The actual experience of dying; how atheists take it; movie proving life after death; where does truly great art arise?

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This is a very good article as far as it goes, which is assuming you have no deep, solid, fact-based conviction of the reality of life after death.

Art of manliness: the dying experience — myths-and-answers

It is instructive to see the egoic mind, the tyrannon at work, in someone it has in its horrible grip.

Death is for all functional atheists, including all those who go to church for whatever reason, and just say they “believe” in God, 

just the most dreadful, horrible thing imaginable.

As in

“OMG, I really am dying. My body will become cold and end up in the ground! I’ll miss everything that is going to happen! Others will live on and do stuff, and I will be f–g DEAD!”

And then the full horror sets in. All totally needless.

And Christianity in its curent form is so fairy-tale-ish, and half-Jewish to boot, that for most it offers no real consolation.

A friend of mine served in Vietnam and he said:

“When the Viet Cong lie there dying, they never say a word. They are very stoic, and Buddhism makes them accept they will be reborn.

With the Americans, white or black soldiers, they moan and cry, and a lot of them cry out for their momma. They really do. It is pitiful to watch.”

And it all is so incredibly unnecessary. The evidence — hard, scientific and proven — for OBEs, NDEs and reincarnation is out there, and found on this website, too.

In reality, when you leave this place — which frankly is a location that sucks because we do not stop “the evil few” from ruining it for the “decent majority” (of course, said decent majority does want someone else to stand up to them 😉 ) —  you actually go after death to a very, very nice place, a temporary heaven, a kind of welcome center, and you are welcomed.

You see a 3-D holographic video of how your life and actions affected others. None of what you will see can be denied. You simply see yourself doing stuff — or failing to do it.

How you react to this video determines what happens next.

Now, if you were really bad to the bone, then you just get a frosty reception — and soon enough, your sentence. They have been watching you for decades. They cannot be bullshitted. You will go to a place full of people just like you, and for as long as it takes — for whatever time you need to get disgusted to the very core of your being with yourself and living life as a selfish jerk.

Below is an film I seriously recommend, “Miracles from Death” and no, it is not a churchy, Jesus movie. 😉

Well, if I cannot stop a totally jew-blackmailed Trump from getting us into WWIII with Russia — ironic, since he ran as an America-Firster, just like Wilson a century ago  — then all this talk about your death will become really relevant. ‘Cuz you gonna die, bro.

I’m not afraid to die. I have given my race and people everything for forty years. And lost every material thing I had, and my whole family, and got vilified within my own WN movement for my trouble.

I’d be happy to check out from this hell hole, and take some bastards with me. 😉

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Yes, when Trump pushes the big, red button, and he will, or Pence will, you will be dying much, much sooner than you think.

Goy tool Pelosi, and arch-jew Schumer give Trump the finger over their refusal to fund “the Wall.” Their entire body language is “we got this goy on the run.”

Donald, let us compare America to a wife and you, as president, to the husband. And the jews have raped your wife. How can you just sit there and talk with someone who has raped your wife?

But here is how I think you will “resolve” your political problems, Donald — by starting a war to unite the country behind you. Excep the war will go all-out nuclear.

So anyway, unless I can stop this, Trump will fulfill the Van Rensburg prophecy and end up, against his will, getting into a war with Putin. (I suspect Russia will be winning it conventionally, and the US, a sore loser, and ruled by insane people,  will be the one to go nuclear first.)

While the US spends $712 billion a year on the military, a lot of it goes to $600 toilet lids and $100 wrenches. Russia buys practical weapons that work in all possible conditions — as Germany found out in WWII.

 

Feisty, defiant, warlike new Russian anthem “Forward, Russia!” is proposed; WWIII and the final victor

The “lucky” ones will be vaporized as the big cities are hit.

They’ll have a scary five to thirty minutes though, when the alarms go off, our missiles launch, and “their” missiles have not yet come down.

The others will die over a course of days as radioactivity and a total lack of shelter, food, water, electricity and heat set in.

Nothing will work. Nothing will run.

And if you do have food, Mr. Prepper, someone with a gun will try and take it – – by killing you.

I am putting all my life-after-death material together, and more — the FACTS that we ARE souls and DO live on — as part of creating a new religion.

But you have to embrace it to receive any benefits.

Otherwise, enjoy the absolute and needless terror of death as a a deluded atheist at Trumpageddon. 😉

 

…..Superb NDE (Near-Death) film “Miracles from Heaven,” based on a 100% true miracle, documented in Boston at a Harvard-affiliated hospital

Trailer:

 

……Summary

This is a very moving true-life film using the excellent actresses Jennifer Garner and the young Kylie Rogers in starring roles.

jennifer-garner-kylie-rogers-actresses

It shows the totally proven, real story of a Texas girl with a fatal, agonizing, painful and incurable intestinal disease who is being treated at Boston’s Harvard-affiliated Children’s Hospital.

Logos of the hospital and of Harvard

children-s-hospital-veritas-harvard

The Longwood Center is a part of Boston where the staff is directed by Harvard doctors. (I myself taught American accent 1997-2003 to many Japanese MD-PhDs right here while they were employed as researcher in these hospitals, needing help with their accent. Japanese has only one-third as many sounds as English, including no American “r,” “ch,” “th” as in “thing,” the heavy “th” as in “the,” and most American vowels, such as “a” in “cat.”)

longwood-center-boston-children-s-hospital

 

After five years of torment, the little girl confessses to her mother she just wants to die in order to escape the constant, terrible pain.

annabel-admits-heaven-wishes-death

But the girl, played by Rogers, suddenly goes into complete “remission” – she is healed.

Many nice and fun scenes also occur, including an uproarious pillow fight, and a visit to the Boston Aquarium.

annabel-christy-beam-boston-aquarium

It is a loving family….

Kevin (MARTIN HENDERSON) says good bye to Anna (KYLIE ROGERS) before she heads for the plane to Boston in Columbia Pictures' MIRACLES FROM HEAVEN.

The real Annabel Beam at Boston Children’s Hospital

annabel-beam-intubated

The total healing happens right after she falls, in effect, headfirst three floors (while climbing a hollow tree) and hits her head, going silent….

annabel-beam-on-tree

The reaction of the mother, played by Garner, to this NEW tragedy — the aparently fatal fall — is one of the most heart-rending scenes I have EVER seen in the cinema.

A family that has undergone so much already, including extreme financial stress (medical bills and flights for treatment to Boston), and then experiences this final tragedy, well, the mother understandably almost totally freaks out! Imagine your child stuck upside down inside a hollow, dead tree, silent as death, after a 30-foot fall, head-first! (And all this is real.)

christy-beam-near-freak-out

As the hours drag on into evening, the fire crew trying to get a fireman down there without cutting the dead tree apart, which could collapse and kill her instantly …a tv reporter looks at her in deep sympathy, and the mom begins to seriously panic. THAT’S IT; SHE’S DEAD — AND EVERYONE KNOWS IT.

christy-beam-freaking-out-best

The wife/mother has already lost her faith completely that any kind of loving God exists… Just a great, honest, real performance by actress Garner.

This mother is truly at the very end of her tether, and having no more faith in God or the afterlife, she feels incredibly alone in a barren, tragic, horrible universe.

heart-rending-scene-praying-at-tree

But, incredibly, the little girl isnot killed — or even paralyzed.

Instead, she has had both an OBE, an Out-of-Body Experience, and an NDE, a Near-Death Experience (actually dying and coming back).

She leaves her body, and then SEES her own body…. (a standard NDE experience)…. and then she actually goes to “another place.”

annabel-beam-sees-own-body-inside-tree

…..and a being resembling Jesus shows her an extremely beautiful place, like “heaven” …..

annabel-beam-sees-god

This scene recalls many accounts, where heaven appears — a temporary processing center for the majority of people who are more or less decent. It is similar to earth, but more colorful and beautiful, and some of the plants and trees are a bit different. (See “90 Minutes in Heaven” below, where the Texas car-crash victim, twice pronounced dead by EMTs, sees the grass with a velour-like, liquidy color-effect to the grass that is amayingly beautiful. Earth, in grading, would get a C and heaven an A. 😉 But it is TEMPORARY. We do NOT yet deserve it!) 

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A butterfly-covered plant….

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“Take my breath — away…” .https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bx51eegLTY8

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This is why the great Aryans make the great art, because between lives they have seen heaven.

This is why they seek areté, excellence, on this earth, because they have SEEN it before their birth.

George Harrison:

Dolores O’Riordan

This is why a French poet said the following, and it hit me as soon as I read it:

 

lamartine-dieu-tombe-fallen-god

Between earthly lives, good people experience heaven, think about and learn from their mistakes, talking with their spirit guides, and then return here, usually somewhat — only somewhat — improved.

(A few achieve some level of enlightenment on the other side, then volunteer to come here to help others.)

Eventually they graduate from this earth, having learned from seeing all the evil and pointless suffering, developing a much higher consciousness in reaction to experiencing ugliness, tragedy and despair — and rejecting the egoic mind that causes it.

And they go on to incarnate on truly wonderful worlds.

Eventually, they ascend, and they, handling power wisely, make worlds, whole planets, and guide them!

Earth could become one of these garden places.

One big, beautiful, planetary Reich!

 

But back to the movie. 😉

The Being of Light (this is how people of all races, religious and cultures who have had an NDE describe him) says she is entirely healed, but she must go back to living on earth to her loving, though super-stressed-out family.

And when her parents ask, she explains all this to them, knowing it will blow their minds. (Christianity does not have OBEs, NDES — or, of course reincarnation, which this movie does not go into.)

annabel-beam-explains-nde-parents

She tells them “He” spoke to her telepathically, into her mind, and she spoke back in her mind, with no words necessary using the mouth.

Interestingly, the being was not arrogant, or terrifying, and listened to her “demand,” which was actually to NOT “go back” if it meant more agony and sickness.

The being assures her she will be well, and she must return to her loved ones on earth.

annabel-heaven-telepathy-no-words

The mother flies back to Boston with Annabel to see Dr. Nurko, who confirms the child is totally healed, with no trace of disease.

Asked how this could be, the Mexican Jew opines “maybe the blow to the head reset her nervous system.” LOL

miracles-heaven-nurko-nervous-system-reset

 

At the end, the movie shows the actual family. This case is totally documented.

The real family, and they are not trailer park or some broke family full of drugs, booze and domestic violence looking to be famous overnight or make a quick buck off a movie deal. Dr Kevin Beam DVM is a successful veterinarian with Alvarado Veterinary Clinic in Alvarado, Texas, and yes, they did get ridiculed for coming forward. There absolutely are Born Again Brain-Deads who say all NDEs are either invented or they are of the Devil…..

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Alvarado, Texas is southwest of Dallas

alvarado-texas-map

Dr. Beam is a 2000 graduate of the prestigious Texas A & M University

kevin-beam-dvm-texas-a-m-2000

The actual mother, writer Christy Beam… She lost her faith, stopped going to church, and was especially resentful over some judgmental, self-righteous church ladies who said her tragedy-stricken family must have been sinful.

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christy-beam-mother-annabel-miracles-heaven

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This jerk said right in the church “this family is just looking for publicity.” There is always some envious dick out there who trashes anything beautiful, noble and positive – because it did not happen to him. (Wonder why?)

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Annabel today, at the tree where she died. 

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This book by an engineer turned minister deals with the radical hostility of many Born-Agains toward NDEs. To say something is “satanic” is about the worst thing a Christian can say against anyone or anything, and they often do say exactly this about NDEs……

Imagine-Heaven-john-burke

This bestseller (also a movie) involves the subject himself, a Texas minister who died for 90 minutes. Sure enough, he was accused of making it all up, and that even if it was true, all NDEs come from the Devil.

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90-minutes-in-heaven-don-piper

*** My blog article on this movie, where the incident is also fully verified.

Satanic rituals triggering suicides; 90 Minutes in Heaven — review; German network ZDF calls to complain; crop circle shown being made

***

In fact, two key people involved in real life in this amazing case are  skeptical, anti-Christian Jews.

One is a Jewish parent who objects when the little Christian girl gives her, a little Jewish girl who is also dying, a Christian crucifix.

(Near the end of the movie, this Jew, portrayed as some kind of reporter, flies down to Texas and stands up for the Beam family, figurately and literally. He gets up and tells their church congregation that all this story really did happen, and that his own daughter was in the next bed over at Children’s Hospital — and did die!)

The other non-Christian and in fact, a Jew also, is her doctor, Samuel Nurko, MD.

So, no, this story is no Born-Again Christian conspiracy to just pretend the girl was deathly ill, as people accused them. It is also no vehicle to push Jesus on people. (I am not sure if Jesus is mentioned even once in the movie.)

And the little girl next to her does die.

This is not a sugary movie.

In fact, the multiple tragedies — physical, emotional and financial — have the effect of making the mother (Jenifer Garner) lose her religious faith completely.

This is one of those “Why, O God, why?” moments.

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In other words, this is not some BS propaganda film but it shows a proven miracle by some higher power.

In fact, the movie is not overly churchy, though it has some church scenes, and a skilled and caring pastor is involved.

In fact, several “church-lady” types are shown as incredibly obnoxious, judgmental, gossipy, slanderous and hostile.

It is an NDE movie, and one about how medical tragedy (a child suffering extreme agony from a fatal disease) can shake the faith of anyone, as in the 1990s bestseller, “When Bad Things Happen to Good People.”

Happy ending, however, though such miracles obviously are rare.

Most kids with fatal illnesses do die, and it happens to a little girl next to Annabel.

LOL — Many Christians doubt NDEs or even imagine they are demonic, because none are reported in the Bible.

Even AFTER their daughter is miraculously healed, even THEN, the parents are doubtful and exchange weirded-out glances as their daughter, totally healed, tells them her NDE story.

She recounts how she left her body, looked down and saw it, went into the afterlife after touching a white butterfly, and was then healed by — and had a spiritual talk with — a loving, glowing being of light with a brown beard…..

beam-parents-exchange-glances-hearing-nde-annabel

 

Btw, many Muslims, Buddhists and atheists also meet this possibly same loving being, but for them he usually is not interpreted as being Jesus. 

jesus-mormons

In the 1997 movie “Contact” with Jody Foster, a being at the far end of the galaxy, whither Jody Foster’s character has gone,  takes on a form that the somewhat terrified human scientist can be more comfortable with. “Contact” is a movie that forms a bridge between aliens and religion. The kind, wise, firm aliens are, in effect, angels.  Jodie’s character recognizes after a bit that the being is not her father, and he admits that the whole father image he is projecting is just to help her to not fear him.

jodie-foster-contact-1997-contact-with-dad

Anyway, I have to give “Miracles from Heaven” Five Stars. 🙂

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracles_from_Heaven_%28film%29

Here is an interview with, first another NDE experiencer, and then (from 2:38 on) with Annabel Beam, the girl, as reported for NBC by Maria Shriver (Arnold Schwarzenegger’s still wife):

http://www.today.com/video/today/57201513

 

….”Meet the local doctor behind “Miracles From Heaven’ “

[source: https://www.bostonglobe.com/lifestyle/2016/03/27/where-medicine-and-miracles-meet/sZLv1OBdBukE8DCtin5GDN/story.html]

samuel-nurko-md-annabel-beam-miracle

Lane Turner/Globe Staff

Dr. Samuel Nurko, director of the Center for Motility and Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders at Boston Children’s Hospital. A new movie is centered around one of his patients.

JdN: This Jewish doctor is really from Mexico, just as in the movie. Here he is, speaking in Spanish, about the amazing case and the resulting movie:.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QvAt6pEAOs#t=68

This is the excellent Mexican actor who played him: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenio_Derbez

 

***

Several years ago on a balmy winter day in Texas, 9-year-old Annabel Beam fell from a branch into the hollow body of an enormous cottonwood tree in her family’s cow pasture. She tumbled down 30 feet, landed on her head, and was trapped for hours before rescuers could reach her.

That Anna survived the fall unharmed is amazing. That she emerged from the tree free of the two rare, chronic diseases she suffered from is described by both her pastor and her doctor as a miracle.

For Anna’s physician, Dr. Samuel Nurko, director of the Center for Motility and Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders at Boston’s Children’s Hospital, the abrupt disappearance of Anna’s intestinal disorders following a major trauma is an extreme example of a certain kind of medical event he witnesses on a regular basis ” the kind for which there is no scientific explanation.

“I haven’t seen it to this degree, but we do see patients who have experiences that can reset the body,” says Nurko. “It’s like pressing control-alt-delete.”

For Anna’s family and their devout Christian community, there is no question that the girl’s miraculous recovery was an act of God. While she was trapped in the tree, Anna told her parents, she met Jesus in heaven and he sent her back to earth with a guardian angel.

Her mother, Christy, wrote a memoir about it. “Miracles From Heaven,” a film based on the book, is in theaters now, and Nurko is having a Hollywood moment. He walked the red carpet at the film’s Chestnut Hill premiere with Jennifer Garner, who stars as Christy Beam. He’s had boldface shout-outs in glossy magazines. He’s watched himself played on the big screen by Mexican superstar Eugenio Derbez, right down to his signature Elmo tie.

“I loved the movie,” Nurko says. But he declines to address the Beams’ interpretation of Anna’s sudden return to good health. “That is their story to tell.”

Prior to Anna’s fall, mother and daughter traveled regularly from their home near Burleson, Texas, a rural suburb of Fort Worth, to Boston for treatment and monitoring at Children’s Hospital. Anna had been sick since she was 4 with pseudo-obstruction motility disorder and antral hypomotility disorder, illnesses for which there is no cure. The nerves and muscles in her intestines didn’t contract normally, and as a result food, fluid, and air weren’t able to properly move through Anna’s body. By the time she was 5 she’d had multiple surgeries for intestinal obstructions. Anna’s diet was largely liquid, her drug intake copious, and she was in near-constant pain.

Then she fell into the tree. Nurko thinks that Anna had a near-death experience, although he says it’s impossible to know for sure.

“It was a major event in her inner self,” he says, “that’s the message. It’s been shown in many cases that your inner well-being, your faith, your attitude, your beliefs and experiences, your family interactions, they are all going to affect how you react to disease.”

The parents (Dr. Beam, far left, and the woman between Jennifer Garner and Dr Nurko, the writer Christy Beam) are good-looking, professional white people. Annabel is in the middle, wearing glasses.

From left): Kevin, Abbie, Adelynn, and Annabel Beam, Jennifer Garner, Christy Beam, and Dr. Samuel Nurko on the red carpet at the opening night of

Scott Eisen/Getty Images for Allied Integrated Marketing

From left: Kevin, Abbie, Adelynn, and Annabel Beam, Jennifer Garner, Christy Beam, and Dr. Samuel Nurko on the red carpet at the opening night of “Miracles From Heaven” in Chestnut Hill, Boston area earlier this month.

Nurko is describing the biopsychosocial model of medicine, known more colloquially as the mind-body connection. It is a driving principle of his practice, but despite growing evidence, Western medicine has been slow to embrace the notion that forces outside of the body may impact illness. Dr. Jeffrey Rediger, a practitioner at the nexus of medicine, psychiatry, and spirituality, is trying to change that.

“We’re groaning toward a larger understanding of the power of the mind,” says Rediger, who is medical director at the McLean Southeast Adult Psychiatric Program in Middleborough, an instructor at Harvard Medical School, and a graduate of Princeton Theological Seminary. “We can’t think ourselves into health, but the pattern I’ve seen over and over again is that if a person can have a deep change in their psyche or their soul, whether it happens quickly or over 10 years in psychotherapy, the body responds. It’s an unmapped wilderness in our culture.”

In the movie, (back) Martin Henderson and Jennifer Garner as Kevin and Christy Beam, and Kylie Rogers as Annabel Beam pushing Eugenio Derbez as Doctor Nurko.

Chuck Zlotnick/Sony Pictures via AP

In the movie, (back) Martin Henderson and Jennifer Garner as Kevin and Christy Beam, and Kylie Rogers as Annabel Beam pushing Eugenio Derbez as Doctor Nurko.

Spiritual experiences are an especially knotty problem for traditional science, Rediger says, rooted as it is in the assumption that thoughts and feelings must be excluded from the data in order to uncover objective reality. Regarding Anna Beam’s “miracle,” Rediger takes issue with the very definition of the word.

“I believe that miracles only contradict what we know of nature,” he says. “I believe that miracles are actually consistent with mental and spiritual laws, it’s just that we’re in the very early stages of mapping them in the West. Modern physics values consciousness, and this is very slowly revising science. As we continue to become more interested as a culture in thepower and capacities of the mind, I suspect we will see more interest in researching such capacities.”

Nurko, meanwhile, would like to see more interest in researching gastrointestinal disease, and it’s his fervent hope that the publicity surrounding “Miracles From Heaven” will increase awareness and funding for a range of disorders that he says affect 10 percent of all children.

He said the public is not inclined to get involved in gastrointestinal disorders.

“When you talk about poop and vomiting, people don’t want to engage. It’s not stem cells. Cancer is sexier. These kids get forgotten.”

Anna’s story, however, is unforgettable. When she returned to Children’s Hospital for the first time after her fall, she was asymptomatic. Completely normal. A pizza eater. Nurko saw no need to run even a single test. Asked how surprised he was by Anna’s headlong return to good health, he says he is consistently surprised by diseases not doing what doctors expect them to do.

“We think we know what’s going to happen, but nature has a way to play games with us,” says Nurko. “We see miracles every day here in the hospital.”

Joan Anderman is a freelance writer. You can reach her at jcanderman@gmail.com.

…..Children’s Hospital article

Annabel’s journey: The story behind the movie “Miracles from Heaven”

Nurko_Annabel-beamEight-year-old Annabel Beam was on a quest to find the perfect gift. During a 2010 trip from her Texas home to Boston Children’s Hospital, she asked her Mom to stop at the airport gift shop before boarding the plane.

Annabel perused the aisles, examining each item in the hope of finding a token of appreciation for her gastroenterologist, Dr. Samuel Nurko, director of the Motility and Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders Center.

Annabel spotted a cuddly teddy bear wearing blue doctors’ scrubs. She reached for the bear, squeezed its arm, and a musical rendition of “Doctor, Doctor, give me the news ¦” began to play.

Annabel’s grin spread from ear to ear. “I want to give this to Dr. Nurko, Mommy,” said Annabel.

The teddy bear symbolized the kindness and hope Nurko shared with Annabel while she managed the rare and chronic gastrointestinal condition pseudo-obstruction. And it remains a symbol of the long-lasting bond between Nurko and his young patient.

“It was a very touching moment,” Nurko says of the day he received the teddy bear. “I keep the bear in my office, and he watches over me.”

This was one of many trips to Boston Children’s to treat Annabel’s chronic and often debilitating condition.

The road to Boston Children’s

When Annabel was 4, she had bouts of distended (swollen) stomach and difficulty eating, and she experienced intense stomach cramping and pain. “[Annabel’s] pain was almost always at a level 10, and on a good day, she was at a level eight,” recalls Annabel’s Mom Christy Beam. “She would live in a fetal position on the sofa with a heating pad on her stomach.”

Annabel was seen by several local doctors and underwent an array of tests including blood work, CT scans and X-rays. She was diagnosed with a variety of illnesses ranging from a lactose intolerance to reflux.

“I always felt bad, and my stomach always hurt,” Annabel recalls. “I remember going out to a restaurant; I would take one bite and would be done because the pain would be so overwhelming.”

By the time she was 5, Annabel had a full-intestinal obstruction that required surgery. Nine days after the surgery, she re-obstructed and required a second surgery.

Time for a second opinion

“After the second surgery, Annabel never got better,” Mom recalls. “So we pursued every doctor in Texas who could possibly figure out what was wrong with her.”

Christy says she can pinpoint the moment the decision was made to bring Annabel to Boston Children’s. “I had a doctor tell me that if her daughter was as sick as Annabel ”  and if she had the same problems ”  she would have her in the hands of Dr. Sam Nurko,” Christy recalls.

In 2009, Christy, Annabel and her aunt traveled to Boston Children’s for an appointment with Nurko. “Annabel was in a lot of pain when she came to see me,” Nurko recalls. “She had a lot of difficulty tolerating her feedings, was vomiting and had abdominal distention.”

Miracles from Heaven

Annabel with distended stomach ” a symptom of pseudo-obstruction

Mom says Annabel and Nurko instantly connected. “Annabel trusted him,” Christy says. “He was sweet and funny, and he made her giggle.”

Following a comprehensive examination and Antroduodenal Manometry   ” a diagnostic test performed in only a few places around the world ”  Annabel was diagnosed with pseudo-obstruction. The intestinal disorder is caused by nerve or muscle problems that prevent the intestines from contracting normally to move food, fluid and air through the intestines. “This is a disease where the nerves of the intestines and the muscles don’t work well, and things don’t move,” Nurko explains.

Treating pseudo-obstruction

There is no known cure for pseudo-obstruction. However, patients with intestinal pseudo-obstruction often require nutritional support to prevent malnutrition and weight loss. Medication may also be required to treat and prevent further complications caused by lack of movement of the stomach and intestinal contents.

Miracles from HeavenAnnabel required nutritional assistance in the form of nasogastric tube (NG) tube. She began treatment with Cisapride, a medication designed to increase motility in the gastrointestinal tract and only prescribed in a few centers throughout the U.S. Annabel’s medication regimen called for her and her family to return to Boston Children’s every six to eight weeks for treatment.

Pseudo-obstruction treatment goal

Miracles from Heaven

Annabel visiting the Freedom Trail

The goal of treatment, Nurko says, was to prevent complications, stabilize Annabel’s condition, treat her symptoms, improve her quality of life and get her active and functioning again.

“Dr. Nurko didn’t say it was all rainbows and butterflies,” says Christy. “But he showed concern about the seriousness of Annabel’s illness, and he was committed to doing everything he could to give her the best quality of life.”

Annabel and her family traveled to Boston Children’s for nearly three years. She says she found relief from her chronic condition, enjoyed her time with Dr. Nurko and was able visit several Boston attractions during their stay.

“I remember looking forward to going to Boston,” Annabel recalls. “We did the Freedom Trail and the New England Aquarium, and it was always a lot of fun.”

Taking the next steps

In 2012, a Boston Children’s fellow ” a motility specialist trained and affiliated with Nurko and the Center for Motility ”  began treating Annabel in Austin, Texas.

While in Texas, 10-year-old Annabel had a life-changing experience ” an experience Christy chronicled in her faith-based memoir, “Miracles from Heaven.”

The story recounts how a near-death accident changed the course of Annabel’s life. The motion picture, “Miracles from Heaven” starring actress Jennifer Garner is scheduled for release March 16.

Jennifer Garner, Miracles from Heaven

Dr. Samuel Nurko with “Miracles from Heaven” actress Jennifer Garner holding Annabel’s bear during a visit to Boston Children’s

Today, Annabel says she is feeling like a normal kid. She is extremely grateful for Nurko’s expertise and compassion and happy to see her teddy bear has made a new friend.

“I always looked forward to going to Boston Children’s,” Annabel says. “And I am very glad I was cared for by Dr. Nurko.”

 

Learn about the pseudo-obstruction and the research fund created in Annabel’s name. Find out how to request an appointment or an online second opinion.

…….Virtus analysis

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[being added]

I feel very sorry for people who believe there is no life after death, or just one.

For the first deluded group, death is terrifying.

For the second, the one-life doctrine means God is very unfair. He gives some a good upbringing and life, great looks and wealth (think John F. Kennedy)  and others are born to a heroin junkie mom.

I am reading a NYT bestselling book now, Hillbilly Elegy, by a young Appalachian man who escaped the white poverty, violence, drugs and alcoholism of his Scotch-Irish people and went to Yale.

When tragedy strikes, or they go off to war (high unemployment drives them into the service) and are seriously wounded, their Christianity goes right out the window. The proof? They start drinking heavily or doing drugs. They cannot explain tragedy, just numb the pain.

Christianity does NOT explain tragedies well, and there is a scene in “Miracles from Heaven” where the mother, played by Garner, meets with the pastor and demands to know why her God-fearing, sweet little daughter is in agony. the pastor admits HE DOES NOT KNOW.

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This is why this book by a rabbi from the mid-1990s — his own little daughter had died after a terrible disease — became a bestseller:

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Now reincarnation explains sooo many mysteries of life, as automaker and reincarnation advocate Henry Ford realized:

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henry-ford-reincarnation-explains-much

 

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Happiness comes from good karma and unhappiness from bad karma.

A good person may have had a great childhood, and be surrounded by other good people, and conform to his surroundings, but tragedy strikes anyway.

Why?

In previous lives they did not lift a finger for someone suffering. They were too busy. Or there was another excuse. Or rationalization.

Now THEY are the one suffering.

With regard to greater social ills:

Generations of earthly whites have stood there with stupid cow and pig eyes when heroic leaders arose — Queen Isabella, Martin Luther, Ford, Hitler, Pelley and Lindbergh to warn them about the Jews.

They reincarnate for centuries and do nothing.

Now their chickens have come home to roost.

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We krushed the Krauts. USA-USA-USA!

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Here, Mister Soviet, have half of Europe!

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It is pig-headed selfishness and cowardice that have brought the earthly white race to misery.

Pollution, vaccines and poisoned food make kids sick by the millions.

The Jews did it, and we did nothing about the Jews.

We cursed the warners.

The ways of karma are righteous and fair.

A cute little girl today, who had near-perfect parents, could have been an uncaring, unfeeling bastard in another life.

Should we let her just suffer now?

NO! It is not helping the suffering that ruined her karma in the first place!

It is by suffering, and then by the act of being helped by an unselfish person, that a selfish person learns the beauty of compassion.

Fireman goes head-first down 30 feet of hollow tree to bring Annabel up

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If […] the Jew is victorious over the other peoples of the world, his crown will be the funeral wreath of humanity.

And this planet will, as it did thousands of years ago, move through the ether devoid of men.

So spirituality — realizing you are a spirit, not a body — is not fluff.  It means whatever horrors await us, we can never really die. We go to higher words, or we go to lower worlds.

Your life, and your choices, will determine which it is.

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1 Comment

  1. “Asked how this could be, the Mexican Jew opines “maybe the blow to the head reset her nervous system.” LOL”
    Maybe her nervous system did get reset by her NDE, as whatever the mechanism it was, the spiritual experience must have been able to physically change the body to have these results, but a blow like that certainly isn’t going to have a beneficial effect. The biologists just have their heads in the sand to the point where the notion of any physiological function having a purpose gives them an aneurysm. Incidents like this, and mundane facts like how immune systems adapt before 1 cellular generation has passed, to deal with a virus for example, put this nonsense thinking to rest. The body could not operate as a mere jumble of uncoordinated units, there is pretty obviously a unifying control system that allows people to even do the simplest things like make a plan. Scientists have not gotten anywhere near close even 1 percent of modeling physiologically how every choice someone makes in their day is predetermined, but questioning this dogma is still an unspeakable evil to atheists. It “must have” just happened to fix the nervous system (through no mechanism they could explain) therefore it did, seems to be the type of thinking these people use.

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