The Wisdom Of Near-Death Experiences by Dr Penny Sartori, Watkins Publishing
According to PENNY SARTORI:
Researchers writing in the medical journal Critical Care Medicine kept in touch with the parents of a six-month-old boy who nearly died in hospital during a serious illness.
Three years later, the child was told by his parents that his grandmother was dying.
The child asked: was she going through the tunnel to meet God?
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Tom, the four-year-old son of a British soldier called Gary, was seriously ill in hospital.
It was 'touch and go', said Gary.
A few months later, the boy told Gary he wanted to go to 'that park' again.
The boy said: 'The one through the tunnel that I went to when I was in the hospital.
'There was a park with lots of children and swings and things, with a white fence around it.
'I tried to climb over the fence, but this man stopped me and said that I wasn't to come yet and he sent me back down the tunnel and I was back in the hospital again.'
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Natasha, now aged 33, was aged 9 when she nearly died from an infection.
She was woken by a bright light.
She says: 'The light was spilling into the room around the edge of the door and I could hear my name being called - even though I’m profoundly deaf.
'I got up to see what the light was, and turned round to see myself still in the bed, asleep.
'But the voice kept calling me, so I opened the bedroom door and it was just this pure brilliant white light. I stepped into it and kept walking towards the voice. I was just walking in light; there wasn't anything else.
'Then I was in a room and realised there was a presence behind me. He put a hand on my shoulder but told me not to turn around. I had to go back, he said, because I was important and had a job to do.'
The next day, Natasha was feeling much better.
dailymail.co.uk
According to PENNY SARTORI:
Dr Melvin Morse, who worked at an American paediatric intensive care unit, carried out research on 30 children who had had Near Death Experiences (NDE's).
Ten years on, they appeared to have benefited from their experiences.
They were good at schoolwork, mentally stable and had empathy for others.
dailymail.co.uk
Dr Phyllis Marie Atwater has collected hundreds of cases of childhood NDEs
According to Dr Atwater many of the children who had had NDE's considered themselves to be spiritual.
But, their spirituality was often quite separate from the religion in which they'd been brought up.
A few months later, the boy told Gary he wanted to go to 'that park' again.
The boy said: 'The one through the tunnel that I went to when I was in the hospital.
'There was a park with lots of children and swings and things, with a white fence around it.
'I tried to climb over the fence, but this man stopped me and said that I wasn't to come yet and he sent me back down the tunnel and I was back in the hospital again.'
dailymail.co.uk
Natasha, now aged 33, was aged 9 when she nearly died from an infection.
She was woken by a bright light.
She says: 'The light was spilling into the room around the edge of the door and I could hear my name being called - even though I’m profoundly deaf.
'I got up to see what the light was, and turned round to see myself still in the bed, asleep.
'But the voice kept calling me, so I opened the bedroom door and it was just this pure brilliant white light. I stepped into it and kept walking towards the voice. I was just walking in light; there wasn't anything else.
'Then I was in a room and realised there was a presence behind me. He put a hand on my shoulder but told me not to turn around. I had to go back, he said, because I was important and had a job to do.'
The next day, Natasha was feeling much better.
dailymail.co.uk
According to PENNY SARTORI:
Dr Melvin Morse, who worked at an American paediatric intensive care unit, carried out research on 30 children who had had Near Death Experiences (NDE's).
Ten years on, they appeared to have benefited from their experiences.
They were good at schoolwork, mentally stable and had empathy for others.
dailymail.co.uk
Dr Phyllis Marie Atwater has collected hundreds of cases of childhood NDEs
According to Dr Atwater many of the children who had had NDE's considered themselves to be spiritual.
But, their spirituality was often quite separate from the religion in which they'd been brought up.
According to PENNY SARTORI:
Janice Wright, a British woman was visiting friends in Virginia, USA.
In the middle of the night, she suddenly 'woke up'.
In her bedroom was her childhood nanny.
According to Janice: "In real life, she was well over 80. But in the vision, she was ageless and surrounded by an immensely bright light. She smiled at me, put her hand out and telepathically told me all was well.
"I was shocked and stayed awake. The next morning, I told my hosts I thought my old nanny had died.
"Later that day, a cousin called from England to tell me that’s exactly what had happened."
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According to Shelley: "I was walking along a path and in front of me was this little girl with her auntie.
"I'm not sure how accurate the image of the auntie was, as I’d never met her or seen photographs of her - I just knew that she'd died about 20 years previously.
"She smiled and telepathically told me all was well
"The aunt said she was there to take the little girl to heaven. The child was dressed in pink and had a pink bucket and spade and glitter make-up on the side of her face. She was very happy and dancing around.
"I woke up the next day and felt really unsettled. I thought about phoning the little girl's father but then thought better of it, trying to rationalise that it was just a dream. That feeling of anxiety lasted all day."
That evening, Shelley went to dinner with relatives. At one point, she glanced at her watch. It was 10.10pm.
"Suddenly, all of the unsettled feeling and anxiety just fell away and I thought: at last I'm starting to relax."
The next day, Shelley learned that the little girl had died the night before - just after 10pm. The cause of her death was unknown.
According to PENNY SARTORI:
"I’m increasingly open to the possibility that our brains are separate from our consciousness.
"In other words, the brain may be channelling what some people call the soul, rather than responsible for creating it."
According to PENNY SARTORI:
In 2004, in England, a dying woman in her 70s was unconscious in a hospital.
Her husband, Peter, and son, Harry, were holding her hands, and her daughter, Gail, had placed a hand on her forehead.
Peter suddenly noticed a bright light a little distance away.
A tall man stepped forward from the light with his hands outstretched.
Then the dying woman seemed to rise from her bed and walk towards the man.
According to Peter: "He was waiting there as if to give her a welcoming hug; there was a sense of peace and love."
According to daughter Gail: "All of a sudden, I could see Mum walking into the distance on a path.
"Around her head was like a sun, and on her right-hand side, I could see the silhouette of some people.
"I saw this tall person - I don’t know who he was. When she reached him, he took her into his arms as if in a warm embrace that was full of love.
"Mum’s breaths got shallower. And then there were no further breaths and the scene disappeared."
According to PENNY SARTORI:
Healthcare workers have recorded various phenomena at the moment of death , including: a change in temperature, a light around the body, the malfunctioning of electrical equipment and the stopping of clocks.
Hospice and palliative-care consultant Dr John Lerma has reported that 70 to 80 per cent of his patients waited for their loved ones to leave the room before dying.
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