Fascinating is the qualification the Daily Mail gives to the stories of two women and a man who say they were in the so-called “beyond” for a few minutes.
Dr. Bruce Greyson, a professor of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences at the University of Virginia, told the outlet, “I think this phenomenon is more common than we think, but I don’t have a materialistic explanation for it.”
We present the three cases and you can draw your conclusions.
There was a beautiful white light and I found my great-aunt: Lynn Mildner
A complication during jaw surgery briefly left Lynn Mildner “dead”.
She tells her story of how she “miraculously” came back to life and tells what she observed in that other enigmatic side.
The “beautiful white light” in the distance and the experience of talking to deceased relatives will never be forgotten.
Mildner is 69 years old today and lives in Hertfordshire, England. When he was 30, he was given general anesthesia to have his wisdom teeth removed.
But there was a complication and “doctors were forced to restore his heart’s normal rhythm with a defibrillator, a device used to deliver shocks to the heart of someone in cardiac arrest.”
Mildner assures that “on the other side” all was at peace. “There was a beautiful white light that I knew I had to go to.”
It was easy. He drifted and drifted, palpably happy. I came to some kind of entrance.
She said her “great-aunt Nellie” told her she would be her guardian spirit.
“I couldn’t wait to cross that threshold and see my grandmothers.” But Aunt Nellie said she couldn’t.
“I had to come back because I still had a lot to do and to achieve. That threshold was final. Once you got past it, there was no turning back. And I have to go back.
“The return journey was uphill, in a dark and very hard tunnel, as if against gravity. I didn’t want to go.”
“And then my eyes blinked and I saw people in surgical clothes holding my arms and one of them had the paddles of a defibrillator,” the British media reported.
I didn’t feel pain, but a kind of regret”: Justin Cameron
Justin Cameron, of Ottawa, Canada, had to have emergency surgery after coming down with peritonitis.
Cameron, who was 44 at the time, recalled “expecting the surgery and having a near-death experience”.
“I didn’t feel pain, but a sort of regret,” he described. He said the feeling was that he was “walking away.”
I saw a supercut reel of my life in the blink of an eye. I have learned that death is painless.
Today, at age 51, Cameron calls his body a “vehicle.”
“I regretted not taking better care of my vehicle.”
Cameron, after that shocking episode, “fatigue” and “disappointment in the world and life” disappeared.
Today he is happy to “see and hear the magic of the world”.
I saw my body in the hospital bed: Shirley Yáñez
Shirley Yáñez suffered a cardiac arrest in 2005. Eighteen years later, she says about the moment, “I could see my body in the hospital bed.”
At the age of 66, she told London that “she almost died due to cardiac arrest after developing a fibroid in her uterus in 2005.”
He nearly bled ‘to death’ and received three blood transfusions, which his body rejected.
The heart stopped and he claims he “died for a few minutes”.
He claims that he saw her body in the hospital bed with blood on all the sheets.
“I was at peace and I could see my body, the blood, and I could hear all the machines beeping.”
“I saw the ER nurse enter the room,” she says.
It felt like I had pins and needles all over my body as new blood was pumped out and I went back into my body.
Thanks to that experience, he said he lives to the fullest today: “My near-death experience was the best thing that happened to me, because today I don’t fear death and I embrace life.”
Source: Eluniverso

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