteer who will endeavour to pass it on when he or she dies. The fee,
depending on the wishes of the messenger, is then given to a relative, a charity
or put towards the payment of medical bills. All the volunteers have a prognosis
of survival for a year or less. If they live longer than a year, the fee is
reimbursed and the telegram is "delivered" free. [Read
more] |
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(March 17, 2005) |
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Toronto's Princess Margaret Hospital has launched a
website to provide terminally ill cancer patients with psychological support
during their final days. Princess Margaret offers an integrated palliative care
program that combines medical treatment with information for terminally ill
patients and their families. Its website, Caring to the End of Life, is part of
the initiative, which aims to integrate mind, body and soul. Death and dying are
neglected areas in the field of medicine, noted Gary Rodin, a palliative care
specialist who heads the program. Cancer care and medical treatments focus on
cure for chronic disease, but doctors may not be trained to give adequate pain
relief and emotional support, he said. [Read
more] |
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(April 2005) |
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A brief description of a typical case of the
reincarnation type would show the following features: |
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Starting in years 2 - 4, the child spontaneously narrates details of a
previous life. |
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(2) |
Volume and clarity of statements from the child increase until ages 5 -
6, when the child talks less about them. |
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By
age 8, remarks about previous life generally cease. |
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Unexpected behavior unusual for child but concordant with behavior of
deceased person occur, e.g., phobias for guns or special interests and
appetites. |
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In
many cases the child has a birthmark or congenital deformity that
corresponds in location and appearance to fatal wounds on the body of
the previous personality. A high number of reincarnated personalities
report violent death, which the child alludes to. |
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In
some cultures the individual who "reincarnates" predicts his or her next
incarnation and may appear in a dream to the expectant mother of the
child to announce an intention to reincarnate in the baby. |
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(7) |
After the age of 10 these child subjects usually develop normally. [Read
more] |
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(April 3, 2005) |
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According to an ongoing research by the National
Institute of Mental Health & Neuro Sciences (Nimhans) and University of
Virginia, “reincarnation appears to be the best interpretation” of the claims of
memories of previous lives “on the basis of the research evidence available
across several cultures (in the East and West)”, said Head of Department of
Clinical Psychology, Nimhans, Satwant Pasricha. “Reincarnation is a possibility
with the data we have. However, there are still many questions that need to be
answered,” said Dr. D Nagaraj, director, Nimhans. “The evidence so far suggests
that reincarnation is worth a second look. There are fringe areas but the
findings of researchers who have spent a lot of time on the subject cannot be
rubbished,” said Dr. Chitaranjan Andrade, professor of psycho-pharmacology,
Nimhans. Nimhans and University of Virginia are the only universities in the
world working on the subject so far.
Dr. Pasricha has investigated and participated in about 500 cases of children
(referred as subjects) since 1973 who “claim” to remember previous lives. [Read
more] |
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(April 1, 2005) |
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Peter Teekamp is an artist and near-death experiencer living in Washington state who accidentally discovered a drawing
that might be worth millions. He believes the drawing to be an original artwork
by the famous 19th century post-impressionist artist Paul Gauguin. He discovered
the drawing hanging on the wall of a restaurant which he visited by pure chance.
Coincidentally, Teekamp happened to be writing a book about Gauguin at the time.
Having studied Gauguin for many years, Teekamp knew a Gauguin when he saw one.
Eventually he bought the drawing from its owner for $5,000. After further
examination and an ugly court battle with its previous owner, Teekamp gathered
evidence to support the claim that it is indeed an original Gauguin. Forensic
experts are needed to prove the age of the drawing and examine the evidence. The
concept for a documentary or reality-based follow-up is being considered. The
Wildenstein Institute in Paris is the leading authority on the works of Gauguin
and have been contacted for their analysis. [Read
more] |
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(March 26, 2005) |
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How religious you are as an adult depends at least
partly on your genes, a study of twins suggests. Past studies have found that
children tend to mirror the religious beliefs and behaviour of their parents.
Now a team led by Laura Koenig at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis has
shown that the influence of environmental factors wanes in adulthood, while
genetic factors become more important in determining how religious a person is.
The team asked 169 pairs of identical twins and 104 pairs of fraternal twins
born in Minnesota, all male and in their early 30s, how often they and their
family went to religious services, prayed and discussed religious teachings
compared with when they were growing up. While the identical twins' behaviour
remained similar in adulthood, greater differences emerged between fraternal
twins as they aged (Journal of Personality, vol 73, p 471). [Read
more] |
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(March 3, 2005) |
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Dr. Claude Swanson was educated as a physicist at
MIT and Princeton University ... His principal interest has been unified field
theory, the so-called "Theory of Everything" which could explain the universe at
the deepest possible level. This has led him to investigate many aspects of the
paranormal, which appear to be completely real phenomena which violate our
present science ... At the same time, thousands of out-of-body and near-death
experiences show that other dimensions and other realities do exist. This has
been the domain of speculation by theoretical physics, but OBE and NDE cases
indicate that parallel realities and dimensions are in some sense real. And
finally, paranormal research suggests that the human soul, the center of human
consciousness, can survive death and is apparently an energy form which can move
and exist independently of the body. Science is discovering that, in the words
of the pioneer Robert Monroe, " we are far more than our physical bodies." [Read
more] |
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(March 26, 2005) |
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More and more research is coming out related to the
mind-body connection, and some investigators have come to the conclusion that
the mind is simply not confined within the brain, that the brain is a vehicle
for the mind, and not the source of the mind. So phenomena like out-of-body
experiences and near-death experiences and so on can only be explained if we
expand our understanding of the mind. The relationship of the mind and the brain
is like the relationship between electricity and a battery. [Read
more] |
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(March 1, 2005) |
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You've heard of telepathy -- it's when you can
communicate with someone just by thinking about it. Now, a researcher in Seattle
says her studies show that, at least for some people, it works. Leanna Standish,
ND, Ph.D., a neuroscientist at Bastyr University in Seattle, calls the
phenomenon "distant neural signaling." She agrees it sounds kind of whacky, and
she can't explain why it works with some people and not others, but after
several experiments, she's convinced the phenomenon is real. In one study,
Standish recruited 30 pairs of volunteers who knew each other and in some cases
were related. [Read
more] |
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(March 31, 2005) |
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A paralyzed man in the US has become the first
person to benefit from a brain chip that reads his mind. Matthew Nagle, 25, was
left paralyzed from the neck down and confined to a wheelchair after a knife
attack in 2001. The pioneering surgery at New England Sinai Hospital,
Massachusetts, last summer means he can now control everyday objects by thought
alone. The brain chip reads his mind and sends the thoughts to a computer to
decipher. He can think his TV on and off, change channels and alter the volume
thanks to the technology and software linked to devices in his home. [Read
more] |
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(March 3, 2005) |
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Hardly articulate, the tiny strangleweed, a pale
parasitic plant, can sense the presence of friends, foes, and food, and make
adroit decisions on how to approach them. Mustard weed, a common plant with a
six-week life cycle, can't find its way in the world if its root-tip statolith -
a starchy "brain" that communicates with the rest of the plant - is cut off. The
ground-hugging mayapple plans its growth two years into the future, based on
computations of weather patterns. And many who visit the redwoods of the
Northwest come away awed by the trees' survival for millenniums - a journey
that, for some trees, precedes the Parthenon. [Read
more] |
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(March 15, 2005) |
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For decades, Dr. Thaler has been a pioneer in the
area of artificial intelligence. Beginning with some very highly unorthodox
theoretical physics experiments in 1975, he embarked upon what many AI
onlookers, such as NASA, have called AI's best bet at creating human to
trans-human level intelligence in machines. In these initial, strictly
curiosity-driven investigations, he built, trained, and then destroyed
artificial neural networks and discovered that all of the key features of the
core near-death experience were duplicated within these destruction sequences.
Most importantly, he observed that within their last gasps, expiring neural
networks produced coherent and often useful new ideas. After very careful
experimentation, he discerned those levels of damage producing the highest
turnover of such novel concepts and then attached another neural network to
automatically mine for the best of these emerging ideas. In so doing, he
produced an invention called the "Device for the Autonomous Generation of Useful
Information," or what the attentive public came to know as the "Creativity
Machine Paradigm." [Read
more] |
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(March 31, 2005) |
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"Mr. Schiavo's overriding concern here was to
provide for Terri a peaceful death with dignity," Mr. Felos said in an afternoon
news conference. "This death was not for the siblings, and not for the spouse
and not for the parents. This was for Terri." ... It drew religious
conservatives and abortion opponents who took up the Schindlers' cause, saying
no life should end prematurely. And just as the case of Karen Ann Quinlan
prompted a debate nearly 30 years ago over the "right to die," the Schiavo case
seemed to focus as much on the "right to live." ... The Vatican issued a
statement calling Ms. Schiavo's death a "violation of the sacred nature of life"
that had "shocked consciences." [Read
more] |
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(March 31, 2005) |
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The ethical dilemma: The debate over euthanasia is
significant, but it is not new. To frame this debate, there are several
distinctions that one ought to make. The first is between active and passive
euthanasia. Active euthanasia involves withdrawing treatment from a patient
causing that patient to die, while passive euthanasia involves withholding
potentially lifesaving treatment from the outset. In essence, it's the
difference between killing someone and allowing someone to die. Regardless, if
the patient is better off dead, then the patient is better off dead. How he or
she gets to that point seems peripheral. The second distinction - between
voluntary and non-voluntary euthanasia - is more important. Voluntary euthanasia
occurs at the informed request of a competent patient, while non-voluntary
euthanasia involves a patient who is not competent to give consent. [Read
more] |
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(March 13, 2005) |
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Sheila Mclean argues if we are to permit doctors to
assist death, then we owe it to the patient, family and healthcare professionals
to decide what is the most dignified and ethical way to help the patient die ...
There are, therefore, two issues raised by cases of this sort. The first is
whether or not it is ever right to allow someone to die. The second relates to
the method of bringing about the death – would it be more ethical to end the
patient's life by way, for example, of a lethal injection rather than removing
the essentials of life and causing a slow, arguably undignified, death? The
realities of modern life require a principled response to these difficult
questions. [Read
more] |
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(April 4, 2005) |
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The Pope had refused to go back to the hospital,
when his health began to seriously deteriorate, and perhaps prolong his life
with the latest artificial life support system ~ all of which were available to
him ~ but, instead, he chose to welcome his death and, in the process, teach us
his greatest lesson ... Elizabeth Kübler
Ross is correct when she writes, " Death may be viewed as the curtain between
the existence we are conscious of and one that is hidden from us until we raise
the curtain." We can raise the curtain now if we stop being controlled by fear
and begin to trust and express our deepest feelings ~ especially love and our
deepest urge to unite and cooperate with one another. And yes, that was, in
essence, the last message of Pope John Paul II. [Read
more] |
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(April 5, 2005) |
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All who care about the pope, who chose not to be
returned to a hospital, have reason to be thankful that he simply died. At the
hospital, who knows? Could doctors have used some desperate measure to stabilize
him in some near-death state, and kept him there for hours or days or weeks,
maybe even years, with or without his awareness? Imagine how much worse, how
pointlessly unaccepting of death, that could have been. Imagine if he had fallen
into a condition like the one Terri Schiavo suffered, with the pope's body
stabilized but his higher brain function gone. Some brave cardinal could have
eased a lot of people's confusion by better studying the medical evidence in
Terri Schiavo's case. Such a cardinal could have said, months ago, that there
was no hope in her case, either. No hope, I mean, that conscious human life
would return to her body, because her cerebral cortex, which had been destroyed
and largely replaced by spinal fluid, could not regrow. [Read
more] |
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(March 17, 2005) |
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The pope has for years insisted that the most
elemental biological definition of the body's existence is, in fact, life. He
argues to preserve a zygote as a human being at the beginning of the human
process and the body, devoid of spirit, at its end. He has chosen to combat
contraception, abortion and euthanasia in such a way as to make life, as he
understands it, the ultimate good. No situation, no medical condition can
justify modifying his absolute interpretation. That is simplistic thinking in
the face of terribly complex issues ... Still, a clutch of politicians has
recently joined the pope in insisting that even the questionable biological
functioning of a body is life and that nothing should threaten it ... The life
of a human being is precious, unique, to be preserved and honored. The
artificially continued existence of a body without that life is medical
manipulation. [Read
more] |
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(2) |
Q & A with P.M.H. Atwater, L.H.D., Ph.D. (Hon.) |
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An in-depth look at the near-death phenomenon |
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 In
this section of the newsletter,
P.M.H. Atwater
will answer questions submitted to her from subscribers to
this newsletter.
Atwater's contribution to near-death studies is considered
to be one of the most important as her first two books,
Beyond the Light
and
Coming Back to Life,
are considered to be the "Bibles" of the NDE by researchers
and enthusiasts.
Her latest books are entitled
We Live Forever: The Real Truth About Death
and
The New Children and Near-Death Experiences.
If you have a question which you would like her to
answer for this column, just email your question to Kevin
Williams at
http://www.near-death.com/contact.html for consideration. For more
information about P.M.H. Atwater's contribution to near-death
studies,
download her press kit here. |
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QUESTION:
"I had all the beautiful usual 'symptoms' and the continuing absolute awareness
of 'truth,' but I also had one I've never seen retold. When I was back in my
body after the emergency Caesarean, in which I stopped breathing for 45 minutes
and was stone cold gone, when I came back, for weeks my body felt like someone
had draped a heavy skeleton over me. I was hunched over with the weight of it
and had to learn to move with it again. I shuffled rather than walked, turned
like a robot rather than a human. Every joint was sooooooooo hard to manipulate
and it seemed like such a complicated process. To get a wrist to move in order
to work fingers was such a conscious effort and they creaked and grated, bone
against bone, very unpleasant but not painful. It was like my mind was
processing the movement of bone, sinew, tissue, muscle, joints - literally as if
someone had draped a body over me and I had to figure out how to work it, like a
puppeteer being inside a mannequin. It felt very cumbersome and very unevolved.
My initial delight years after when I discovered other people had experienced
the tunnel and the light of pure love, has always niggled that no one else seems
to report this dysfunction of the body and soul on rejoining. It's funny, even
though I had had a Caesarean, it didn't seem to be that area that grated. Moving
a finger was a slightly comical process. My story is, of course, much bigger,
but I wonder if you've ever heard of this strange misfit approach on
reintegration?" --
Jenny |
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P.M.H. Atwater'S REPLY:
"I had to laugh at your description of reintegration. Please don't misunderstand
me. I mean no disrespect, but I dealt with something similar myself after two of
my three near-death experiences. Yes, I have heard of this before with others,
many times in fact, but not told in quite the same manner that you did - of a
skeleton draped over you, the weight, the discomfort. You are the first to use
such an analogy. Let me say, though, that it is not unusual for an experiencer
to feel "out of sorts" or somehow alienated from his or her physical body upon
re-entry and afterwards ...". [Read
more here] |
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PMH Atwater's website
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Marketplace (a public service)
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Her research on this website
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At the
NDE Online Store you can find NDE products
such as books, documentaries, movies, music,
magazines, and journals. More NDE media products
are coming. |
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by Yvonne Perry |
(Availability: Now) |
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In her new book, "More Than Meets
the Eye," Yvonne Perry address topics that many people are not comfortable
talking about - such as suicide, the near-death experience, end of life
decisions, grief and other emotions regarding the passing of a loved one. Her
chapter on euthanasia comes from her own experience with her beloved uncle who
was kept alive on machines against his will for almost a year. In the chapter
entitled, “Let Go of my Toe” she gives a heart-rending account of her uncle's
plight and his spirit visits to her in his final days. Imagine her surprise when
a year after his death she encountered his spirit at a 7-11 store smoking a
cigarette and drinking Coke! [Read
more] |
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by Dr. G.M. M. Woerlee |
(Availability: Now) |
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The author is an NDE skeptic and
an anesthesiologist with more than twenty years of hospital experience, Dr.
Woerlee has been struck over the years by the similarities between the body's
symptoms under anesthesia and its reactions near death. Among the issues he
addresses are the sensations of being disembodied that those near death often
describe, the perception that mind and body are separate components of
existence, whether there is such a thing as a soul, the physical effects of
decreased oxygen to the brain, and the visions that the dying sometimes report,
from rapturous experiences of eternal peace to diabolical dreams. [Read
more] |
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by Paul Elder |
(Availability: Now) |
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Open a psychic doorway to the
spirit world ... That's exactly what hap | | | | |