After missing his wife of 50 years, dying widower sees her again as he passes; Boston neurologist drowns during Costa Rica rafting vacation — is transformed by NDE

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In a post-Christian West that is functionally atheistic, doctors are notoriously brainwashed into thinking that the soul and the afterlife are just comforting superstitions for weak people: “When you die, that’s it. It’s over.”

When the brainwaves stop, it is just “a cool, silky blackness,” claimed the psychopath Winston Churchill, the same atheist who burned 500,000 civilians alive at Dresden, saved bolshevik communism by his alliance with Stalin, and bankrupted his own British Empire, which began to disappear after WWII.

Recently an atheist caused me huge harm who denied God, scoffed that NDEs are not real, and laughed at reincarnation. I am tired, above all else, of the direct result of this thinking:
It is okay to shamelessly lie, use others, and say to oneself:
“No God saw my crimes, and if no one on this earth exposes or arrests me, then no punishment awaits me either when I die. I got clean away with it.”
WRONG.

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….. “Can’t you see it?” Deathbed vision of a dying widower 

JdN: I found this comment under a YouTube NDE video comforting because ten months ago I too lost my beloved and loyal wife — my NS comrade as well for 17 good years.

Mortality jumps by 70% in widowers like me in their sixties. Women often have a whole network of friends to fall back on when their spouse dies, but men tend to focus on their marriage mate, and when they lose that wife, the grief can be terrible. I hate lying in bed alone.

I carry on because I love my race, it is in mortal danger from the jews and white traitors, God gave me big things to do, and the time is ripe.

We now face mega-death from 1) violent, hate-filled minorities;

2) the mRNA vaxx being snuck into our meat and vegetables;

3) from the digital currency; and, above all,

4) from a nuclear WWIII with a Russia and China that are gradually coming to genuinely HATE us.

I should have been born as an American in 1889, not in the much smaller Germany, and started here a new, authentic, credible modern religion to straighten out our race. It is our own glaring flaws that the jew fastens onto like a leech. We can do nothing with Whites as they now are.

 

*** [I edited this for typos. Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRis2a-sWz0&lc=UgwwyNySDjleI48A5hV4AaABAg]

I’ve always had questions and doubts about things. Not religious and never went to church. I’ve always believed in the science of things that can be proven.

Recently I lost my wonderful parents five months apart. They were married 50 yrs and absolutely loved one another so much. (Both were 69.)

I knew when my mom passed of breast cancer that my dad would soon follow. Five months later, he was indeed in the hospital, septic from necrotic gallbladder and multi-organ failure. (His body just seems to have suddenly given up and shut down) The day before he passed he kept asking me, my brother, all the doctors & nurses if they “could see that?” And he motioned toward the ceiling.

We kept looking up (seeing nothing), but for two days he was so persistent that we just eventually told him “yes,” as he was getting frustrated that we couldn’t see the “lights and colors floating around.”

The day he passed, he told me he was sorry that he wasn’t going to make it because it was too late to fix him. We told him not to talk like that, and he would get better as soon as the doctors got that necrotic gallbladder out.

My dad had severe rheumatoid arthritis since age 27 and hadn’t been able to lift his arms for years due to his shoulder joints being eroded.

But as he was dying he lifted both arms towards the ceiling as if he was reaching for something, and he was moving his hands together as if he were working with something. And he said “Hold on, Brenda (my mom’s name [his late wife’s]). I’m trying to get it open. I’m coming.”

And he kept his arms outstretched as if he were trying to open something, and then he passed.

I’m so glad I had others in the room to witness this, and I recorded some of it with my phone or else no one would have believed it. I wouldn’t either. 😉

If you knew my dad and witnessed how bad he suffered the last few years, not being able to lift his arms to drive or anything due to shoulder joint erosion, you’d know what a huge miracle this was.

He very clearly was reaching for something to let him be with my mom, as he was telling her he was coming as soon as he got it open.

Witnessing this is why I’m here watching these videos now. I definitely now believe there is something more than this existence as we know it here on Earth.

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….Neurologist’s Near-Death Experience Changes His Understanding Of Consciousness

“I was a hardcore atheist. I operated on many brains and did not see a soul anywhere in them.” “I saw a light which I cannot describe in  language, and I could see 360 degrees around me.”

Authored by Maria Han via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Neuropathologist Dr. Peter Cummings was convinced everything about consciousness, including profound near-death experiences (NDEs), could be explained by science and was rooted in the brain—until he had an NDE of his own.

Cummings was a career-oriented man who was doing well in his job as a doctor and as an assistant professor at Boston University’s School of Medicine/Dept. of Anatomy and Neurobiology.

Peter Cummings, MD is a triple board-certified physician specializing in neuropathology and forensic pathology. He earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Maine in Orono and a masters degree in pathology from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

He attended the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin, Ireland, graduating medical school with honors. He completed his residency in anatomic pathology and his fellowship in neuropathology at the University of Virginia. He is an award-winning educator and bestselling author. He has been accepted as a medical expert in the courts of 27 states and 7 different countries.

A trip to Costa Rica for his wife’s 50th birthday changed his outlook completely. While there, he decided to go whitewater rafting with his wife and son.

Cummings was always afraid of the water, though not sure why. He often practiced holding his breath because he felt that one day it would come in handy.

“I used to get really bored in school and one of the things I would do is I would hold my breath. See how long I could hold my breath and then try to beat that record. And I always thought someday I’m going to need this,” recalled Cummings.

“I always found excuses to not be in the water, because I just always felt like I was going to drown,” said Cummings.

He came close that day in Costa Rica when the raft he and his family were in flipped. He bounced along in the water for a while, until he was pulled under by the current.

There was a point where I was drowning. And I knew it,” said Cummings.

He was surprised at how calm he felt in the face of death.

“I thought about the autopsies I’d done on people who had drowned. This is supposed to be a very peaceful way to die. And then I’m thinking well, ‘What the heck is taking so long?’”

At the bottom of the river, Cummings experienced something neuroscience probably would have called a hallucination.

At that point, everything stopped and I was next to this huge boulder and all the bubbles had stopped. And I moved my hand through the bubbles and they all just sort of moved around my hand in this very weird way. And then there was this bright light,” he said.

Then he felt “an incredible feeling of love.” He heard a voice speak to him.

“I got really emotional not because it’s upsetting but because I’m in that moment of that beauty. And I knew my family was going to be okay. And the voice said “they don’t need you, they’re going to be fine,’” he recalled.

Somehow, he also knew that his wife and son had already been pulled out of the water. They really were alright.

Then his science brain entered the conversation.

You’re just hypoxic. Hold your breath. You have to beat your record. And at that point, the light just sort of vanished,” he said.

Cummings was pulled out of the water and slowly he told himself to relax so that he could regain his breath. That night at their hotel, Cummings, who has always been vigilant of his heart rate, checked his Apple watch and found that while underwater, his heart had stopped.

“I remember looking at my Apple watch because I’m kind of a health freak and I’m kind of obsessed with my heart rate. I looked at my Apple Watch and I had eight minutes of unrecorded heart rate in that time period,” said Cummings.

Electronic devices are not 100 percent accurate and they record heartbeats at intervals, but Cummings believes that in those eight minutes, there was a period when he had no heartbeat.

After the near-death experience, Cummings found that his intensive academic life was not what he wanted anymore.

“I became very uncomfortable with my career pursuit. Those things weren’t important to me anymore. I say I’ve written a couple of very bad novels. And I couldn’t identify with that any of those things,” said Cummings.

Sensing that he wasn’t suited for his life in Boston anymore, he and his family moved back to Maine, where he grew up.

The experience turned Cummings into a more thoughtful doctor. As a pathologist, he spoke to many family members of the deceased.

The number one question I’ve always been asked is ‘Did they suffer?’ And as a physician, you always say ‘No, of course not.’ But I always felt like a liar. Because I don’t know,” said Cummings.

And after his near-death experience, he knew what it was like to die.

“I wish I could talk to those people again and say, look, this is beautiful. Even under these horrible circumstances, but horrible circumstance is a second. The process after that is incredible. And there’s nothing to worry about,” shared Cummings.

In medicine, death is the end. But Cummings now felt that death was not something to avoid talking about.

“We’ve made it so sterile and kept behind this curtain. That we don’t get a chance to really experience and celebrate the transformation that is happening,” he said.

After the incident, Cummings shared that it not only changed his perspective on his job, it “really helped me come to grips with who I am as a husband and a father, a human placed on this planet.”

Cummings’ change after his near-death experience is not a solitary one.

Dr. Bruce Greyson has done extensive research on near-death experiences (NDEs) and his observations told him that these experiences often change the person who changed them for the better.

“Dr. Greyson has followed up on cases over the course of decades and found that in about 95 percent of the cases, it remains as though the NDE just happened,” Mr. Greyson told The Epoch Times in 2015.

“In one case, a man was an alcoholic and he was abusive toward his wife. After an NDE, he became an all-around good Samaritan. He didn’t drink, he was good to his wife, he helped others. For example, he rushed to New Orleans to join efforts following Hurricane Katrina,” described Dr. Greyson.

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