![]() and India by interviewing doctors and nurses who had been present when people died. Osis, Ph.D., psychology professor at the University of Freiburg, and Erlendur Haraldsson, Ph.D., psychology professor at the University of Munich, studied deathbed visions in the U.S. She then went out to play and sadly was murdered only hours later. She told her mother not to worry because Jesus would take care of her. She said she saw a beautiful golden heaven and that it was “really, really, real,” with gold angels, diamonds, and jewels. Amazingly, against medical odds, the boy lived one more year.Įlisabeth Kubler-Ross described a healthy 4-year-old girl who had a vivid dream she described to her mother. Diane Komp, a Yale pediatric oncologist, described a 7-year-old girl who sat up in bed just before her death from leukemia and said, “The angels, they are so beautiful, can’t you hear them singing Mommy?” A boy dying of leukemia said that God spoke to him and that he asked God to live another year so he could explain his death to his 3-year-old brother. Melvin Morse describes children’s deathbed visions, explaining that they are astonishing scientific proof of the validity of the near-death experience.ĭr. Looking just at those who are conscious, between 50 and 60 percent experience deathbed visions.Ĭhildren are truth-tellers because of their youthful naivete, so when they experience such visions, they describe them matter-of-factly. Stephen Wagner estimates the number of people who experience deathbed visions as even more because only about 10 percent of dying people are conscious shortly before their deaths. James L Hallenbeck, director of palliative care services with the Veterans Administration Palo Alto Health Care System, estimates that these pre-death visions or deathbed visions of deceased loved ones occur for at least 25 percent of deaths. They are God’s counselors, bringing reassurance to those about to cross over.ĭr. Both help the person prepare for the transition. Deathbed visions are the visions dying patients have in the days or hours immediately preceding death. Pre-death visions are visions of deceased loved ones patients commonly have in the weeks before they die. Nearing Death Awareness as Evidence of Survival Hogan’s Guided Afterlife Connections procedure. The book contains 26 accounts of people who have had their own afterlife connections through the Dr. Hogan is co-author of Guided Afterlife Connections (Greater Reality Publications, 2011). He is director of the Center for Spiritual Understanding and on the boards of the Academy of Spiritual and Paranormal Studies and the Association for Evaluation and Communication of Evidence for Survival. ( and is a writer and trainer of writers with 38 years experience. The following was extracted, with permission, from Hogan’s book, Your Eternal Self, published in 2009 by Greater Reality Publications, pages 66-76. ![]() documents experiences of NDA from his book Your Eternal Self and his website. Near or nearing death awareness (NDA) is a term to describe a dying person’s experiences of the dying process and broadly refers to a variety of experiences such as end of life dreams or visions. ![]() Deathbed visions (DBVs) are the visions dying patients have in the days or hours immediately preceding death. ![]() Pre-death visions (PDVs) are visions of deceased loved ones that patients often have in the weeks before they die.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |