OK, I didn't see him at the moment he died.
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OK, I didn't see him at the moment he died.
Here is the explanation. The difference is these people didn't die but came close to it, while the people in question closed up shop.
Quote:
Peace of Mind: Near-Death Experiences Now Found to Have Scientific Explanations
Seeing your life pass before you and the light at the end of the tunnel, can be explained by new research on abnormal functioning of dopamine and oxygen flow
Have you read the NDERF website? There are thousands of stories on there and many of them were confirmed dead (i.e. no brain activity).
Changes in brain chemicals doesn't necessarily mean that caused the experience. It might be an effect, rather.
My mom had an NDE...
I haven't but I've heard some of the stories (floating over the body, etc.).
It's what they recall last or what they believe they recall. People are also highly suggestible. It's not out of the realm of possibility their experience is just referencing what others have also supposedly had. Are there NDE experiences written down from a century ago or is it just in the last 4 or 5 decades?
Pretty sure not all of those people out of thousands had been aware of NDE stories in the media. Some of them were kids when it happened. The website is fairly recent, so of course most of them are accounts by people who are still alive today.
My mom is in her late 60s... hers happened as a child, in the 50s. Nobody talked about that stuff then.
Apparently this is a known phenomena and it was exactly like that, a smile before the last 2-3 breaths
https://bkbooks.com/blogs/something-...oment-of-death
Doesn't anybody look sad ? I'm sure that I shall. Of course, if death means the end of unbearable pain, then the smile would surely be appropriate.