While drowning experiences house of God
When I moved to Puerto Rico in 1994, I had no
idea that I would live through a near-drowning, even though the island,
surrounded by oceans and seas, scared me. I have always had a fear of
drowning in deep water. A year and a half after arriving, on September
9, 1995, I was settled in my own home and busy working full-time. I was
happy and having great fun with my local companions who had become
family to me. One night after work, I gave a ride to some visitors of my
friends, whom were visiting the island. I drove them up the west coast
where I lived and worked. After some cajoling I was glad to take the
drive up along the coast of beautiful Puerto Rico as I drove my local
friend and his visitors up to their cottage where they were staying for a
week. It was evening by the time we arrived. I was going to
stay the night and then drive home in the morning after shopping and
going to the beach. Later that night, Maury and I went for a walk
together, down to the beach. He was the handsome brother of the friend
who had asked for the ride. We were getting along great. I felt
invigorated and blessed, enjoying one of the most enchanting beaches in
the world. This is the surfing capital of Puerto Rico and known
world-wide by surfers who ride the huge waves along the pristine
shoreline. The waves were gigantic and loud that particular night
because of the post-hurricane weather, with another hurricane on the
way.
We were playing by the shore with the beauty of the night
sky off-setting the romantic ocean at our finger-tips; we were lulled
into the ocean. While playing in the water, the ocean terrifyingly
grabbed us in one wave! We were swept out to sea! Panicking, we
struggled together to swim back to shore, but the waves were too big and
powerful, plus the rip-tide had a deadly hold on us and we could not
swim against it. Personally, I knew nothing of rip-tides or what to do
if ever caught in one which is to swim parallel to the shore until out
of the rip tide current. I did know I was going to drown that night and
would never make it back to the beach. Due to the violent blasting of
the waves, Maury and I were forcibly separated three times. He was not
able to stay or swim me into the shore. I found myself alone in the
middle of the vast, immense ocean, fighting for my life. I was able to
prolong survival by timing the waves crashing on my head. I think I was
out there for about thirty minutes, although it felt like forever. As
the waves washed me under, over and over, I was able to tell when to
take a breath, to sustain me underwater, until I swam up to the surface,
to take another breath. This went on until I was too exhausted to move
any body part.
Eventually the moment arrived when I became
aware of exactly which wave would pummel me underwater to my death. As I
inhaled my last breath, I felt an all-encompassing peace releasing all
fears. The moment had come to get right with God. I was acutely
conscious of the knowledge I would not make it up to the surface again. I
was having my last view of the beach, the stars and the expansive,
blue, dark ocean. As I took the breath that would sustain me for the
rest of my life, I timed the wave falling on me. The ocean stilled and
became very quiet. Stars began to fall on the horizon and dropped into
the sea. When I looked up at the wave, it was suspended above me
dripping droplets of water from its crest.
The next moment, I
traveled to space. My spirit was taken in an instant to outer space and
exploded into pure consciousness! I was acutely aware in my mind that I
was traveling and had become an astral being. I was taken into the sky
and into space. I was above the beach and to the right of the almost
full moon. I was completely conscious of being alive without a body! As I
began to comprehend where I found myself, my mental dialogue was the
same as when I was in the physical realm. I noticed my mind was still
thinking, hearing, and seeing. I tried to figure out where I had been
taken. My spirit eyes felt the same as seeing through my body's eyes. My
mind told me I was in a holy place. I was a visitor in a house of God.
The next moments were timeless, as I was gently informed about
how I lived my life on earth. Completely non-judgmental, yet clear and
precise was the voice inside my head. I learned why I was dying and how
it would affect my loved ones. More information kept flooding my
consciousness as I listened, learned, and understood profound life
conditions of the past, present and future. I became my own proof of
individual divinity, blessed with immortal life, by the infinite mercy
of God's unconditional love. The revelations seemed to go on until I
noticed a bubble of light, so to speak, to the right of where I was
floating. Inviting and comforting, all my attention was eventually
diverted to it. I knew without a doubt it was the entrance to heaven. I
was happy to be going there, especially if what I was feeling is the
norm. I forced myself to float towards it. When close, all of a sudden
in an excruciating moment, I was rudely blasted back into my body!
The
last wave had slammed me down hard as I began the descent into the
dark, watery abyss to my drowning death. Then I felt a hand!
Miraculously I was being rescued out of the last wave at the exact
moment I was going to drown. Upon realizing I was being pulled to
safety, I died and do not remember being pulled out of the water and
laid on the beach. Upon resuscitation when I struggled to wake up, I was
shocked to find out I was still alive and much to my chagrin, still in
my body!
The only thing I could think about was my near-death
experience and how much I wanted to go back to where I had just visited.
Plus it made no sense I was on earth. The rest of the night and into
the next morning became an extended fight to live. By the time the light
of the new day dawned, I had actually lived through the first
near-drowning, to almost die again from secondary drowning. Upon
admittance to a hospital, I spent a long week in the Intensive Care
Unit. Upon being discharged I went home a different person than whom I
had been before that fateful night up the western Puerto Rican coast.
NDERF.org #7516
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