ChatterBank0 min ago
Life After Death/out Of Body Experience
93 Answers
I know this is an age old poser and boring to many, but I am interested to know if any reader has experienced this strange phenomena and what their feelings are about the subject (not necessarily religious). I have a very credible friend who is convinced this happened to him and now has no fear of death and an unshakable belief in an afterlife. What's your take on this?
Answers
Mine was massive blood loss, at the same time I felt a calmness I also experienced a rather arrogant (but human) sensation of 'They won't cope without me'. They didn't have to, obviously.
22:47 Sun 22nd Apr 2018
Once, long time ago ( was in hospital when first National Lottery draw was drawn, Noel Edmonds ). I had a brain aneurysm ( very lucky to be alive apparently ), after my op at Smethwick Neurosurgical hospital I could hear mrs av calling Tony Tony but I could have quite easily have followed the light.
I have had two, one as a child when my mother died, and another when I had a really high fever in the Far East. I have posted this on here before, but I will again as it is quite relevant to the OP.
It is to with the way our brain works, which probably isn’t how most imagine. Our senses take in the surroundings and recreate those surroundings in our brain. Our brain then puts us inside those surroundings it has created, so basically it’s like we live in a video game in our brain. That is why it takes a child so long to learn to walk – positioning ourselves in our brain is a very hard task to learn, whereas a child’s growing brain could master the art of walking in no time. That is also why we have out-of-body experiences as the brain can lose its ability to put us in the right place, through severe shock for example. The most common place to go when we lose our position is the ceiling and we look down on ourselves, but we can go anywhere.
It is to with the way our brain works, which probably isn’t how most imagine. Our senses take in the surroundings and recreate those surroundings in our brain. Our brain then puts us inside those surroundings it has created, so basically it’s like we live in a video game in our brain. That is why it takes a child so long to learn to walk – positioning ourselves in our brain is a very hard task to learn, whereas a child’s growing brain could master the art of walking in no time. That is also why we have out-of-body experiences as the brain can lose its ability to put us in the right place, through severe shock for example. The most common place to go when we lose our position is the ceiling and we look down on ourselves, but we can go anywhere.
well people have out-of-body experiences
we know this by reading the scripts above
we also know that they arent out of body
we know this by reading my previous post -
They put numbers on the tops of lampshades and asked those with out of body experiences in the ward or cas what the numbers were ....
Sorry no takers .... no one got the numbers right ( above random) [ accident hospital Brum, eighties]
we know this by reading the scripts above
we also know that they arent out of body
we know this by reading my previous post -
They put numbers on the tops of lampshades and asked those with out of body experiences in the ward or cas what the numbers were ....
Sorry no takers .... no one got the numbers right ( above random) [ accident hospital Brum, eighties]
My out of the body experiences were not near death occasions. Far from it. Several times,I was simply laying in bed and I started to roll back and forth, like I was turning over. I then rolled out of my body. It happened rather too frequently for my liking. My sister saw herself sleeping, and out of her body walked to the bathroom. She could not see her reflection in the mirror. Her friend came in and started doing her ablutions not seeing my sister. When she awoke she told her friend what she saw her doing?? A very embarrassed friend confirmed her words.
This all fascinates me too. I haven't experienced anything like it but my mother many years ago having an operation in hospital claims she found herself back in the pub they had.... When she came round from the operation they apparently told her she had 'died' on the operating table.
I only know when she did pass away some years after...I experienced her presence in the pub a lot. Could say more on that on the morning she passed away too but that's another story.
I only know when she did pass away some years after...I experienced her presence in the pub a lot. Could say more on that on the morning she passed away too but that's another story.
That's only a theory, Pixie.
A dear friend of mine who sadly died of myeloma in 2009 was regressed and told, with fascinating detail, how he'd been killed early on in battle, during a Charles I / Cromwell conflict, by a cannonball hitting him in the chest. He specified details about his fiancée and about an oddity in the formation of the King's army. After specific research undertaken in the aftermath of his regression, all his details turned out to be true and correct.
My friend was a devout Christian throughout his life and a scientist by profession. He was one of the most intelligent, enlightened and honest people you could ever hope to meet.
A dear friend of mine who sadly died of myeloma in 2009 was regressed and told, with fascinating detail, how he'd been killed early on in battle, during a Charles I / Cromwell conflict, by a cannonball hitting him in the chest. He specified details about his fiancée and about an oddity in the formation of the King's army. After specific research undertaken in the aftermath of his regression, all his details turned out to be true and correct.
My friend was a devout Christian throughout his life and a scientist by profession. He was one of the most intelligent, enlightened and honest people you could ever hope to meet.