In 1982 I died from terminal cancer. The condition I had was inoperable, and any kind of chemotherapy they could give me would just have made me more of a vegetable. I was given six to eight months to live.
I had been an information freak in the1970’s, and I had become increasingly despondent over the nuclear crisis, the ecology crisis, and so forth. So, since I did not have a spiritual basis, I began to believe that nature had made a mistake, and that we were probably a cancerous organism on the planet. I saw no way that we could get out from all the problems we had created for ourselves and the planet. I perceived all humans as cancer, and that is what I got.
That is what killed me. Be careful what your world view is. It can feed back on you, especially if it is a negative world view. I had a seriously negative one. That is what led me into my death. I tried all sorts of alternative healing methods, but nothing helped.
So I determined that this was really just between me and God. I had never really faced God before, or even dealt with God. I was not into any kind of spirituality at the time, but I began a journey into learning about spirituality and alterna¬tive healing. I set out to do all the reading I could and bone up on the subject, because I did not want to be surprised on the other side. So I started reading on various religions and philosophies. They were all very interesting, and gave hope that there was something on the other side. I ended up in hospice care.
I remember waking up one morning at home about 4:30 AM, and I just knew that this was it. This was the day I was going to die. So I called a few friends and said goodbye. I woke up my hospice caretaker and told her. I had a private agreement with her that she would leave my dead body alone for six hours, since I had read that all kinds of interesting things happen when you die. I went back to sleep.
The next thing I remember is the beginning of a typical near-death experience. Suddenly I was fully aware and I was standing up, but my body was in the bed. There was this darkness around me. Being out of my body was even more vivid than ordinary experience. It was so vivid that I could see every room in the house, I could see the top of the house, I could see around the house, I could see under the house.
There was this Light shining. I turned toward the Light. The Light was very similar to what many other people have described in their near-death experiences. It was so magnificent. It is tangible; you can feel it. It is alluring; you want to go to it like you would want to go to your ideal mother’s or father’s arms.
Hi Pheonix, ...great article! I recall his NDE being one of the most incredible, and what he discovered rings so true from the spiritual perspective. I will link your article here on my 'Afterlife' discussion thread. -
ReplyDeletehttp://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=36063
Namaste, paul
So what are your beliefs about hell. Why do people claim to have gone there and seen others there with there entire experience. do you not believe that the wicked in gods eyes will not go there?
ReplyDeleteI believe that heaven and hell are a creation of one's state of mind and life experiences. To me the terms are referring to an afterlife, but are ways to metaphorically describe one's current reality.
ReplyDeleteSometimes one's own mind can be one's personal hell, sometimes it's something more concrete like poverty and war. I don't think that worrying about some potential esoteric state of eternal torture in the future is practical, considering the fact that there's so much going in the world right now that needs to be dealt with to free people from a hell that they're already in.
One thing for sure, my friend, "If your going through Hell...don't stop!"